The building was to be located on the Martin Peña Channel waterfront across the street from the José Miguel Agrelot Coliseum and right next to the Milla de Oro area. The proposal took inspiration from the mangrove trees located on the channel. The building would be composed of four distinct towers which would twist together similar to the mangrove branches, giving people the opportunity to move horizontally and diagonally.[2] The entanglement of the different structures would be hidden behind a façades with different treatments, such as an "interlaced net" mimicking a mangrove.[3] The mangrove-tree inspiration would be further stressed by the use of vegetation and water features throughout the structure.[2] It would have "house[d] apartments, businesses, public spaces and...a hotel,"[3] and "direct access to the area’s bus and train stations [as well as a] future connection to a ferry stop."[4]
If built, the Mangrove Tower would have been Puerto Rico's "first true skyscraper"[3] at 206.5 metres (677 ft) as it would have exceeded the 150 metres (490 ft) threshold to be considered a skyscraper, since the tallest high-rise building in Puerto Rico is the Caribbean Sea View which stands at 102 metres (335 ft).[5]
The lot is now home to the Trocadero Diverplex, which houses commercial, entertainment and tourism spaces.[6]