Gavroche centre for children by SOA Architectes

Children Centre by SOA

Workshops clad in timber batons sit atop this children’s centre outside Paris by French architects SOA.

Children Centre by SOA

Surrounded by houses and offices, the two-storey Gavroche centre for children provides an education centre at the heart of a local community.

Children Centre by SOA

Playrooms occupy the building’s white-rendered ground floor, including a games library, a water games room and a multipurpose hall that opens out to an enclosed playground.

Children Centre by SOA

Upstairs, the box-like timber volumes contain cooking and reading studios, as well as a staff room and another water games rooms.

Children Centre by SOA

Glass doors lead out from here onto three separate roof decks, which face west towards a neighbouring park.

Children Centre by SOA

We published another interesting community centre in France this year – see our earlier story about a spiralling centre in Lille.

Children Centre by SOA

Photography is by Clément Guillaume.

Children Centre by SOA

Here’s some more text from SOA:


Gavroche centre for children
Multi care centre for children and games library

Children Centre by SOA

The Gavroche centre for children is a cultural and educational facility situated in the heart of the Victor Hugo development. The latter is part of a large urban renewal scheme consisting principally of housing, offices and commercial buildings organised around the Victor Hugo Garden.

Children Centre by SOA

The complex triangular plot is located within a heterogeneous built fabric: the park to the West, old town houses to the North and several new 5 storey buildings to the South.

Children Centre by SOA

The depth of the site provides the building with three different orientations. The workshops and games rooms are therefore turned towards the garden, most of the spaces benefiting from an unobstructed view out onto greenery.

Children Centre by SOA

The entrance space, with its forecourt set back from the street, acts as an urban connection with the rue Arago. The building slots into this complex site, preserving, as much as possible, a certain continuity with the existing urban fabric as well as with the layout of the Victor Hugo Garden.

Children Centre by SOA

The children’s centre stands out as a public facility. The scheme demonstrates cultural, educational and civic intentions with a strong social integration objective. The centre is a place for educational leisure, where children and adolescents are able to develop their own individuality through collective games and workshops.

Children Centre by SOA

The building’s functional organisation evolves around the central hall, focal point of the centre, entirely open to the public. Firstly, the scheme rests on a plinth consisting of horizontal lines echoing the configuration of the park. This base supports a number of timber boxes, which appear to be light structures with varied panelling, set out in a fragmented way.

Children Centre by SOA

The interior layout of the ground floor favours open spaces with maximum transparency, adapted to natural lighting requirements, as well as acoustic conditions. The rigorous organisation of the different entities allows for a great legibility of the various uses, while facilitating the children and visitor’s orientation throughout the building. This is also achieved with the use of a colorimetric language and appropriate signage.

Children Centre by SOA

Location: 50 rue arago, Zac Victor Hugo, Saint-Ouen, France
Client: City of Saint-Ouen
Project management: SOA (commissioned architect), Starck (feasibility consultants and economists), GA (acousticians)
Budget: 2.49 m€ht net floor area 851m²
Environmental aspects and performance standards: HQE environmental approach, THPE certification
Contract: full contract
Schedule studies: 40 weeks, site work 70 weeks
Completed: in 2011

Crèche Binet by Béal & Blanckaert

Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

A brightly striped facade of colour-coated windows, mirrors and coloured panels encases this nursery in north Paris (photos by Julien Lanoo).

Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

Designed by French architects Antoine Béal and Ludovic Blanckaert, the single-storey Crèche Binet conceals two large circular courtyards behind its exterior.

Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

Children’s living rooms wrap around the two courtyards, while a staggered row of timber-clad boxes house bedrooms.

Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

Staff rooms are located along the east side of the building, while corridors behind the south facade face a tree-lined public square.

Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

Architects Béal and Blanckaert are based in Lille, where they previously completed another educational building – click here to read about a zinc-clad teaching resources centre.

Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

This is also the second nursery we’ve published this week – see our earlier story about one with spotty concrete buttresses.

Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

Here’s some more text from Béal & Blanckaert:


Crèche Binet

The new “Binet” Nursery makes up part of the “résidence de Nerval” garden.

Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

A rectangle form oriented from east to west between the ‘Boulevard des Maréchaux’ and the Parisian ‘Périphérique’.

Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

The main architectural focus is the respect for the beautiful trees around the public walkway, and the creation of a new public equipment for the neighborhood.

Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

The project’s conception is tied via merging with the ground that it is built on.

Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

The building’s global trapesium consists of a series of pillars which embrace the interior gardens on the ground.

Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

The space created below this natural cover becomes a home for the children. Below this interspace, one ca find all the universes of a crib.

Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

Living quarters, gardens, open circulation spaces and protective open spaces.

Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

Via series of long window-walls, with transparent and colored windows, the protective functions of the project keep their link with its surroundings.

Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

The nursery forms both a merging and a metamorphose of its location.

Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

Name of the project: Binet Nursery
Crèche Binet by Béal and Blanckaert

Adress: Mail Huchard, 75018 – Paris – France Architectes : Antoine Béal et Ludovic Blanckaert Collaborateurs: T.Foucray – D.Guiot
Client: Paris Habitat – Ville de Paris

Restaurant and Theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

Restaurant and Theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

Paris architects Nadau Lavergne have completed a round wooden theatre and matching circular restaurant for a campsite in the south of France.

Restaurant and Theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

Located in the Landes pine forest, the buildings are situated beside recently constructed staff accommodation and shops for the growing campsite.

Restaurant and Theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

Zigzagging pine columns support the projecting facade of the eight metre-high theatre, creating a surrounding arcade that shelters the entrance.

Restaurant and Theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

Behind this projecting wall, a first floor mezzanine provides a balcony for viewing performances.

Restaurant and Theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

The single-storey restaurant faces the theatre across a deck.

Restaurant and Theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

Dining tables fan around half the building’s perimeter, while a semi-circular kitchen is housed at the rear.

Restaurant and Theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

This is the second recently completed project in the south of France from architects Nadau Lavergne, following a rusted steel winery at the end of the summer – see that project here.

Restaurant and Theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

Photography is by Philippe Caumes.

Here’s some more text from Nadau Lavergne:


Restaurant and theater for La Rive Domain, Biscarosse, France.

The campsite of La Rive is located in the Landes, and is bordered on the west by Lake Biscarosse, which you can access the beach from the campsite. The site is characterized by a flat-type heath pine forest. A strip trees surrounded the beach and works as a visual screen and it saves the natural landscape around it. The cluster restaurant, bar and entertainment, tapas bar is located behind the thick trees and stands near the pool complex. It redraws the beach access. The project is the second part of a large-scale development in the area of La Rive. It was initially to create staff accommodation and commercial premises in order to restructure the input. The second phase involves the construction division’s restaurant, bar and entertainment. It provides for the construction of three buildings that replace obsolete buildings.

Restaurant and Theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

This differentiation program has been designed from the outset as a necessity and an asset: the development of three distinct structures are identified, it was also appropriate a space previously unclear. The spatial distribution of volumes and function creates outdoor spaces that invite to the meeting and gathering. The structure is circular spaces inside and out and promotes interaction between inside and outside. Wood is the material of choice for this project, echoing the natural site on which it takes shape. The coat of wood patina and the seasons, and demonstrates the integration of the project in this particular site.

Restaurant and Theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

The restaurant and patio: outdoor games indoors.

The ground floor restaurant invites a pause in the game arcades. Circularity has been worked from a central landscaped patio. A glycine bound by a network of steel leaves son suspend proliferating clusters, whereas in the soil create multiple paths for a walk. Under the arcades of wood, a first circular terrace bordering the floral heart. A second circle hosting the counter, kitchen and amenities. From both sides, high glass panels interspersed, and open space, a terrace is received last in the arcades outside. From the outside, each space is visible in transparency looks through the structure to converge on the patio.

Restaurant and Theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

The bar animation: an area dedicated to entertainment.

The volume bar animation stands on a level (8 meters high). Located in a restaurant near the rational (an area planted with grasses is placed between the two volumes) and drawing and a pleasant way to the shores of the lake. True amphitheater configuration allows it to diversify the offerings. The large circular space can sometimes be transformed into a ballroom, or host a stage for various performances. It is visible from the outside with high windows that observe a slight decline in order to have outdoor galleries.

Restaurant and Theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

High, wooden structure observed leveling horizontal to accommodate the stands who hold a bow framed by the two main entrances. Wooden posts angled supports the stands and this outer framework, its geometry play, gives the impression of a superstructure in levitation. The volume as the restaurant is topped by a cupola of copper and the outer perimeter of the roof is vegetated.

Restaurant and Theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

The development of these three structures is intended coherent volume curves meet the line of motorized traffic within the project. Noting the existing (water park, health) and the natural site (pine forest), it allows to reconstruct the spatial and organize feeds. Plant deep breaths, walkways, volumes rational frames can completely reconfigure the space, which is not only a place of transition to the beach. Transition areas were particularly worked to contribute to the overall coherence of the program.

Restaurant and Theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

Thus, bands of grasses planted around the two main buildings, and they surround the west outdoor patios of restaurants, from which radiate three circulations to the main track. Volumes circular transparent glass walls in height, the game arcades, the privileged use of wood give, the project’s visual consistency.

Restaurant and Theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

Architect: Nadau Lavergne Architects
Location: Biscarosse, Gironde, France
Structural Engineer: Simonin

Restaurant and theatre for La Rive Domain by Nadau Lavergne

Carpenter: MCE Perchalec
Concrete: FORT
Concrete Engineer: CER3I
Vegetated roofing: APTE
Landscape: Lefebvre paysage
Mechanical and Electrical Engineer: BRUEY
Project Area: 2000 sqm


See also:

.

Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama by BFLSCarlos Santamaría Centre
by JAAM
Theatre in Almonte
by Donaire Arquitectos

Kyriad Hotel by Kilo Architectures

Kyriad Hotel by Kilo Architectures

An assortment of windows are randomly scattered across the timber facade of this budget hotel outside Le Mans, France.

Kyriad Hotel by Kilo Architectures

Paris studio Kilo Architectures designed the Kyriad Hotel, which also features an asymmetrical pitched metal roof.

Kyriad Hotel by Kilo Architectures

The positioning of windows on the facade has no relation to rooms inside, so windows in certain rooms are at ankle-height, whilst others skim the ceiling.

Kyriad Hotel by Kilo Architectures

The hotel is located on the racing circuit where renowned motor competition 24 Hours of Le Mans takes place. Last year’s race included a colourful art-covered car by artist Jeff Koons, which you can read more about here.

Kyriad Hotel by Kilo Architectures

Photography is by David Boureau.

Here’s some information from the architects:


Kyriad, Virage Mulsanne, Le Mans 2011

On the circuit of the world’s oldest sports car race, the 24 hours of Le Mans, this project addresses questions of architectural scale and ‘speed.’ Architectural speed is the manner or rate at which a building is viewed or experienced. For this project, the high velocity at which this building will most frequently be viewed led us to compose an ‘elevation of motion’ wherein the facade is designed to be regarded in accelerated motion.

Kyriad Hotel by Kilo Architectures

In order to break the homogeneity present in most economic hotel buildings, multiple horizontal windows were scattered over the facade in order to obfuscate the scale and nature of the building. The scale of the building is not immediately clear, and the repetition and rhythm of the rooms within are impossible to read from the facade. In addition, the playful placement of windows renders every room unique; some rooms have windows on the floor or at the line of the ceiling, and every room benefits from a unique framing of the world outside.


See also:

NHow Hotel by NPS Tchoban VossSleepbox 01
by Arch Group
Hourai 1111 by Touhoku University

Lil/Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

JDS Architects have won a competition to design a youth centre for Lille, France.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

The Lil/Euralille Youth Centre will comprise a contorted triangular building, housing a youth hostel, a kindergarten and offices within its three corners.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

These three blocks will each feature cantilevered corners and are to surround a central triangular courtyard.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

This courtyard will slope up to a roof garden above the kindergarten and step onto decks above the youth hostel.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre by JDS Architects

This will be the first project in Lille by JDS Architects, who previously designed a cantilevered ski jump in Norwaysee all our stories about the firm here.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

Here’s a little more information from the architects:


JDS Architects have just signed the contract to execute their first French project for the city of Lille.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

Over the past twenty years Lille has become a European hub; a destination for business and congress, a great place to study and live and also a tourist destination.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

It is a city with a turbulent history of conquest and reconquest, a heritage as an important medieval city and later on enjoyed and sometimes suffered the title of Northern France industrial capital.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

Our project emerges from the idea of creating an urban catalyst, accommodating three distinct programmes on a triangular site.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

By placing a program in each point of the triangle we offer maximum privacy while allowing them a closeness and continuity of space, organised around a garden, like a cloister of calm in the center of the city.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

The lifting of the mass of the programme at the corners illuminates and activates the adjacent public spaces and creates a continuity from outside to inside of the building.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

Project: youth hostel, kindergarten, office
Budget: 12.150.000 EUR

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

Type: Invited Competition
Size: 6.980 m2

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

Client: SAEM Euralille
Status: 1st Prize 2011

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

Location: Lille, France
JDS Partner in Charge: Julien De Smedt

Lil/Euralille Youth Centre by JDS Architects

Project Leader: Renaud Pereira
Team: JDS, EGIS, Agence Franck Boutté Consultants, SL2EC

Lil/Euralille Youth Centre by JDS Architects


See also:

.

Casal de la Juventud
by CrystalZoo
Youth centre by
Mi5 Arquitectos
Factory by Marks
Barfield Architects

Maison Champs Elysées by Maison Martin Margiela

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

Belgian fashion designer Martin Margiela Fashion brand Maison Martin Margiela have completed their first hotel interiors at the Maison Champs Elysées in Paris.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

The designer furnished 17 new suites at the existing hotel, as well as a restaurant, bar, smoking room and reception.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

A diamond-shaped light hangs from the ceiling of the reception hall, where stainless steel lines the walls.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

Inside one of the suites, walls are decorated with black and white photographs, depicting the 19th century wall mouldings of an existing room elsewhere in the hotel.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

To contrast, its bathroom walls are covered with colourful magazine spines.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

In another suite, the rooms are split between two levels and face a grey-painted landscape mural, whilst the furniture, walls and curtains in the room named The Closet of Rarities are entirely black.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

In the suite named Loose Covers in White, as well as in the hotel’s lounge bar, chairs and objects are covered in the designer’s trademark white fabric, which also features in an installation published on Dezeen back in 2009.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

Here’s some more information from Maison Martin Margiela:


Maison Martin Margiela presents the ‘Hotel La Maison des Champs Elysées’, located right in the heart of Paris.

When the Maison renovates another Maison:

Maison Martin Margiela has been entrusted with its first hotel project and is therefore rethinking the interior design of Hotel La Maison- Champs Elysées. This Parisian hotel, in the historical building of the Maison des Centraliens*, is located at the junction of Avenue Montaigne, the Grand Palais and Place de la Concorde.

Maison Martin Margiela has begun a new page in its history with projects involving interior architecture and design, after more than two decades of designing showrooms and shops to sell its collections throughout the world. The first projects date from 2009 with the ‘Elle Décoration’ Suite at the Palais de Chaillot and the ‘Ile aux Oiseaux’ suite in the spa hotel ’Les Sources de Caudalie’ in Bordeaux.

However, collaborating with The Maison Champs Elysées has been the largest and most demanding project in terms of interior design since Maison Martin Margiela was first set up in 1988.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

Bernadette Chevalier, La Maison Champs Elysées representative explained, “With the help of Maison Martin Margiela, we wanted to offer clients in search of different experiences, new concepts of living space by redefining the rules and offering a luxurious but relaxed atmosphere, where minimalism of forms is served by incredible attention to detail. Moreover, this hotel is located in the centre of a district which brings the most prestigious French couture houses together.”

Maison Martin Margiela adds, “The House is delighted to reinterpret another house as its first Paris hotel project. Maison Martin Margiela has created a dramatic world where reality and make-believe seem to blend. The decor is like a succession of stage sets where references are mixed so as to create an unusual atmosphere where past and present jostle harmoniously.”

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

La Maison Champs Elysées consists of two buildings, one dating from the Second Empire under Napoleon III, the other built more recently.

Maison Martin Margiela, appointed after winning the competition to design the historical part of the building, has re-thought this space to create hotel suites, a restaurant, a smoking room, a bar and a reception area.

In designing this project Maison Martin Margiela aimed for continuity in relation to its own artistic history by offering a place where contrasts harmonize and which is tinged with surrealism.

The House worked jointly with other artists (landscape painters and lighting engineers) to carry out this project.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

Day

The Reception Hall

The floor is made up of Mareuil limestone flagstones with black slate insets randomly scattered as if by the wind. The reception area in the shape of a mirrored prism is in the centre of this hall. This huge diamond gives an impression of infinite space. There are many wall lamps in brushed stainless steel on the white walls, which light up the outlines of missing paintings.

Materials: Pierre de Mareuil (limestone flagstones), marble, mirrors, brushed stainless steel.

The Essling Bar

The floor and ceiling match each other by using a divided- up effect in black and white trompe-l’oeil. A wool carpet on the floor is printed with a classical-style French ceiling design while the ceiling is decorated with wallpaper printed with the same design. Traditional French panelling, coloured off-white, covers the walls, which themselves show traces of a past which never existed and where only the outlines of paintings and lighting remain. The ‘Groupe’ Margiela sofas, covered in white linen and cotton, face each other and are linked by low tables whose size is amplified by mirrors

Materials: wool, paper, wood, brushed stainless steel, mirrors, cotton, linen.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

Smoking Room/ Cigar Cellar

The Smoking room is like a negative of the bar- white becomes black. Black is dominant and club armchairs in dark brown leather are grouped around small, low cube-shaped tables made of mirrors which give this room an authentic English gentlemen’s club style. Traditional French panelling and parquet stained in black oak are literally burnt which creates the impression of disaster. Gentle lighting is diffused by little wall-lamps and suspended light fittings as well as black bottle lamps.

Materials: oak, cotton, leather, mirrors

Restaurant – 80 covers

The restaurant plays on the contrasts of materials and sensations: Flooring in waxed concrete and walls in formed concrete contrast with light, delicate furniture. Square tables and arm chairs in white cotton loose covers placed on a dull metal pedestal create an illusion of floating, bringing a note of surrealism to the place. The seating is entirely classical mixing Louis XV ‘Bergères’, Louis XVI Salon chairs, Louis XV Lyre Back chairs and Louis XVI Medallion Back chairs. The background shows classical French wooden doors, but supersized. The mouldings, locks and casement bolts also emphasise the supersize theme. Three canvases stretched on the ceiling continue the theme of three classical distressed ceilings. Alcoves made mainly of silver birch printed with endless black and white classical cubes scattered on the walls. The restaurant offers a view of a green living wall through a glass screen and access the garden.

Materials: waxed concrete, Ductal® concrete, cotton, wood, silver birch.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

Corridor/Passageway

After the reception hall, access to the restaurant and lifts is through a long corridor covered in wall-paper made from black and white photographs of the ‘golden salon’ on the second floor. A wool runner, printed with English-style parquet in black and white is laid on the waxed concrete flooring. Three ‘Montgolfier’ chandeliers with steel and crystal pendants have been deliberately mottled to age them. The left partition wall in this corridor is made up of moveable panels on hinges, which form a visual filter between the corridor and the restaurant. They are printed with trompe-l’oeil on one side and on the other side stretched fabric lit from behind.

Materials: wallpaper, waxed concrete, wool, steel, crystal.

The Antin Hall

This hall is situated behind the hotel. It provides access to a passageway leading to the garden and to the upper floors via the lifts. The walls and ceiling are entirely covered in aluminium sheets, applied by hand. The flooring is made up of big, silver, ceramic tiles. The lighting comes from a chandelier in the shape of a faceted diamond.

Materials: aluminium, ceramic, steel, Plexiglas, LED lights.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

Night

Landings and Corridors

The landings and corridors are entirely black: black paint on the walls and thick black carpeting on the floor. These dark spaces are lit up by projections of light which imitate sunlight filtering through non-existent doors or windows.

Materials: wool

Suites with unfinished mouldings

These three suites with wood mouldings endlessly interrupted, like an unfinished work, or work in progress, offer a monochrome painting in white from very pale grey to light beige. The salon and bedroom are separated by a huge central space with sliding partitions to provide a complete or partial separation of the space. The ceiling is optical white and the fitted wool carpet is in very light beige. The bathrooms are entirely made of vitreous enamel mosaic tiles. A mirror lit by a set of bulbs, like an artist’s dressing room, has been placed above a huge double basin in white stoneware. A large bath and an Italian-style walk-in shower complete the room.

Materials: wood, wool, vitreous enamel, mirrors.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

The ‘Golden Salon’ suite

The walls are entirely covered in wallpaper made from black and white photographs taken of the golden salon on the second floor. The net curtains are printed with these same patterns. In this way, the perspectives and richness in decoration of the Second Empire style (Napoleon III) are reproduced as trompe-l’oeil on the fittings and furniture in the suite. A huge library mural full of various books is put up over the bed head in the bedroom. The conveniences with all four walls covered with sections of different editions of magazines, continue this library theme. The flooring is English-style parquet in aged oak. The bathroom is entirely made of vitreous enamel mosaic tiles.

Materials: wallpaper, oak, vitreous enamel tiles, mirrors

The ‘Closet of Rarities’ suite

Black is overwhelmingly present in this suite. The walls are painted coal black and the English-style oak parquet is stained black. An entire wall of the salon is devoted to a closet of rarities displaying various objects and works of art. The curtains are fashioned from black wool cloth with fine pinstripes reminiscent of the traditional fabric for a gentleman’s suit. The bathroom is done in mosaic tiles.

Materials: oak, vitreous enamel, mirrors, wool cloth.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

The ‘loose covers in white’ suite

Paintings, objects and furniture and fittings from the entrance are meticulously covered in white loose covers. In the salon and bedroom the upper part of the white walls differs from the lower part. The foot of the classical Haussmann walls with picture rails, frames and plinth contrast with the upper part made with wide panels of stretched white cotton. A set of bulbs in phosphorescent gypsum from the Urals frame a large mirror on the bedroom ceiling and illuminate the night. The flooring is English-style parquet in aged oak. In the bathroom the installation of white tiling with black pointing hints at a graph paper effect.

Materials: cotton, wood, gypsum from the Urals, oak, ceramics, mirror, tiling.

The small split-level suite/ unusual bedroom

This small suite is organized on two levels which gives it an unusual character.
The hall including the dressing room leads to a staircase, which goes down to the bedroom. The entire wall on the right is draped with a white cotton curtain making a link between these two spaces. The flooring, walls and the bed head are in layered silver birch like a millefeuille of fine wood leaves. The bed is built into this structure. A huge imaginary landscape, opposite the bed, has been specially printed onto wallpaper and is reflected on the adjacent wall which is entirely mirrored. In the bathroom the installation of white tiling with black pointing hints at a graph paper effect.

Materials: silver birch, wallpaper, mirror, cotton, ceramics, sheet of brass.

Maison Champs Elysees by Maison Martin Margiela

The Trompe-l’oeil bedrooms

These ten rooms are all made to the same design. The light beige wool fitted carpet is printed with a Persian rug in red tones and as if it were coming down from the bed in trompe-l’oeil fashion. The wall behind the bed head is enhanced by three frames of light painted to give the illusion of sunlight filtering through the adjacent windows. The wall, separating the bedroom from the bathroom is entirely made of silver birch and has built- in storage units and a desk. In the bathroom the installation of white tiling with black pointing hints at a graph paper effect.

Materials: wool, ceramics, tiling, mirror.


See also:

.

Palazzina Grassi
by Philippe Starck
New Hotel by the
Campana brothers
‘Mat, Satiné, Brilliant’ by
Maison Martin Margiela

Astier de Villatte

Ceramics, candles, hand printed agendas and more from one of our favorite Parisian brands
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It took a recent visit to one of our favorite Paris shops to realize that despite using their products all the time we’ve never written about them. Astier de Villatte is a 15 year old lifestyle powerhouse founded by Benoît Astier de Villatte and Ivan Pericoli. Their unique take on ceramics, paper goods, perfumes, candles, furniture, silverware, glassware and more are created in a Bastille workshop that used to house Napolean’s silversmith.

They are perhaps best known for their 18th- and 19th-century inspired handmade ceramics, many of which are designed with the equally multi-talented French artist Nathalie Lété. Their team of twenty ceramicists (perhaps the biggest in Paris) makes pottery the way Benoît’s father taught him and his siblings. Starting with black Terracotta, each piece is finished with a milky glaze that amplifies the unique character of the clay, celebrating its imperfections and ensuring that no two pieces are exactly alike.

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A similar nod to the past styles and methods can be found in many of their other products, from scented erasers to the only hand-typeset agenda in the world. The two-page week layout also includes an important 8th day that changes each week, named after some of their favorite foods (Cassouletday anyone?). Created with a vintage printing press, the new 2012 agendas feature the same signature mosaic pattern and bright colors but now include the Astier team’s insider tips on their favorite venues in New York as well as Paris. Studiohomme has a great video visiting Astier de Villate’s print and ceramic workshops:

The candle market is certainly a saturated one, but quality shines through in these glass or ceramic votives with vegetable wax candles, often named for places that inspire olfactory overload: Alcatraz, Algiers, Honolulu and Naples among them. Recent additions include a series made in conjunction with Françoise Caron and the Japan-based fragrance company, Takasago: Cabourg, Quebec, Broadway, Zermatt and Yakushima. We’ve had the soda-inspired “Broadway” scent burning in the office for the last week—a nice way to rid the office from the smell of its new lunchtime infatuation with the Schnipper’s Chicken Club sandwich.

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Also new this fall is a collaboration with New York-based designer John Derian. The artist worked mostly on small plates, painting them with his signature menagerie of birds and insects, as well as sweetheart symbols and everyday household items. The John Derian collection for Astier de Villatte, as well as many other of their products, are available at his NYC boutique.

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Astier de Villatte has a few shops in Paris, is available on their site and at stores in many countries. Check their site for details.

See more of our favorite items in the gallery below.


Les Grandes Tables de L’île by 1024 Architecture

Les Grandes Tables de L'île by 1024 Architecture

Paris studio 1024 Architecture have completed a cafe made from scaffolding and shipping containers on an island on the Seine in Paris.

Les Grandes Tables de L'île by 1024 Architecture

Les Grandes Tables is located on the Île Seguin, where architect Jean Nouvel is currently converting a car factory into a museum.

Les Grandes Tables de L'île by 1024 Architecture

Elevated amidst the scaffolding structure is an oriented strand board box, which houses the first floor restaurant.

Les Grandes Tables de L'île by 1024 Architecture

A staircase at the front of the building leads visitors up to this dining room, whilst an open space below is used for informal events and parties.

Les Grandes Tables de L'île by 1024 Architecture

Another scaffolding structure published on Dezeen temporarily housed a temporary cafe, sauna and paddling pool – see our earlier story here.

Les Grandes Tables de L'île by 1024 Architecture

Above: photograph is by C. Sancereau

Photography is by Brice Pelleschi, apart from where otherwise stated.

Les Grandes Tables de L'île by 1024 Architecture

Above: photograph is by C. Sancereau

Here’s some more details from 1024 Architecture:


Les Grandes Tables de L’île

A restaurant/bar/open-air café positioned on Île Seguin in the middle of a temporary garden whilst waiting for the architect Jean Nouvel’s macro project to be implemented, Les Grandes Tables de L’ile is a place to meet, for haute cuisine and why not even parties to accompany the reconstruction of this island steeped in history.

Les Grandes Tables de L'île by 1024 Architecture

Above: photograph is by C. Sancereau

The project is an architectural hybridization between an agricultural greenhouse, a barge and a timber-frame house.

Les Grandes Tables de L'île by 1024 Architecture

Modelled after a large wood fibre box suspended in a scaffold structure from which freight containers are hanging, all encompassed beneath a transparent umbrella…

Les Grandes Tables de L'île by 1024 Architecture

An eye-catching iconoclastic assemblage with an area of 300m2 to accommodate 120 covers and the cuisine of Arnaud Daguin, a chef with stars to his name.

Les Grandes Tables de Lile by 1024 Architecture

Above: photograph is by C. Sancereau

Constructed from scaffolding, wood fibre panels and containers, according to the principle dear to the 1024 duo, the restaurant can be promptly extended by video and lighting effects by changing with the assistance of mapping for the duration of a party or a particular event.

Les Grandes Tables de L'île by 1024 Architecture

Above: photograph is by C. Sancereau

‘A meeting place aimed at initiating the reoccupation of the venue.

Les Grandes Tables de L'île by 1024 Architecture

Above: photograph is by C. Sancereau

An architecture which must be able to disappear without leaving any traces…’

Les Grandes Tables de L'île by 1024 Architecture

Above: photograph is by C. Sancereau

Client: Les Grandes Tables (Paris/Ile Seguin)
Team: Pierre Schneider and François Wunscel (Architects) / Stéphanie Grimard (project monitoring)

Les Grandes Tables de L'île by 1024 Architecture

Above: photograph is by C. Sancereau

Companies: SIRC (containers and construction) / PLETAC (scaffolding) / Light-Event (Electricity) / RECYCLING (interior lights) / ABAC (heating and CMV)

Les Grandes Tables de L'île by 1024 Architecture

Above: photograph is by C. Sancereau


See also:

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Southwark Lido by EXYZT
and Sara Muzio
Chin Chin Laboratorists by
Akram and Haythornthwaite
Motel Out of The Blue
by Dros and Lombarts

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

French studio FREAKS freearchitects have inserted a rectangular timber tunnel inside this Paris cosmetics shop.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

The shop, called Heliocosm, also features bright turquoise walls and a table where customers can mix their own natural cosmetics.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

An opening cut away from the wooden box provides the location for a salvaged second-hand table, while integrated shelves display products.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

The tunnel leads from this workshop area to a lounge, where a wall-mounted photograph creates the illusion of a window facing snow-covered mountains.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

Another shop with a tunnel inside it was completed in London earlier this year – see our earlier story featuring an octagonal orange tunnel here.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

Photography is by David Foessel.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

Here’s some text from the architects:


Heliocosm – A Natural Cosmetics Shop in Paris

FREAKS freearchitects have been commissioned for the interior design of the shop for a new natural comestics brand Heliocosm located in Herold street, Paris 1st ward.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

The program of the shop consists mostly in a big workshop table onto which the customers are invited to make up their own cosmetics based on natural products lead by professional tutors.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

As the total dedicated budget of 100K€ was pretty low compared to the total 100sqm area to be refurbished, the project focuses onto one single space characteristic: the impressive length of nearly 20 meters, pretty rare as a shop setting within the typical parisian context.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

The major efforts were made on the renewal of the first and the last rooms, linked with a wood-covered tunnel-alike space hosting all the display shelves and cupboards.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

That space works as a theatre decorum into which doors and hole are managed to organize all the technical storage, access, restroom and extra display.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

The chosen color is a light greenish blue, a so called “cool mint” color, applied all over floors, walls and ceilings, wrapping the visitors within a both refreshing and disturbing feeling.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

The ending perspective of the shop is reinforced with a large scale print on plastic sheet representing mountains with a greenish lake dislocating the shop towards another parallel reality.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

That ending room is a lounge space, used both as a waiting room and a coffee/tea room.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects

The furnitures have all been found in second hand shops and markets, to not to engage too much the visitors into an “over design” experience while offering them a comfy and homy atmosphere.

Heliocosm by FREAKS freearchitects


See also:

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Aesop at Merci by
March Studio
Kyoto Silk by
Keiichi Hayashi
Skin by Michael Young
and Katrin Olina

Nursery in Sarreguemines by Michel Grasso and Paul Le Quernec

Nursery in Sarreguemines by Michel Grasso

Visitors enter this nursery in northeast France through a curving concrete orifice.

Nursery in Sarreguemines by Michel Grasso

Architects Michel Grasso and Paul Le Quernec designed the nursery, which is located beside a noisy road in the town of Sarreguemines.

Nursery in Sarreguemines by Michel Grasso

The undulating entrance walls lead into a round reception room at the centre of the building.

Nursery in Sarreguemines by Michel Grasso

The rest of the nursery is arranged like a human body cell, with classrooms and playrooms encircling this central nucleus.

Nursery in Sarreguemines by Michel Grasso

Ceiling heights in these surrounding rooms slope down to just over two metres-high to create a comfortable environment for young children.

Nursery in Sarreguemines by Michel Grasso

Rooms around the building’s perimeter open onto sheltered terraces and a surrounding garden.

Nursery in Sarreguemines by Michel Grasso

Other nurseries and kindergartens on Dezeen include one with pyramidal chimneys and another with brightly coloured rotating shutters – see more stories about kindergartens here.

Nursery in Sarreguemines by Michel Grasso

Photography is by the architects, unless otherwise stated.

Nursery in Sarreguemines by Michel Grasso

Here’s a short description of the project from Michel Grasso:


Nursery in Sarreguemines (France)

It’s with a feeling of total freedom that we designed this project. Our first intention was to provide a protective and protected building, for comfort and safety of children, but also for the tranquility of their parents.

Nursery in Sarreguemines by Michel Grasso

Our second intention was to introduce the concept of double standards within the building, the children and adult, because we don’t lose sight that it is primarily children who are the main subject of this institution. Finally, our third purpose was to find a way to modify the perception of the building.

Nursery in Sarreguemines by Michel Grasso

Indeed, the requirements impose a development on the ground floor of the 1350 square meters of the building…

Nursery in Sarreguemines by Michel Grasso

The project was designed as a body cell with its nucleus (the nursery), its cytoplasm (the gardens) and its membrane (the wall closure).

Nursery in Sarreguemines by Michel Grasso

The perception of the nursery is a bush of bamboo with small boxes bringing the light into a building with curved lines.

Nursery in Sarreguemines by Michel Grasso

The project:
1 350 m2
2 400 000 euro

Nursery in Sarreguemines by Michel Grasso

Client: Communauté d’Agglomération Sarreguemines Confluences
Architects: Paul Le Quernec & Michel Grasso


See also:

.

Tellus Nursery School by
Tham & Videgård Arkitekter
Kindergarten Kekec
by Arhitektura Jure Kotnik
Fagerborg Kindergarten
by RRA