A narrow section gave the building the image of a plate, and the desire to reveal panoramic views gave rise to several glass bridges and consoles.
The building includes an underground parking lot at 420m/m, its number of floors is 24 floors in single-section and 22 in two-section towers.
This project was created in 2005 and was then intended for the cultural center of the Republic of Adjara. At the end of 2006, relations between Russia and Georgia deteriorated – formally, the Transcaucasian republic changed its mind about building a cultural and business center in Moscow - and the site was put up for auction. The winner of the auction was CJSC Peresvet-Invest. The city gave her the right to erect here not a cultural and business complex, but an office and residential complex with a kindergarten and an underground parking lot.
The span between the towers is about 35 meters. Reinforced concrete beams up to 3 meters high will be laid as the main load-bearing elements in the lower part of the bridges. To prevent deformations in places where the beams rest on the longitudinal bearing walls of the towers, the designers of the Promstroyproekt Institute and the architects of A. Asadov's Workshop have developed a unique system thanks to which two buildings connected to each other at the levels of the stylobate and bridges will be as stable as if it were one building. Thus, the designers took revenge for the underground force majeure, proving that the shortcomings of the site can be overcome, even for this they will have to come up with and build a "flying ship