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Le Blanc by Imtiaz Developments is imagined as a calm, light filled address in Dubailand Residence Complex, for people who want their home to feel clear, ordered and quietly refined. The building sits close to the heart of the community and rises as a mid rise tower with a basement, ground floor, three podium levels, seventeen residential floors and a rooftop. Prices start around AED 690,000, with a sixty forty payment plan and handover expected in the second quarter of 2028, which gives both end users and investors time to plan around a real delivery date while the wider district continues to mature.
From outside, the architecture follows the idea behind the name. Le Blanc reads as pure and balanced, with clean lines, soft neutral tones and a luminous facade that catches the light through the day. Extended balconies, clear verticals and generous glass keep the building simple rather than showy, so the overall effect is calm instead of loud. The podium is treated as a green platform, with planted areas, seating pockets and direct access to shared amenities, so you approach through a soft landscape rather than a hard edge of parking and ramps. It feels like a place that has been drawn with a steady hand.
Inside, the planning is human in scale. The lobby is wide enough to feel generous without being theatrical, with pale walls, polished surfaces and warm lighting that give it a hotel like composure. You can wait for a friend, answer a few emails on your laptop or simply pause on the way out without feeling that you are in a corridor. From here vertical circulation is simple, lifts are easy to find, and you move quickly up to your floor. The whole sequence is designed so that using the building every day feels straightforward rather than complicated.
Le Blanc offers a mix of studios, one, two and three bedroom apartments, with sizes from about four hundred and forty three to more than two thousand two hundred square feet. Studios suit single professionals or frequent travellers who want a compact, manageable base. One bedroom layouts are a good fit for couples or solo residents who prefer a clearer separation between living and sleeping. Two and three bedroom homes work for young families or people who want a home office and guest room without leaving the city apartment format. In each case the layout is kept open plan across the main living area, with kitchens, dining and seating zones flowing into each other so that movement stays natural.
Within the apartments, the design leans on muted palettes, soft textures and a few careful accents in metal and marble. Floors, joinery and worktops are chosen to be durable and easy to maintain, which matters for long term living or serious rental use. Floor to ceiling windows pull in light and stretch views over the community, while balconies extend the living space outside for morning coffee, a quiet read in the evening or a simple chance to step out and breathe. The feeling is bright, composed and gently contemporary rather than overly formal.
Living, dining and kitchen areas are arranged to take regular furniture without awkward corners. Kitchens arrive fully fitted with Bosch appliances and sensible runs of worktop and storage, so you can actually cook, not only reheat. The idea is that you move in and start using the space without a long setup period. Bedrooms are treated as proper retreats. Master rooms are wide enough for wardrobes, side tables and a chair without feeling squeezed, and secondary bedrooms still feel generous. Large windows keep them sunlit during the day, while their position away from the main living space helps maintain a calm atmosphere at night.
Bathrooms continue the same logic. Fixtures come from BagnoDesign and Geberit, with clean lines, good water pressure and lighting that is soft enough for evenings without feeling dim in the morning. Finishes are kept in neutral tones that sit quietly behind daily routines, and storage is integrated where possible so bottles and small items disappear when not in use. Alexa enabled smart home controls give you the option to adjust lights and other functions by voice or phone, which is useful if you like to set scenes in the evening or manage your home remotely.
Shared amenities are focused rather than excessive. A rooftop or sky level pool gives adults a proper place to swim and unwind, while a separate family and kids pool makes life easier for parents. A gym sits at podium level, with enough space and equipment for regular training instead of a token room. Cabanas, sunken seating areas, a clubhouse and an outdoor cinema turn the podium into a social deck where you can meet neighbours, watch a film or host a simple gathering. Children have their own zone to play, and outdoor dining and barbecue corners make casual evenings with friends feel easy to arrange. The aim is that you actually use these facilities during the week, not just on special occasions.
For investors, the story is straightforward. You have a known developer, a sensible ticket size, a sixty forty structure that keeps a large portion of payments closer to handover, and a product that is neutral enough in style to appeal to a broad tenant pool. For end users, the appeal is in the mix of light, clarity and practical planning, a home that feels calm after work and stays easy to manage over years, not months.
