The third floor of the commercial center houses the Century Cinema complex. South African clothing store Mr Price opened its first Rwandan branch in the complex in 2011, run by franchisee Deacons Kenya, while luxury coffee house Bourbon Coffee runs a cafe and outdoor seating area, one of its five outlets in the city. This was Nakumatt's second Kigali store, the other was in the Union Trade Centre. The largest retailer in the complex was a branch of the Kenyan supermarket chain Nakumatt, which occupied the ground and lower ground floors of the commercial centre, as well as the ground floor of the car park building. Each floor of the tower has 336 square metres (3,620 sq ft) of office space available. The tower block is occupied mostly by office space, with only the ground, lower ground and top floors being retail. The total retail floor space is around 10,000 square metres (110,000 sq ft) while office space is 7,000 square metres (75,000 sq ft). As of 2013 the tower is the tallest building in Kigali and Rwanda. The building consists of three components: the tower, which rises to 20 stories, the 4-story commercial center, and a car parking block which is also 4 stories tall. The building is on the site of the former central bus station, which was closed in 2005. Kigali City Tower is on Avenue du Commerce, also known as KN 76 Street, in Nyarugenge District, which is the central business district of Kigali. The three-screen Century Cinema complex was completed in March 2013 and opened in May 2013. The building was completed in early 2011, and retailers and companies began to occupy the space thereafter. Sekoko contracted Chinese company China Civil Engineering Construction to construct the building, and also sourced raw materials from his own depot in Guangzhou, China. By 2008, Sekoko's team had changed the building's shape to elliptical in order to create more floor space within the tower. At that stage the tower was proposed as a circular building with a spiral design, which would act primarily as a viewing platform. The first phase of the project was the construction of the car park building, which began in 2007. Sekoko, a Rwandan Patriotic Front veteran of the Rwandan Civil War, worked in Japan from 1995 to raise capital, before returning to Rwanda to start a coffee distribution business and later diversifying into real estate and hospitality. The Kigali City Tower project was begun in 2006 by Rwandan businessman Hatari Sekoko, through his company Doyelcy Limited. The changing economy has prompted a construction boom as the need for office and urban residential space has increased. This policy, which is based on liberalising the economy, privatising state owned industries and reducing red tape for businesses, has led to a strong GDP growth between 20 of 8% per year. Since his accession to power in 2000, President Paul Kagame has sought to transform Rwanda from an impoverished country dependent on subsistence agriculture into a middle income country with a strong service sector. The building work began in 2006 and the complex opened in 2011. The building, on the site of a former bus station, was developed by Rwandan businessman Hatari Sekoko and built by Chinese engineers. Major retailers include supermarket Nakumatt, Bourbon Coffee and a four screen cinema. The complex consists of a 20-storey tower, the tallest in the country, a four-story commercial center and a car park block, with space divided between leased office space and retail outlets. Kigali City Tower is a mixed use high rise office and retail building located in Kigali, the capital of Rwanda.