Zap’ Ados by Bang Architectes

French studio Bang Architectes has converted a former peanut factory in Calais into a skateboarding park with a bright orange mesh facade (photos by Julien Lanoo).

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

In order to increase natural light inside the warehouse the architects removed concrete walls from the east and west elevations and replaced them with glazing, screened behind the layer of steel mesh.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

Two new volumes project from the facade to reveal the locations of a youth centre positioned along one edge of the building and a raised platform opposite accommodating more skating tracks.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

An enclosed passageway with entrances at both ends crosses the width of the building to provide a safe place for spectators to stand.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

If skateparks grab your interest, check out one designed by a skateboarding champion in Germany.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

Here’s the full description from the architects:


ZAP’ADOS

Create a signal in the landscape

The operation takes place along a canal in St. Pierre, which is the former industrial district of Calais. It continues the urban renewal initiated by La Cité de la Dentelle (by Moatti & Rivière Architects) located a hundred meters downstream. In this bleak urban landscape, the conversion of the existing industrial hall has to be visible.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

The future facility must signal its presence and invite potential users, the young and curious, to enter. The high clearance at the front of the building offers increased visibility of the west gable from the surrounding area. This gable, which has been completely redesigned, will project a strong signal into the public space.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

Reclassify the hall

The existing building is a common industrial hall with no outstanding features, consisting of a concrete structure filled with precast concrete panels and a roof of cement sheets. The hall was once a roasted peanut factory, followed by various other incarnations (including a go-kart track) before being abandoned for several years.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

Prior to handing and processing it had been dilapidated, vandalised and had become structurally unsafe. The first task was to open the dark hall before curettage and structural recovery. This was achieved by removing precast concrete panels on the eastern and western facades to release through-views and bring natural light into the heart of the building.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

Express the new assignment of the building

The youth centre and the skate park extends beyond the gable and form two protrusions, which clearly signifies that the building has a new purpose. One protrusion stands on the floor and emerges from the skateboarder club and youth centre, forming a point of contact between the inside and outside space. The other is cantilevered and a launch pad that overlooks the front square, featuring skaters waiting in turn before taking off.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

The two prismatic volumes, like opened arms, reclassify the free space of the front square and act as an invitation to enter. The architectural expression is unified by a common envelope made of expanded metal, which turns the silhouette from a hanger into a prism protruding from a singular hybrid form.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

The metal mesh allows spectators to watch activities inside and is gradually perforated from top to bottom. The mesh acts like a shutter, controling direct sunlight and the color is stricking; it is deliberately conspicuous. This colorful mesh protects the equipment as the expanded metal is very resistant and anti-graffiti. It is doubled with a curtain wall to protect users from prevailing winds and reduce any noise nuisance to nearby houses. Outside the building the front square is treated using an orange frame to draw parking spaces, which overlap the textures of the existing floor coatings.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

Linking the two programs

Inside the hall the various program elements are organised longitudinally, to optimise the length of the skate tracks and provide an entrance to the youth centre along the southern facade. When entering the building, there are a series of enclosed and heated rooms installed on the right identified by emerging prism. This set is built with a light frame and placed on the existing slab, with entrances distributed along an indoor walkway.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

This walkway is fully integrated into the space used for the skate park, separated using a handrail that runs its entire length. It enables “spectators” to watch the skaters safely. The long wall is covered with an acoustic fabric stretched to form large “dimples”. This absorbing surface is designed to reduce reverberated sounds caused by skateboarding on hard surfaces.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

The wall is also provided with vertical windows offering views for both users of the skate park and youth centre. A sinusoid layer of large acoustic baffles is suspended from the ceiling to increase acoustic comfort for users. These technical elements offer inexpensive modifications that morph the inner space and hide the unsightly ceiling.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

Create skate tracks

The modules are arranged in a strips logically oriented along the full length of the hall. On the west side a raised platform overlooks the front square. It serves as a high point: the launcher. The bowls (rare in the region) are installed at the east end of the hall to maintain space clearance. These complex curved surfaces are works of joinery and carpentry of great sophistication.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

In the center of the hall is the funbox. A calm initiation zone is arranged along the indoor walkway and punctuated by modules. The modules are made of wood (not concrete) to maintain the adaptability of the skate park and the reversibility of the original allocation of the hall.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

Construction system

  • Structure of the gables and volumes emerging: structural steel
  • West facade: the existing concrete columns and structural steel are “sandwiched” by painted gradually expanded aluminum on the outside wall and the curtain wall noise attenuation inside
  • Acoustic wall on the indoor street: textile glass fiber coated with PVC stretched over two layers of cotton batting and put on a sheet of extruded PVC formed.
  • Ceiling: industrial acoustic suspended baffles made out of melamine
  • Skate joinery: wood frame and covering in birch plywood from Finland coated by a clear glaze.
  • External joinery: aluminum with double glazing.
  • Roofing of emerging volumes: self-protected bitumen.

Zap' Ados by Bang Architectes

Operation’s name: ZAP’ ADOS
Location: 87 quai de Lucien L’heureux 62100 Calais
Client: Ville de Calais
Design Architects: Bang Architectes (Nicolas Gaudard and Nicolas Hugoo) Engineer: B&R ingénierie
Program: conversion of industrial hall into Skate Park and Youth Centre Floor area: 2 760 m2
Total cost: 1,5M € H.T.
Start of study: June 2010
Delivery: December 2011

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

French photographer Julien Lanoo has sent us some images of this extension to a house in Paris by French studio Bang Architectes.

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

Called Heliotrope Raising, the project involved topping an existing house with this glazed wooden-framed structure.

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

Situated on a narrow plot of land, the original house was too small in size and overlooked by neighbouring buildings, meaning a limited amount of light entered the space.

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

The architects have extended the house vertically, adding two extra floors and creating a new living space at the very top, which is bathed in natural light.

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

Photographs are copyright Julien Lanoo.

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

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Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

Here’s some more information from the architects:


HELIOTROPE RAISING

Initially, there is a modest little house, totalizing an area of 60 m² on two levels, situated in a backyard plot, in a very narrow area of the 20th district of Paris. Enclosed and humid because of the presence of an underground aqueduct, the house is plunged into darkness as the buildings nearby and especially a 20m high wall cover any chance of light.

Beyond the obvious need to increase the family’s living space, there is also a true a desire to gain light and visual clearance.

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

The search for light is what guides the design of the project until the genesis of an “heliotropist” architecture. It is therefore necessary to gain height over the old construction up to the maximum volume of capacity, limits of urban regulations, and budget. Naturally, the center of gravity of the new dwelling, that is to say the living rooms, finds its place on the top floor.

The access to the site through a 90cm wide corridor and the structural weakness of the existing building makes us opt for a lightweight wooden structure wich can easily be manipulated. On the wide length of the house, side yard, the existing walls are so fragile that, as a precaution, large “stilts” in glulam will span them.

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

On the newly created floors, on all open sides, the skeleton of the wood frame wall will be exhibited. Structural elements will be displayed every 80 cm, combined with a filling of a full height volume of glass for maximum natural light.

Structural glued laminated Douglas, extended and narrowed asymmetrically draws a regular vertical grid which acts as a sunshade and opposes a kind of three-dimensional filter to vis-à-vis. This principle applied consistently unifies the created volume and gives it a clear expression, despite its modest size, in a dominant and diverse site. Finally, this technique removes the problem of façade composition on such a small volume.

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

Internally, the house is organized around a central space occupied by the staircase beneath a canopy angle (regulation impact of a prospect of a neighboring building). The hopper, in decreasing width, lets the light descend from the canopy to the DRC. A small south-facing terrace on the 3rd floor benefits directly from the sun and the view over the colorful roofs of the neighborhood. In the new part of the house, partitioning is voluntarily minimized. The facades are left free to all partitions or doors; we flow along to enter the bathroom or walking closet.

Program: adding levels and renovating a house for a couple and two children
Location: rue de la Mare, Paris 20ème
Total net floor area: 170 m²
Creates net floor area: 98 m²
Total cost: 270 K € (all taxes included)
Client: Private
Project manager: Bang Architects (Nicolas and Nicolas Gaudard Hugoo)
Start of study: February 2009
Delivery: October 2010

Construction system:

  • structural and facade: glued laminated douglas (untreated)
  • floors and roof: pine wood panels (OSB)
  • external wall: wooden frame wall + larch cladding
  • insulation: 12 cm wood wool
  • window frames: aluminum thermal break with double-glazing 6/16/6, argon, low emissivity
  • covering: self-protected tar

Environmental approach:

  • compact volume
  • thermal insulation quality: wood wool on 12 cm
  • no thermal bridges through “all wood”
  • structural elements acting as shading in summer
  • Low emissivity glass
  • window frames with thermal bridges break
  • natural light from all parts (except toilets) to reduce energy consumption
  • healthy materials: wood, linoleum, wood wool, etc..

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