
Bi-Fold Brochure Design • Tri-Fold Brochure Design • Real Estate Marketing • Property Collateral
Overview
This brochure design collection combines two real estate formats: a bi-fold brochure for Gather COLA and a tri-fold brochure for Habitafio property services. The designs use building renders, floor plans, interior photography, navy and olive accents, clear information blocks, and professional fold layouts to support property marketing and service communication.
The Challenge

Real estate brochures must communicate trust, location value, space details, and brand credibility within a limited printed format. Poor brochure design can make floor plans difficult to read, property visuals feel disconnected, or service information appear crowded. Developers, brokers, and property service brands need collateral that looks professional during meetings, site visits, leasing conversations, and presentations. The challenge is to organize visual and technical property information without losing clarity or sales appeal.
The Solution

This collection solves that by using each brochure format according to its communication purpose. The Gather COLA bi-fold design uses architectural renders, floor plan visuals, logo placement, partner branding, and blue accent panels to present a commercial property development with structure and confidence. The Habitafio tri-fold design uses warm interior photography, dark navy service panels, olive highlight blocks, icons, and concise copy to explain property management services clearly. Together, the brochures create a polished real estate marketing system that feels informative, visual, and presentation-ready.
The Impact

The designs help real estate brands present their properties and services with stronger authority. Clear layouts make project details, floor plans, benefits, and contact information easier for prospects to understand. The professional visual style supports stronger trust during investor, tenant, landlord, and buyer conversations. Long-term, this brochure approach can improve brand perception, support lead generation, and strengthen offline marketing consistency.












Real estate brochure design plays a critical role in how property brands communicate value beyond digital listings and short presentations. In property marketing, printed collateral must do more than display attractive images. It has to explain the project, show the space, guide the reader through key information, and create confidence in the developer, broker, or service provider. This case study brings together a bi-fold and tri-fold brochure design as one real estate marketing collateral project, showing how different fold formats can support different communication needs.
The Gather COLA bi-fold brochure is designed around a commercial real estate development. The visual direction uses architectural renders, exterior building visuals, floor plans, partner logos, and a clean blue-and-white layout system. The cover introduces the property with a strong logo, large building image, and partner branding, making the brochure feel official and development-focused. Inside, the layout presents an aerial render, an about section, and floor plan information, supported by image grids that help viewers understand the space, structure, and leasing potential.
The Habitafio tri-fold brochure focuses on property services and landlord communication. Instead of architectural plans, this direction uses warm interior photography, lifestyle-style property images, dark navy panels, olive highlight blocks, and small service icons. The fold structure allows the brochure to separate about information, services, mission, commitment, and reasons to choose the brand. This makes the content easier to scan, especially for landlords or property owners reviewing service benefits quickly during a meeting or handover.
As a combined property brochure design project, the collection shows how real estate print collateral must adapt to audience intent. A development brochure needs to communicate space, scale, location, and opportunity. A property management brochure needs to communicate trust, service reliability, and professional care. Both designs use strong hierarchy, branded colors, clean typography, and structured image placement to make information feel organized and credible.
The long-term value of this real estate brochure design lies in its ability to support offline sales and relationship-building. A polished commercial real estate brochure can help developers and brokers present projects more clearly to tenants, investors, and partners. A professional tri-fold brochure can help service providers explain their offering with confidence and consistency. When brochures are designed with clear structure and visual purpose, they become more than printed handouts. They become practical sales tools that improve trust, strengthen brand presentation, and support better property decisions.
real estate brochure design
bi-fold brochure design
tri-fold brochure design
property management brochure