A former water tower was converted into a residential building. This is what they look like from the inside

I felt compelled to send you pictures of this place the moment I laid eyes on it.

The memory surged back to me of my own experience at a building very similar to this one on my first business trip to Sweden (well, what a fascinating period in my life!).

In the middle of the 2000s. The apartments in this skyscraper were reportedly sold at a ridiculously high price per square meter, according to my colleagues back then.

The rich always want to reside in a unique location and have a hand in shaping history.

It is not commonplace to renovate water towers, as I discovered later.

Observatories, in addition to apartments, restaurants, and hotels, are formed from them.

In the Tyumen region, where I spent some time, for instance, a couple of water towers have taken on new and intriguing uses; one of them is a children’s creative club in the city center, and another is a private observatory in the suburbs where, for a nominal fee, you can gaze at the night sky.

Come on, we’re already in this flat. In a Stockholm suburb, it occupies a former water tower from the year 1912.

Water was supplied to the surrounding neighborhoods by the tower until its closure and preservation in 1959.

A residential building was made out of the structure in the 1980s.

From each of the five units here, you can take in breathtaking views of the neighborhood and even the river.

The height of the tower is 28 meters.

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