Business
13:17 7 May 2026
Post by: WBJ

Liberty Tower: Warsaw’s New Height for Urban Living

Cavatina Group’s 140-meters residential skyscraper at Grzybowska 54 opens apartment sales, bringing Class A office standards to prestige living in the heart of Wola.

Liberty Tower: Warsaw’s New Height for Urban Living

Warsaw’s skyline has long been dominated by glass-and-steel towers built for business. Roughly nine in ten of the city’s high-rises are commercial: offices, hotels, mixed-use developments. For decades, prestige residential living at true altitude has been the province of just a handful of buildings. Liberty Tower is set to change that.

Rising 140 meters above Grzybowska 54 in the heart of Wola, Liberty Tower is a 43-floor residential skyscraper developed by Resi Capital by Cavatina Group, one of Poland’s leading property developers. Designed by Cavatina’s in-house Architecture Department under director Piotr Jasiński, in collaboration with Epstein International Architecture Office, the building received its construction permit in early 2026. The project includes 587 apartments ranging from 26 to 97 square meters, and is now on sale, positioning Liberty Tower as Warsaw’s newest and most technically sophisticated prestige address.


Liberty Tower by Cavatina


A tower that refuses to stand still

The building’s architecture is a deliberate departure from Warsaw convention. Liberty Tower comprises three distinct volumes stacked one atop another, each resting on an irregular polygon with planes angled in different directions, each rotated slightly relative to the one below. The result is a structure that presents a different silhouette from every vantage point. From the Żelazna-Grzybowska intersection, it looks one way; from a distance, another; and from the upper floors of surrounding buildings, yet another.


Liberty Tower - Concierge


Interiors that begin with emotion

The design of Liberty Tower’s common areas was led by Lena Suliga, Cavatina’s Director of Arrangements and Design, drawing on references from Manhattan and Dubai — not for extravagance, but for the quality of prestige embedded in every detail.

“Our task was to build around emotions. Not simply say: this is stone, this is metal. We wanted to say: here it is comfortable, here you are in a space dedicated to you, one that calms you and separates you from the noise of the city.”

The double-height main lobby sets the tone immediately. Natural stone floors, travertine walls, and deliberate minimalism create a space where detail carries all the weight. The structural columns, two stories tall, are rendered as architectural objects whose form abstractly invokes trees, visible through the glass façade from the street even before visitors enter the building. A mirrored ceiling doubles their apparent height, giving the lobby the sensation of ascending without limit.

The reception desk is, by design, a sculpture: a block of glass or resin in which shaped forms inspired by marble, stone, or concrete have been encased. Plants are not placed in pots but sealed within two glass vitrines flanking the desk, aesthetically permanent and maintenance-light. “I have never seen a reception like this,” says Suliga. “We wanted that the moment anyone walks in, they are surrounded by detail unlike anything they have seen elsewhere.”


Liberty Tower - Cigar Room


Bronze, not gold – a considered palette

Gold, long the default currency of luxury interiors, was deliberately excluded. In its place: copper and brushed bronze, warmer and more restrained. Suliga regards the choice as genuinely generational: “Bronze is classical, timeless. It will not age.” Liberty Tower may be the first Polish residential development at this scale to deploy bronze as its dominant metallic accent.

The corridors match the lobby’s ambition all the way to the front door of each apartment. Warm wood-effect cladding lines the circulation cores; copper detailing, walnut-colored doors, and LED base lighting create a hotel-quality sequence from lobby to threshold. Apartment numbers are a separate design object: backlit profiles mounted against stone-effect panels.

A wellness floor and a living landscape

The first floor is reserved exclusively for residents: a gym, a two-person massage room, a cinema lounge, and a spa with three sauna types and jacuzzi baths, separated from one another not by walls but by curtains of running water. A second water curtain encloses an intimate rest zone with a backlit artwork behind it, completing a sensory sequence designed for urban decompression. “We are in the middle of a city that is relentlessly loud, demanding, and stimulating,” says Suliga. “The building’s spaces are designed to give people a center of calm. Every detail is there to make you feel safe and at peace.”

The outdoor terrace, also on the first floor, centers on a reflecting pool with sculpture, surrounded by seasonally shifting planting arranged in distinct micro-zones, each one a different visual experience as residents move through the space. The same landscape has been designed to be read from above, from apartment windows: its copper-edged forms and textured planting compose a living image that changes all year round.


Liberty Tower - Lobby


Warsaw’s next standard

Liberty Tower enters a small and selective market. Its residential peers, Cosmopolitan and Złota 44, belong to a different generation. As Warsaw’s newest and most technically equipped prestige high-rise, built by a developer whose entire commercial track record rests on Class A quality, it arrives at a location its predecessors cannot match: directly adjacent to Browary Warszawskie, with schools, green space, and one of the city’s most active cultural and culinary destinations within walking distance.

Apartments in Liberty Tower are available now at libertytower.pl



More News

lifestyle

LifeStyle
1 month ago

Poles limiting alcohol and sugar in their diets

LifeStyle
2 months ago

Winter relaxation embraced by nature

LifeStyle
2 months ago

BROOKLYN WARSAW: New York Energy in the Heart of the Capital

LifeStyle
3 months ago

Sales of works of art at auction in Poland exceeded PLN 400 mln

Book of Lists

Book of Lists
5 years ago

The largest Polish companies under the Book of Lists microscope! Book of Lists 2020/2021 certificates have been awarded.