The Free City housing estate has been designed in the form of a traditional Polish town. It is full of green space and has a transparent system of internal streets, a representative main alley and a city square. The designers have made sure that the major part of the original landscape, with its gentle hills, meadows and an old orchard, could be preserved and incorporated into the future real estate investment. The estate comprises eight multi-family buildings of housing and services, the height of which has been adjusted to the hilly terrain. The complex includes around 1200 flats, which gives it the status of an independent housing estate.
The three-floor buildings boast representative halls and functional, spacious flats with ceilings at a height of 2.70 m. Images of birds are the main decorative motif of the interiors of all buildings. Each building bears its own name which derives from the name of one of the local bird species and the interiors of each building are decorated with photos of many different kinds of birds.
The adopted compositional and functional principle of circulation within the estate creates a clear system of pedestrian routes. The routes which run between the wings of the buildings connect the main axis to staircase entrances and to pedestrian routes that lead to streets and parking lots. The designed urban layout allows for a clear distribution of functions within the estate. The type of urban planning applied here allows for transparent location of individual functions within the estate. Retail and service facilities have been placed at the ground floor of each section of the estate, along the main pedestrian circulation area and around the central square. The architectural shape of the housing estate allows for its optimal adaptation to the very particular natural terrain.