[6] The tower's floor-plan design is based on the shape of a Catherine wheel and is typically divided into five apartments per floor with separating walls radiating out from the central core.
The building is divided into three distinct parts—a base that houses the communal facilities of the building including a lobby, business lounge, gym, spa and swimming pool; a middle section containing most of the apartments; and an upper section where the façade reduces in diameter to provide 360-degree terraces and a wind turbine that tops the structure.
The wind turbine, developed by Anthony Mewburn-Crook in collaboration with British green-technology company Matilda's Planet, powers the tower's common lighting, whilst creating virtually no noise or vibration.
By October 2012, the steel and the core had reached full height, and the installation of the wind turbine began with the glass a few floors below the top of the tower.
The owner of the five-storey penthouse was the family of Andrei Guriev, who was believed to be installing a Russian Orthodox chapel.