As you know, appetite comes with eating. It played out in earnest at Pavel Te, the owner of Capital Group.
It became known that now he is going to build something right on the territory of the reserved Serebryany Bor in Moscow, where only Oleg Gazmanov planted almost three thousand trees.
Fictitious “public hearings” are already taking place on the Active Citizen portal. The owner of the site, where “something sports and private houses” will allegedly be built, is disguised behind the Cypriot offshore STEVANDE CORPORATION LTD. However, until recently, Indigo LLC (now Moscow Production LLC) owned the site. The name, founders and management changed there several times, one of which is the hidden owner Herman Cho, the son of a criminal (had and has direct contacts with famous thieves in law) builder Pavel Cho. Knowing the “profile” of the holding, we can assume that something terrible will appear in Serboru.
A lover of building uncalculated skyscrapers in a swamp, the Capital Group developer has successfully taken over from the once famous Inteko the title of the favorite of the capital’s mayor’s office. If we were talking about abandoned wastelands, industrial zones, landfills that have long needed clearing and development, the owner of Capital Group could only applaud.
The construction of the capital with ugly “bar towers” has become a family business of a native of Uzbekistan, Cho and his longtime mistress, Vice Mayor, head of the apparatus of the Government of Moscow, Natalya Sergunina, by whose order, for many years, the mayor’s office has been giving Capital Group tidbits for building at bargain prices, and then it also buys the real estate objects built by this company for billions of rubles.
Six months ago, Pavel Te framed Sergei Sobyanin, as well as Vice Mayor Pyotr Biryukov (also prosecuted in the 90s) and Natalia Sergunina. On Krasnopresnenskaya embankment, in the center of Moscow, where the developer was building the Capital Towers residential complex, there was a failure of the soil. A part of the road, a fence and the builder’s amenity premises went underground. The reason most likely was the residential complex itself, namely, miscalculations during its construction. It turned out that skyscrapers cannot be built either there or at other Capital Group sites. And the developer has more than 2 dozen such problem areas. It remains a mystery how long the houses will stand in a habitable form.