In the early 2000s Düsseldorf recorded a greater demand for well-located inner-city residences of a more sophisticated standard. The design chooses an ensemble consisting of three residential blocks arranged in echelons around a quiet square as the central point of connection. It thus elegantly mediates with a harsh axial-symmetrical urban side and a softer edge towards the park between the urban and the rural space. This building shape radically symbolises the new architecture of compact density, which demonstrates the demands on bourgeois residential styles. In reference to its historical context, the façades emulate the height of the neighbouring buildings. Clad in noble materials applied in fine craftsmanship, they distinctly take up the individual storeys and give the ensemble the weight and power of an urban building. In reference to a differentiated sequence of rooms, the transition towards the indoor rooms is astutely enacted. Large entrances combine a representative generosity with security, emphasised by walls panelled or faced with natural stone. The generous design continues on the actual floors; the residences' antechamber expands into well-proportioned rooms offering excellent illumination and a fine interior.