Construction has begun on a new skyscraper, Liberty Tower, at 54 Grzybowska Street in Warsaw, one of the tallest apartment buildings in this part of the city. The investment by Resi Capital, part of the Cavatina Group, and Epstein will result in a 43-storey high-rise with an extensive residential programme and areas reserved exclusively for residents.
Liberty Tower at the junction of Wola and Śródmieście
Liberty Tower is being built on a plot at the intersection of Grzybowska and Żelazna Streets, purchased by Resi Capital in 2024. The area was severely damaged during World War II, and after 1945, many properties remained vacant or were used on a temporary basis. In recent years, the area where Wola and Śródmieście meet has been undergoing intensive changes, attracting new residential and office investments. The planned building will be 140 metres high and will accommodate 587 apartments ranging in size from 26 to 124 square metres. The design also includes five levels of underground parking with 267 parking spaces.

Design by Cavatina Group and Epstein
The architectural concept for Liberty Tower was developed by the Cavatina Group team in collaboration with the international firm Epstein. The building was designed as a slender, proportional structure with large glazed areas that open up the interior to the panorama of Warsaw. The authors of the design paid attention to the scale of the building and its reception in the immediate vicinity of the existing buildings. As Piotr Jasiński from Cavatina Group emphasises, the idea was to create a tower that would be clearly recognisable in the Warsaw skyline, yet calm and neutral in the everyday contact of users with the street space.
The new Liberty Tower skyscraper in Warsaw
Liberty Tower will feature extensive common areas available exclusively to residents. The programme includes a lobby with 24-hour concierge service, a wellness and spa area, a gym, a cinema room and a cigar lounge. The layout of these functions on different levels of the building refers to the idea of a vertical city, where many everyday needs can be met without leaving the building. Resi Capital, with a portfolio of over 2,000 properties in cities such as Wrocław, Katowice and Łódź, sees Liberty Tower as the next stage in the development of the residential segment in central locations in Poland’s largest urban centres.
Source:cavatina.pl
Read also:Architecture in Poland|Warsaw|Skyscraper|City|Metamorphosis




