The overall formal organisation of the scheme plays on the blurring of a clear formal structure. The underlying diagrammatic principle of bands and quarters is corrupted as though it has been deformed by the force of a magnetic field.
In the absence of a real density (the floor area ratio of the site is less than 1, similar to that of the surrounding housing quarters built during Soviet times) a form of differentiation is introduced that creates local pockets of higher density and conversely allows significant parts of the site to become public green area. The differentiation in density enhances the plausibility of the attractors and creates a kind of natural gravitation towards them.
The various segments of the scheme contain a mix of typologies, although the emphasis and proportional presence of those typologies in each segment is different, each segment aims to accommodate the largest possible variety that its character permits in order to attract the largest variety of people.
The housing quarters are composed of a series of clusters that enclose a series of semi private collective spaces. The clustering of the residential uses, besides inducing a more sustainable, ecological approach also reintroduces an enhanced sense of community. Collective, socially inspired types paradoxically only have been most successful when they have been built for the rich. Their reintroduction here could be a good opportunity to break with the trend that more affluence invariably leads to lower density and more individual forms of housing typologies.

