The estate mainly contains offices, along with a number of shops, cafes and restaurants meant to populate and activate the square and urban area.
The building consists of five fused, circular ‘towers’ of different heights: A composition relating to the entire complex scale and character of the urban area, giving the house a unique architectural identity in the overall impression of the location.
Contrary to previous development at the site, the house is not combined with the neighboring properties but lies freely at Axel Square with access from all sides, in this way freeing itself entirely from the city block’s direction-fixed, closed structures.
The horizontal and vertical ‘Brise Soleil’ of the building is an architectural main point. The shading adds depth and relief to the voluminous building, in addition to shielding from the sun and providing shelter from the wind around the curved tombac covered facades.
Stairs, elevators, secondary rooms and technical shafts are grouped as cores in the center of the circular curves, leaving the floorage along the winding facades free to establish open workspaces, cellular offices, meeting and quiet rooms of various sizes, along with the desired ground level functions directed at the audience.