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Serro at The Heights Country Club and Wellness is planned as a quiet green address on the edge of the city, a place where the desert softens into landscaped streets, ponds and long walking routes. Created by Emaar Properties, it brings a collection of three, four and five bedroom townhouses and villas into a new master community in Al Yalayis Five. The focus is simple. Give families space, privacy and everyday comfort, then anchor it all in a setting that is designed around wellbeing rather than speed. Prices from about AED four point eight million, an eighty twenty payment plan and a handover currently guided for the first quarter of twenty thirty give buyers time to plan their move or investment.
From the outside, homes at Serro follow a very clear design language. Facades stay light and calm, with pale materials that pick up the colours of the surrounding landscape instead of fighting them. Lines are clean, frames are generous and there is a quiet rhythm of windows, terraces and balconies that keeps each elevation ordered. You notice that there is no heavy decoration. The architecture is modern and future focused, but it is also deliberately simple so that the light, the greenery and the sky do most of the work. It feels like an address that will still read well ten or fifteen years from now.
Inside, layouts are designed around real family routines. Three bedroom homes suit young families or couples who want a guest room and a home office without going straight into a larger villa. Four bedroom options read as proper long term family houses, with clear separation between entertaining spaces and private rooms. Five bedroom villas step up the sense of scale with extra suites for extended family, guests or staff. Built up areas run roughly from four thousand nine hundred square feet to just over seven thousand square feet, so rooms have the volume to take full sized furniture without feeling tight. Circulation is kept logical. You do not lose space to long corridors or awkward turns.
Living and dining areas are mostly open plan, linking directly to terraces and gardens so that indoor and outdoor life can blur in the cooler months. Kitchens are planned as proper working spaces rather than show kitchens only, with sensible runs of worktop, storage and appliance positions that support daily cooking. Finishes lean towards natural tones and soft textures. Floors, joinery and worktops are chosen to be durable and easy to care for, which matters in a family home. Large windows and sliding doors bring in daylight and frame views of planting, greenways or the broader community. The overall mood is quiet, modern and calm.
Bedrooms are treated as genuine retreats. Principal suites tend to include walk in wardrobes or generous storage walls, well proportioned bathrooms and often a terrace or balcony that opens over the garden or community. Secondary bedrooms still feel comfortable, with enough wall space for wardrobes, desks and beds without squeezing. Bathrooms keep to a clean, hotel inspired language with fittings chosen for regular use, not just for show. The intent is clear. These homes are meant to be lived in every day, not only used as occasional holiday houses.
Shared community facilities within Serro and the wider cluster are focused on wellbeing. Walking and jogging paths wind past ponds, landscaped green fingers and small seating pockets. Cycling trails create an easy way to move around without always relying on the car. There are neighbourhood playgrounds for children, calm garden corners for a coffee or a call, and planned fitness and wellness spaces that link back to the larger country club concept. The whole cluster is designed to encourage people to move, to breathe and to slow down a little without feeling cut off from the city.
For buyers who think in numbers as much as lifestyle, the positioning is straightforward. You have a branded Emaar master community of eighty one million square feet, a limited launch of around three hundred and eighty three homes in this phase, a wellness narrative that runs through the entire plan and a payment structure that keeps most of the capital spread through construction. That combination will appeal to end users who want a long term base and to investors who see the potential in an emerging corridor tied to new infrastructure.
Day to day, life in Serro is meant to feel organised rather than complicated. Drive in from Emirates Road or Jebel Ali routes and you move quickly from main highway to quiet internal streets. Parking, drop off and entry have been thought through so that peak school and work times are manageable. Gardens are sized so that families can add seating, a small pool or simple play equipment without the plot feeling crowded. Many homes look over internal green corridors or towards water features, which keeps the outlook soft even as the community grows.
The Heights master plan gives each cluster a slightly different flavour, and Serro leans strongly into that idea of country club calm. You can imagine morning walks past lawns and ponds before work, children cycling short local loops in the late afternoon, and weekend time spent under trees rather than just in malls. The architecture stays consistent enough to make the streets feel composed, but there is still room for owners to express themselves in planting, outdoor furniture and small design choices. Over time that is what often gives a neighbourhood character.
On a practical level, the unit mix and sizes are aligned with the type of residents the area is likely to attract. Three and four bedroom layouts work well for professionals and families who want to be near the new airport, Expo City and key employment zones while still keeping access to older parts of Dubai. Larger five bedroom villas will pull in buyers who see this as a long horizon family base and want room to grow without shifting communities later. In every case the product is being pitched as a future proof home that will stay relevant as the wider district matures around it.
