June 2026
Built from the intake you shared on WhatsApp. If anything below is off, reply on the thread and we'll fix it before the next phase (site blueprint + brand direction).
UrbanScape Greenery is a local landscaping and plant business. The intake describes a single operation that spans the full range of what a greenery business usually touches: selling plants, designing outdoor spaces, building vertical gardens, maintaining what they install, and stocking the pots and tools that go with all of it. That breadth, indoor retail plus outdoor design plus ongoing maintenance, is the clearest signal we have about who they are. It says they want to be the one call a customer makes for anything green, not just a nursery that sells you a plant and waves goodbye.
Beyond that, the founder story, the size of the team, and how long they have been operating were not captured in the intake, and the online recon turned up nothing we can attribute to this exact business. Six searches and a fetch were run across Google, JustDial, Sulekha, IndiaMART, Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn. The closest matches were a Knauf Insulation green-roof product brand ("Urbanscape Green Solutions"), an unrelated Bangalore gardening Facebook page ("Urban Scape Gardening"), and an Indonesian exhibition account. None of them is this business. So we are building this brief from the intake content alone, and treating the company history as an open question rather than inventing one.
What we can say with confidence is the intent behind the service mix. A business that offers both "low-maintenance greenery for homes and offices" and "custom outdoor space planning" is thinking about two different moments in a customer's life: the quick, affordable purchase that brightens a desk or a balcony, and the larger, considered project of designing a garden or a living wall. Holding both under one roof is a deliberate choice, and the brand should reflect a team that is as comfortable advising on a single pot as it is planning a full landscape.
The intake lists five service and product lines. Grouped by the kind of customer need they meet:
Plants and retail
Design and build
Service and upkeep
These five lines reinforce each other. Indoor plants and accessories bring people in cheaply and often. Design and vertical-garden work are the higher-value projects. Maintenance turns a one-time sale into an ongoing relationship. A website should make all three doors visible without making the small buyer feel they have walked into a place that only wants big projects, and without making the project client think they have wandered into a pot shop.
The intake points to two broad customer groups, though it does not spell out which one the business leans toward.
The first is homeowners and individuals: people furnishing a flat, a balcony, or a terrace; renters who want something living on a windowsill; and homeowners planning a proper garden. The "low-maintenance greenery for homes" framing suggests they are comfortable serving buyers who are not gardeners, which widens the audience well beyond hobbyists.
The second is offices and commercial spaces: the explicit mention of "homes and offices," together with vertical gardens and landscaping, points at workplaces, cafes, retail interiors, and building frontages that want greenery for their look and their feel. Commercial maintenance contracts often sit here too, and they tend to be steadier and more valuable than one-off retail sales.
What the intake does not tell us is the pricing tier (budget, mid-market, or premium), the city or service radius, and whether the business sees itself primarily as a retail plant shop, a design studio, or a maintenance service. Custom garden design and bespoke living walls usually sit at a mid-to-premium price point, while indoor plants and accessories are typically accessible and volume-driven. Until the operator confirms where they want to sit, the brand should stay credible across that range rather than committing hard to "cheap and cheerful" or "high-end designer." This is one of the more important things to pin down before the build, because it changes the copy, the photography, and the way prices are presented.
This is the largest gap in the intake. No city, no address, no service area, no hours, and no contact channels were provided, and the online recon could not fill them because no verified profile was found under the exact name "UrbanScape Greenery." The recon notes specifically flag that the missing city blocked any city-anchored search.
Practically, that means we cannot yet state where they are based or how far they travel for landscaping jobs. We also do not know whether they run a physical storefront or nursery, sell online, take orders over WhatsApp, or some combination. For a business that mixes walk-in plant retail with on-site design and maintenance, location and service radius are load-bearing facts: a customer needs to know whether they can visit, whether the team will come to them, and how to get in touch.
Because the platform handles intake and delivery over WhatsApp, a WhatsApp contact number is likely the primary channel, but it has not been confirmed for this business and is not stated in the intake, so we are not listing one. All of the location, hours, and contact details below are deliberately left out of the frontmatter rather than guessed. They sit at the top of the questions list and should be confirmed before the site goes live, because a landscaping and plant site with no address, no service area, and no way to reach the team will not convert.
The honest answer is that the intake does not yet give us a differentiator, so we should not manufacture one. What it gives us is a hypothesis worth testing with the operator:
None of these is proven yet. The right move is to ask the operator which of these is true and which they want to lead with, and to ask for any signals of difference the intake missed: years in business, notable projects, warranties or plant-replacement guarantees, sourcing (do they grow their own?), or named clients.
The voice should be warm, practical, and reassuring, the tone of someone who knows plants well and wants to make them feel approachable rather than precious. The "low-maintenance greenery for homes and offices" phrasing in the intake is the cue: this is a business that meets people where they are, including people who are nervous about keeping a plant alive. It should sound knowledgeable without being botanical-Latin showy, and friendly without tipping into hype. For the design and vertical-garden work, the same voice can lift into something a little more considered and confident, since those are bigger decisions, but it should never go cold or corporate.
Sample phrases that capture the intended sound: