M Building by Stephane Maupin

M Building by Stephane Maupin

Shiny corrugated metal clads the two cascading stacks of apartments that make up this block in Paris by architect Stephane Maupin.

M Building by Stephane Maupin

The two symmetrical sides of the M Building slope down at 45-degree angles towards a small central courtyard.

M Building by Stephane Maupin

Some of the 20 apartments have gabled roofs, while some open onto balconies that face one another rather than the neighbouring school and adjacent cemetery.

M Building by Stephane Maupin

You may also want to take a look at another housing block in Paris we recently featured, or see all our stories about France here.

Photography is by Cecile Septet.

Here’s some more information from the architects:


The project takes place in the north Pierre Rebiere Street is a 600 meters long and 25 meters wide straight line.

M Building by Stephane Maupin

It is surrounded by the Batignoles’ cemetery on one side and by the back entrance of the international high school Honoré de Balzac on the other. The transformation of this narrow abandoned street allows the establishment of whole string of new buildings.

M Building by Stephane Maupin

The local rules for urbanism and the scope statements associated to this neighborhood minimizes plastic expressions. As a result it is not allowed to open any views on the cemetery. Thus directly implying a blind front for the future building and making it impossible to have normal front to front flats. The project impressively manages to get around those constraints: each of the flat benefits from both multiple sights and light sources at any time of day and year.

M Building by Stephane Maupin

This climatic mechanism suggested the shape of the building.

M Building by Stephane Maupin

Those solar templates sculpted internal slopes getting to the very heart of the construction. The 45° symmetrical slopes establish a triangular quadrant relieving the whole block from its compactness. As a result a central void appears where the dwellers can share a continually illuminated unique space. Hence as the light hits one side in the morning the opposite side will benefit from it in the afternoon.

M Building by Stephane Maupin

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The shape of this new space is favorable to the composition of an unusual landscape.
It is made from a cascade of Parisian roofs with its respective proportions and rhythm, as well as its apparent disorder. The whole is included in a succession of terraces which represent genuine extra room for the flats. Those terraces are so wide and comfortable that they become like private suspended gardens. In modern Babylonia, the Parisian Barbie rediscovers the joys of barbecue in the open air.

M Building by Stephane Maupin

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The staging withdraws itself from the urban stranglehold.

M Building by Stephane Maupin

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By refusing the frontal facing towards the street, the building creates a residential intimacy. The residents can communicate freely and develop the relations they desire. The unique vis-à-vis brings the dwellers together. Each resident is within reach of the other and that, without any road to cross. The building works as an inside village, within the town but still open towards the others.

M Building by Stephane Maupin

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Materials contribute to the staging of this unique ship. The body of the building is treated as a white hull. The homogeneous coating on the street fronts creates a casual relation to the rest of the agglomeration. The inside is a metallic and shining sheathing. The flats are revealed in a play of light and reflect. The building even possesses a central space dedicated to sharing.

M Building by Stephane Maupin

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Once the hall crossed, a simple staircase brings to an inside square at the heart of the building. The setting here is sympathetic. We wander on a wooden deck. We are surrounded by flowers and trees. Our sight gets lost in the foliage of the great neighboring trees.

M Building by Stephane Maupin

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Client: Paris Habitat
Team: SM
Project: 20 housings
Location: Rue Rebière, Paris
Date: January 2012
Surface: 1800m²
Cost: 2 500 000 €

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin and Nicolas Hugon

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

French architects Stephane Maupin and Nicolas Hugon have completed this ship-like building outside Paris as a base for rail and subway employees.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

Connected to the roof of the five-storey building are three blades resembling those of a helicopter, which contain street lights and solar panels.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

Called RATP Formation Centre, the projects has a combination of circular and rectangular windows.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

The following is from the architect:


The building is located on the fringe of Paris city, at ‘Porte de la Villette’, an area where the urban fabric dissolves into heterogeneous industrial infrastructures.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

Surrounded between Paris ring road, train tracks, factories, and social housings, we were inspired by the brutality of this collage where concrete pillars clashes with raw metal, gravels collides with noisy train sounds…a mineral and raw atmosphere.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

The triangular zone of intervention on the site releases itself naturally from the existing constraints.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

The result is a concrete piece of cake, a simple 22m high extrusion of that original triangular shape.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

The building regroups workshops dedicated to the maintenance of the Parisian subway transportation system that were previously dispersed in different places.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

Employees gathers to the building and get prepared before being routed towards damaged rails tracks sites.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

Each of the building’s five floors hosts a different activity and program, first floor is a warehouse, the second floor is filled by lockers, the third floor is a classroom, the fourth floor is for management, the fifth floor welcomes a restaurant with a large terrace offering overlooking views towards the Parisian’s ring road.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

The five floors of the buildings are arranged and organized around a central convivial staircase.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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We designed that staircase as an amazing interior procession.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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All other circulation spaces are designed as playful additions to the building’s main structure: footbridges, staircases and aerial lifts create a multidimensional atmosphere with varied spatial experiences.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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As the work is hard, the lockers room is designed as a welcoming and release space, where the combination of washbasin, soap dispenser and mirror with a colorized background resembles a friendly smiley.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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The project is crowned by a contemporary tripod helix.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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This tripod is in fact a combination of the vertical chimney and the light projectors for car parks and areas surrounding the building.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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It also helps to heat sanitary water, providing a large area of solar panels.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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This strong element is a sign of the architect’s engagement to environmental convictions. It proves that the French ‘HQE’ label can also be interpreted with fun.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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Trough delicate reaction to the site, and careful organization of the circulations and building’s access, we intended to affirm the building as a ‘worker’s palace’ instead of a banal utilitarian building.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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We could easily imagine the head of this submarine bursting through the ice…

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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Credits : Stephane Maupin / Nicolas Hugon
Year :2010
Collaborators : Jérome Santel, Gwenael Lechapelain
Area : Paris
Photos credits : Cécile Septet

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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See also:

.

Laboratory
by TEN Arquitectos
Manny
by Tétrarc
Laboratory
by Héctor Fernández-Elorza