Tour Végétale de Nantes by Edouard François

Tour Végétale de Nantes by Edouard François

Plants adapted to thrive in rocky crevices will take over the facade of this tower for Nantes by French architect Edouard François.

Tour Végétale de Nantes by Edouard François

Plants will grow inside stainless steel tubes on the Tour Végétale de Nantes.

Tour Végétale de Nantes by Edouard François

The tubes will take up little space on each host balcony but will provide leafy surroundings for inhabitants while showcasing species collected by the local botanical gardens.

Tour Végétale de Nantes by Edouard François

The building will comprise a plinth containing retail and parking, offices enclosed in a black rubber cube and the residential tower with shifting, elliptical balconies.

Tour Végétale de Nantes by Edouard François

François is renowned for architecture that incorporates plants, including the Parisian Eden Bio social housing development completed in 2009. More details in our earlier story.

Tour Végétale de Nantes by Edouard François

More stories about plants on Dezeen »

The information below is from Edouard François:


This operation situated in the future eco-neighborhoods, Prairie-au-Duc, in Nantes, is unique in particular because of its height. Its main challenge is to (re) create the desire to live in tall buildings, in a remarkable setting in the heart of the town.

This mixed project consists of a base of shops and parking, on which is placed in a black rubber cube of offices and a housing tower of 17 storey (60m).

The tower consists of a main body ringed by elliptic balconies. The balconies vary from floor to floor to form a giant organic silhouette.

The tower is the support for a collection of chasmophites plants coming from the collections of the botanical gardens of Nantes. These plants have been collected by scientists from the whole world and frozen. The building will show the plant collection of the city.

The originality of the plantation is to grow in long stainless steel tubes (diameter: 12cm/length: 4meters ). These tubes recreate the natural conditions of the chasmpophite plants that grow in rocky mountain flaws. A scientific experiment is currently underway for over a year in the botanical gardens of Nantes, to test the viability of the plantation process. The result of this experimentation shows that the growth of plants is exceptional for a very low water consumption.

The impact of the tubes on the balconies is minimal. On the other hand on the facades, they form vertical dynamic lines.

Tour végétale de Nantes
Architect : Edouard François – int. FRIBA
Botanist : Claude Figureau
BET : AIA-SERA
Client : Groupe Giboire
Ilot A2 – Prairie aux Ducs – Ile de Nantes – Nantes
Planning : Concours Déc. 2009 – Livraison 2012
Program 9150 m² :
7500 m2 – appartments 6 240 m² (85 à 90 units)
2000 m2 – office,
350 m² – activity
91 parking places
Phase PC


See also:

.

Urban Forest
by MAD
Beirut Terraces by Herzog
& de Meuron
Gwanggyo Power Centre
by MVRDV

Parc des Expositions by OMA

Parc des Expositions by OMA

OMA have won a competition to design a gateway building for Toulouse, France, with a 40,000 square metre column-free exhibition hall.

Parc des Expositions by OMA

The 660 metre-long Parc des Expositions (PEX) will host exhibitions, conferences and concerts.

Parc des Expositions by OMA

Located in a new innovation district in Toulouse, the centre will occupy part of a 2.8 kilometre-long development site.

Parc des Expositions by OMA

More stories about OMA on Dezeen »

Parc des Expositions by OMA

Images are by OMA.

Here are some more details from the architects:


OMA to build major convention centre in Toulouse, France

OMA has won the competition to design the new Parc des Expositions (PEX) in the innovation zone of Toulouse, southern France. PEX is conceived as a new gateway to the city and will host exhibitions, conferences, and concerts. The 338,000m2 project is designed to be a compact mini-city – an antidote to the sprawl of a standard exposition park, and a means to preserve the surrounding French countryside.

Surpassing three submissions by internationally-renowned competitors, the project, led by OMA’s director of French projects Clément Blanchet, will be completed by 2016. Blanchet commented: “This project is not only about architecture, but rather infrastructure. It’s a condenser for diversity, a machine that can promote an infinite amount of possibilities.”

Rather than spreading across the entire available site – a patchwork of open fields and sporadic developments – OMA chose to designate a strip of 2.8 kilometers long and 320 metre wide, crossed by the RD902 highway. The strip will act as a zone for future developments and link the river Garonne at one extreme and the Airbus A380 factory on the other. In this strip, PEX is a 660 metre long, 24 metre high structure, both monumental in its horizontal scale and subtle in its overall impact.

PEX consists of three parallel bands: the multi-function Event Hall, with a massive doorway allowing performances to spread outdoors; a 40,000m2 column-free Exhibition Hall; and, in the middle band, a 160,000m2 parking silo. Instead of banishing parking underground or pushing it to the periphery of the site, parking ramps are visible through glass partitions from inside the halls. The massive structure of PEX is a simple and flexible three-dimensional grid, providing a plug-in system for exhibitors and facilities.

In 2010 OMA also won the competition for a major new library, the Bibliothèque Multimédia à Vocation Régionale (BMVR), in Caen, France. The project will be OMA’s first public building in France.


See also:

.

Musée national des
beaux-arts by OMA
Chu Hai College
Campus by OMA
De Rotterdam
by OMA

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

Visitors can climb a staircase over the roof of this spiralling community centre in Lille by French architects Colboc Franzen & Associés.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

The aluminium-clad building has a jolting helical shape that wraps around a central glass atrium.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

External staircases connect landings and terraces on each of the four storeys.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

The first three levels contain community facilities for different age ranges while the top floor comprises staff offices and accommodation.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

More stories about projects in France »

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

Photography is by Paul Raftery.

Here are some more details from the architects:


L’Arbrisseau Neighbourhood Centre, Lille

A multi-facetted building for every generation

It’s impossible not to notice the L’Arbrisseau neighbourhood centre in the southern suburbs of Lille. Its helical shape, the staircase that winds itself up around the sides of the building and its aluminium cladding, like a space vessel’s, all make it stand out. They create a contrast with a rather disjointed and sometimes deprived urban environment that nonetheless holds some pleasant surprises, including a sunflower swimming pool around the back that is straight out of the Seventies.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

However incongruous it might seem, the building was indeed built and designed together with local people and the city council. Users came up with ideas – ranging from the most trivial to the most metaphorical – that were included in the final project. They wanted an aquarium; they’ll find it behind the reception desk. They wanted a library; it’s there all right. But they also wanted a tree to make sure there was the symbol of their neighbourhood, which is called l’Arbrisseau (‘arbre’ is French for tree). And so they got a tree – a 12-metre tree of life with a terrace nestling on each level and a panoramic viewpoint at its tip.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

It was Lille City Council’s ambition to create something ‘beautiful’ and ‘high quality’ in the ‘suburbs’. L’Arbrisseau is in the south of Lille, an area that is undergoing radical redevelopment after years of social and economic decline. There is clear political ambition and varied urban landscape offers great potential. This is a tight-knit community: people born in L’Arbrisseau often spend their whole lives here. The challenge for this project was to embody this sense of renewal as well as a certain community spirit.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

The building is arranged in a spiral around a central atrium. This means that it faces no particular direction but instead speaks to everyone equally. The plain untreated aluminium cladding of the façade underscores this desire to standardize the sides of the building and adds to its magnetism; the building catches the light and focuses the sun’s rays to form an attractive, shimmering whole.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

The project’s distinctive characteristic is that it is open to people of all ages. The tiny tots are on the ground floor, with a mother and child care centre, and a space to receive several groups of 0-4 year olds. Small and slightly older children are accommodated on the first floor, where there is an infant day centre (3-6), a ‘little wings’ area and activity rooms for 6-12 year olds as well as a reading corner. The second floor is the domain of the older generations. There is a multi-purpose hall (intended for weddings and other private and public celebrations) as well as an area used especially for adult integration courses such as cookery and computing. The third floor contains administrative offices and a four-room, on-site staff flat that includes a south-facing terrace. The building’s layout allows each age group to relate directly to the one below it and the one above. This is what makes it unique.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

The mother and child care centre is linked to the first-floor centre for 4-12 year olds by a split-level garden. The tiny tots have direct access to the garden. The first floor in turn connects with the teenage and adult floor via the double-storey library. It also enjoys a terrace overhanging the garden. The teenage and adult floor offers a variety of activities ranging from the multi-purpose hall for concerts or weddings to cookery and sewing workshops. A terrace acts as a continuation of the hall and looks out over the grounds to the north. This floor communicates with the top storey of the building. The aim of superimposing the various schemes was to free up the greatest possible space for a garden around the bottom of the building. Stretching the building vertically increases its visibility and its prestige.

All of the different schemes are united around a common atrium. A concrete tower houses the facilities, staircases and lifts, as well as supporting the building. The design of this tower articulates the structural forces acting upon it and the toothing of the girders holding up the floors on either side. The solid, mineral mass and its extruded appearance also bring to mind the region’s characteristic underground chalk quarries (there is one behind the building).

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

The inside staircase echoes the cut-out façade of the building, allowing the light captured by the terraces filter through the tower like tree branches to produce complex and changing patterns of shadows in the atrium.

The spiral staircase that curls around the outside of the building has a landing – or terrace – on every level, each connected to the next by stairs. Users can get to their activities from outside and also climb up onto the roof of the structure. Here there is a panoramic viewpoint overlooking the L’Arbrisseau neighbourhood with the belfry of Lille City Hall in the distance. This reintegrates the L’Arbrisseau area into the fabric of the city of Lille as well as strengthening its local roots.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

Last but not least, the fact that the building’s key elements – the libraries – are two storeys in height creates interesting spatial and visual effects as well as allowing the installation of raked seating. This encourages flexible and improvised use of the space, as befits a neighbourhood centre. It is easy to organise lectures, show videos or arrange reading corners on a particular theme; the terraces can be turned into a children’s playground at one moment and an area for adult activities the next and can also host film screenings, exhibitions and even open-air theatre.

The very particular volume distribution of the L’Arbrisseau neighbourhood centre is emphasised by its untreated aluminium and glass sheathing. There are openings here and there for plate-glass windows that afford different views and let in light. These are covered in materials (metal cladding, mirror glass) selected in accordance with the principles of eco-design and to guarantee users optimum visual and thermal conditions in both summer and winter.

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

Contracting authority: City of Lille
Architects: Colboc Franzen & Associés, Paris

Cost of construction: €4,076,000 excluding all tax

Area of the plot: 2,030 m2
Usable area: 1,190 m2
Net floor area: 1,779 m2
Gross floor area: 2,927 m2

Location: Crossroads of the future extension of rue de l’Asie and rue Vaisseau le Vengeur, 59000 Lille

Project management: Colboc Franzen & Associés
Project manager: Arnaud Sachet
Team: Ulrich Faudry, Malik Hammadi, Kerstin Heller, Bruno Sarles, Emmanuel Villoutreix, Lena Weis.
Research consultancy: INEX (fluids), C&E ingénierie (structure), JP Lamoureux (acoustician), BM Forgue (economist), PBP (OPC).

Beginning of studies: October 2007
Date of delivery: May 2011

Neighbourhood Centre by Colboc Franzen & Associés

Program

  • Basement: Technical premises + 8 parking spaces
  • Ground floor: Foyer, mother and child care centre, reception area for various groups, garden
  • 1st floor: Day centre without sleeping facilities, area for 6-12 year olds, terrace
  • 2nd floor: Area for 12-16 year olds, multi-purpose hall, area for adults, terrace
  • 3rd floor: Offices, on-site accommodation, panoramic terrace

Sustainable development

  • Mixed concrete and steel construction. Elements prefabricated in workshop.
  • Connection to district heating system.
  • Reinforced exterior insulation: the heat loss coefficient of the opaque walls and joinery work is on average 50% lower than standard. Thermal inertia is guaranteed by reinforced concrete slabs and the core.
  • Thermal break joinery fittings and high-performance glass. 1/3 of the windows can be opened for summer comfort.
  • Rainwater management: optimisation of absorption zones, retention and re-use of rainwater.
  • Use of certified materials.
  • Dual-flow, heat-recovery ventilation systems.
  • The fresh air is preheated by a ground-coupled heat exchanger.
  • A set of photovoltaic panels is installed on the roof.
  • A performance monitoring system has been implemented.

Together, these technical choices allow for energy consumption in line with French regulation RT 2005 and beyond the requirements for a low-energy house. L’Arbrisseau neighbourhood centre has primary energy consumption of 48.68 kWh/m2/year of primary energy, or primary energy consumption = standard consumption – 58.4%.


See also:

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Community Centre by
Dierendonck Blancke
Community Centre
by Adamo Faiden
Stephen Lawrence Centre
by Adjaye Associates

Nomad by 1/100

Nomad by 1/100

This disco-cum-caravan is one of five timber-clad cabins installed by Swiss architects 1/100 in the garden of the Quai Branly Museum, Paris.

Nomad by 1/100

Each mobile pavilion folds open to reveal a different function, offering a sheltered information point, an ice cream vendor, a sound-system, a kindergarten and a stage.

Nomad by 1/100

Scattered across the site, the Nomad caravans are decorated with disco lights and surrounded by carpets, stools and chairs to encourage social gatherings.

Nomad by 1/100

At the end of the summer each caravan will be folded up and towed to a new location.

Nomad by 1/100

More stories about pavilions on Dezeen »

Nomad by 1/100

Photography is by Thomas Mailaender.

Nomad by 1/100

Here are some more details from the architects:


NOMAD
Museum Quai Branly, Paris

The installation NOMAD squats the garden of the Museum Quai Branly for the summer months. It inhabits the site from the 4th of June to the 4th of September, before continuing its journey.

Nomad by 1/100

The installation NOMAD chooses to inject programm into a hyperarchitectural environment. This programmatic occupation of the site will last the summer months, taking advantage of the highly frequented garden. Caravans, tents, carpets and stools: informal architecture, assemblage of recycled and transformed objects, the installation enables the domestication and the appropriation of a garden originally thought to be admired. Lightweight and mobile, five informal settlements provide spaces for events, refreshments and subsistence. Spread along the paths, in the glades and under the museum ship, they trigger interactions and create a new field of relationships. In the heart of the city, the dense vegetation is the set of a temporary occupation. Without fences nore measurements, this territory is redefined, held, inhabited for a time.

Nomad by 1/100

Second-hand caravans, transformed and tuned, build the heart of those mobile units. They offer shelter to an info point, a sound-system, an ice cream van, a kindergarden and a stage, programs chosen for they capacity to generate interactions. Agricultural canvas, tight to the caravans, offer shade to an inviting floor of colorful carpets. Lightweight foldable wood furniture, inspired from the museum collections, can be spread according to needs. Detached from their context and aesthetized by the museography, many domestic objects presented in the musem exhibitions have lost any relation with their original function. Inspired by the collections, the furniture created for NOMAD desacralizes and reintegrates those objects to where they belong, everyday life. The whole deployement can be removed in no time and leave the site without any marks. An architecture without bonds, but not without history or territory: the caravans and their inhabitants, removed for a while from the national landscape, are integral part of the European culture – and way before this summer of 2010, when France hunted them down.

Nomad by 1/100

Museum of Arts and Civilisations, museum of Primal Arts, museum of Africa, Asia, Oceania and Americas? Let’s call it Museum of Quai Branly, this would avoid any ambiguity and misunderstanding. Beyond a polemic of designation, this is an institution which chooses to focus on extra-european cultures, however defining itself as a place where cultures are in dialogue. But the monologue is not a variant of the dialogue. This fixation on the exotic risks to block any parallels, any cultural exchanges and, above all, to impede any reflexion on occidental practices and cultures. The project chooses then to fight against an euro-centrist vision of culture and its bigoted evolutionism. Indeed, if it is far from being absurd to expose those fascinating objects coming from cultures that we definitively know too less, their display should jeopardize our position – otherwise it is purely aesthetics.

Nomad by 1/100

At a time when a billion humans are migrating throughout the world, often involuntary, nomadism becomes the horizon of art and society. It is about not looking away, about doing an humble autocritic, as from now on we recognize nomadism as part of our own culture, integrated in globalization.

Nomad by 1/100

NOMAD stops in the garden of the Museum Quai Branly to affirm contextualization against esthetization, diffusion against centralization, emancipation against homogeneization.


See also:

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Opera by Axel
Enthoven
Rolling Huts by Olson
Sundberg Kundig Allen
Vostok Cabin by Atelier
Van Lieshout

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

Beneath a wide skylight, a white spiralling staircase descends the three storeys of this high school in Lille by French architects Tank.

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

Although constructed entirely from brick, the College Levi-Strauss has no corners, only curved edges.

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

Three kinds of brickwork are used to create a facade that varies in colour.

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

Square windows of different sizes are scattered across the elevation and at lower level occasional bricks are painted in yellow, green and blue.

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

The building surrounds an enclosed courtyard playground, but classrooms face outward towards the city.

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

More stories about schools on Dezeen »

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

Photography is by Julien Lanoo.

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

The following information is from Tank Architectes:


College Levi Strauss, Lille

The college Levi Strauss is settled in the heart of a urban growth district, between its ancient housing, warehouses and the port district of Lille, North of France.

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

The main building’s settled on the urban boulevard, the main hall, highly transparent, is opened on the front square, this gives an institutional feature to the high school playing a major role within the district.

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

The main entrance is through a porch at the intersection of Boulevard de la Lorraine and Rue Lestiboudois.

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

Very sunny and sheltered from the winds, the playground’s mainly mineral and generously planted.

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

Opened on the playground, the entrance of the dining hall and club. Dedicated to the pupils facilities, those spaces have been thought like spaces in the bricks oriented towards the trees of the playground.

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

Click above for larger image

On top of the covered playground situated on the southern side, the scientific classrooms offer a large view on the nearby urban environment. Connecting to these specialised classrooms, the library’s occupying a central position on the first floor with direct access to the school hall.

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

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The asymmetrical alignment of the variously sized square windows bring light into the classrooms and offer pupils large views of the city. On the southern part of the site outdoor sporting facilities and a gymnasium operate independently.

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

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College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

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As in many regions of northern Europe, the brick is the only material used for the facades. The architects wanted rounded corners, so that the high school looks soft, there’s no sharp angle. The bricks are rendered in 3 stratums corresponding to the 3 shifted levels of the building which create open spaces and identify the entrance of the pupils.

College Levi-Strauss by Tank Architectes

Click above for larger image

Project managers:
Architects: TANK ARCHITECTES, Olivier Camus & Lydéric Veauvy
Mathieu Berteloot, collaborating architect

Engineering studies:
Structures, fluids, kitchen Pingat Ingéniérie,
Sustainable development Etamine
Road works Best VRD
Landscape : Paysages
Outdoor design : Atelier Télescopique

Client: Conseil Général du Nord
Total cost: 13 158 000 € ht
Area: 8 200 m2 SHON
Calendar: studies: june 2007-oct 2008
building: nov 2008-nov 2010
delivery: november 2010


See also:

.

Primary school by
Pereda and Pérez
The Sackler Building by
Haworth Tompkins
County Elementary School
by Vector Architects

Cité de l’Océan et du Surf by Steven Holl and Solange Fabião

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

Steven Holl Architects have collaborated with Brazilian architect Solange Fabião on this wave-shaped museum of the sea in Biarritz, France, which opened this week.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

The Cité de l’Océan et du Surf has a cobbled plaza over the concave roof, which gently descends to meet the sloping ground.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

The galleries of the museum are contained within this curving concrete block, while two acid-etched glass boxes at one end accomodate restaurants and a surfer’s kiosk.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

The museum houses exhibitions about scientific issues associated with the sea and tides.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

More stories about Steven Holl Architects »

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

Above photograph is by Steven Holl Architects

Photography is by Iwan Baan apart from where otherwise stated.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

Here are some more details from the architects:


Cité de l’Océan et du Surf opens in Biarritz, France

The Cité de l’Océan et du Surf, located in Biarritz, France will open to the public on June 26, 2011.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

Above photograph is by Steven Holl Architects

The museum, a design by Steven Holl Architects in collaboration with Brazilian artist and architect Solange Fabião, aims to raise awareness of oceanic issues and scientific aspects of surf and sea.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

Above photograph is by Steven Holl Architects

Derived from the spatial concept “under the sky” / “under the sea”, the museum’s concave exterior creates a central gathering plaza, open to the sky and sea, with the horizon in the distance.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

Above photograph is by Steven Holl Architects

On the interior, the inverse convex curve becomes the ceiling of the main exhibition space, evoking the sense of being “under the sea.”

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

Click above for larger image

The building’s spatial qualities are first experiences in the entrance space, where ramps pass along the dynamic curved surface on which filmed exhibitions are projected, animating the space with changing images and light.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

Click above for larger image

Two “glass rocks,” which contain the restaurant and the surfer’s kiosk, activate the central outdoor plaza and connect analogically to the two great boulders on the beach in the distance.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

Click above for larger image

The plaza’s southwest corner is dedicated to the surfers’ hangout with a skate pool and an open porch underneath that connects to the auditorium and exhibition spaces inside the museum. This covered area provides a sheltered space for outdoor interaction, meetings and events.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

Click above for larger image

The gardens of the Cité de l’Océan et du Surf aim at a fusion of landscape and architecture, and connect the museum to the ocean horizon.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

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The precise integration of concept and topography gives the building its unique profile.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

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The public plaza is paved with a progressive variation of Portuguese cobblestone paving that allow for the growth of grass and natural vegetation.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

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The building lifts up toward the ocean towards the west and the concave form of the plaza is extended through the landscape.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

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With slightly cupped edges, the landscape, a mix of field and local vegetation, is a continuation of the museum facility and provides a site for festivals and daily events.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

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The exterior of the building is a textured white concrete made of aggregates from the south of France.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

Click above for larger image

Materials of the plaza are a progressive variation of Portuguese cobblestones paving with grass and natural vegetation.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

Click above for larger image

A combination of insulated glass units with clear and acid-etched layers animates the visual dynamics enhancing interior comfort.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

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The interior of the main space is white plaster and a wooden floor provides under-floor wiring flexibilities.

Cite de l’Ocean et du Surf by Steven Holl

Click above for larger image

Credits:
Client: SNC Biarritz Ocean

Architect: Steven Holl Architects:
Solange Fabião, Steven Holl (design architect)
Rodolfo Dias (project architect)
Chris McVoy (project advisor)
Filipe Taboada (assistant project architect)
Francesco Bartolozzi, Christopher Brokaw, Cosimo Caggiula,
Florence Guiraud, Richard Liu, Johanna Muszbek, Ernest Ng,
Alessandro Orsini, Nelson Wilmotte, Ebbie Wisecarver, Lan Wu,
Christina Yessios (project team)
Rüssli Architekten
Justin Rüssli, Mimi Kueh, Stephan Bieri, Björn Zepnik (project
team DD/CD)

Associate architects: Agence d’Architecture X.Leibar JM Seigneurin
Structural consultant: Betec & Vinci Construction Marseille
Acoustical consultant: AVEL Acoustique
HVAC consultant: Elithis
General contractor: Faura Silva, GTM Sud-Ouest Batiment
Exhibition engineer: Cesma
Exhibition contractor: Geroari


See also:

.

Knut Hamsun Centre
by Steven Holl
Vanke Center Shenzhen
by Steven Holl Architects
Linked Hybrid by Steven
Holl Architects

Splitscreen – A Love Story

Tournée avec un Nokia N8, cette vidéo “Splitscreen – A Love Story” a été sacrée dans la compétition Nokia Shorts 2011. Une histoire d’amour scindée en deux, montrant les divergences entre la France, les Etats-Unis et l’Angleterre. Une réalisation soignée par J.W.Griffiths.



splitscreen-a-love-story5

splitscreen-a-love-story4

splitscreen-a-love-story3

Previously on Fubiz

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Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Following our previous story about a labia-like staircase, these images by French photographer Stefan Tuchila illustrate the womb-like orbs created by artist Anish Kapoor in the Grand Palais, Paris.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Formed of three 35 metre-high interconnected balloons, the Leviathan sculpture has a dark purple skin and a translucent red interior.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

From inside, the silhouette of the palace ceiling is visible through the bulbous red rubber.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

The sculpture was designed for the fourth Monumenta exhibition, which closes imminently.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

See our earlier story on the ArcelorMittal Orbit by Anish Kapoor »

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

See more images of this project on the photographer’s website.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

The following information is from the press release:


MONUMENTA 2011
Anish Kapoor at the Grand Palais
Leviathan from 11th May to 23rd June 2011

Each year MONUMENTA invites an internationally-renowned artist to turn their vision to the vast Nave of Paris’ Grand Palais and to create a new artwork especially for this space. MONUMENTA is an artistic interaction on an unparalleled scale, filling 13,500m2 and a height of 35m.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

The first three MONUMENTA exhibitions were hugely successful, drawing in 150,000 visitors over five weeks. In 2007, the first challenge was met by German artist Anselm Kiefer, who resides in France, followed by American artist Richard Serra in 2008 and French artist Christian Boltanski in 2010.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

For its fourth incarnation, the French Ministry for Culture and Communication has invited Anish Kapoor, one of his generation’s greatest artists, to produce a new work for the Nave’s monumental space, from 11th May to 23rd June 2011.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Thirty years after his first exhibition in Paris, MONUMENTA marks Anish Kapoor’s return to the French capital. He is considered as one of the most important sculptors of our time. His work has profoundly enlarged the scope of contemporary sculpture, as much by his mastery of monumental scale as by the colourful sensuality and apparent simplicity emanating from his works. All this contributes to the fascination they hold for the public at large, as demonstrated, for example, by the popular success of Cloud Gate in Chicago.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Born in Bombay in 1954, he has lived in London since the 1970s. His work rapidly gained international recognition and has been awarded numerous prizes, including the famous Turner Prize, which he won in 1991. His career has been the subject of a number of solo exhibitions at the world’s most prestigious museums, including the Louvre, the Royal Academy, Tate Modern, etc. Recently, he has been commissioned to design the key landmark for the forthcoming Olympic Games in London: a 116-metre-high sculpture entitled « Orbit ».

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

The artist describes the work he is creating for MONUMENTA as follows: “A single object, a single form, a single colour.” “My ambition”, he adds, “is to create a space within a space that responds to the height and luminosity of the Nave at the Grand Palais.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Visitors will be invited to walk inside the work, to immerse themselves in colour, and it will, I hope, be a contemplative and poetic experience.”

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Designed using the most advanced technologies, the work will not merely speak to us visually, but will lead the visitor on a journey of total sensorial and mental discovery.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

A technical, poetic challenge unparalleled in the history of sculpture, this work questions what we think we know about art, our body, our most intimate experiences and our origins.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Spectacular and profound, it responds to what the artist considers to be the crux of his work: namely, “To manage, through strictly physical means, to offer a completely new emotional and philosophical experience.”

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

The awe-inspiring strength of Anish Kapoor’s work is a fertile ground that favours the democratization of the access to contemporary art.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Through this series and subsequent exhibitions, the French Ministry for Culture and Communication hopes to appeal to the widest possible audiences.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

To exceed the visitor’s expectations, artistic educators, whose knowledge and teaching abilities multiply the possibilities to access and understand the artwork, will be on hand throughout the exhibition to talk to visitors, widening their understanding of contemporary art at no extra cost.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

School groups will have their own special programme developed in collaboration with the French Ministry for National Education.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Multidisciplinary and fun, the programme is designed for young visitors, ranging from nursery school to high school, one highlight being dance workshops in partnership with the Théâtre National de Chaillot.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

There will be learning activities on the internet, making it possible to link the artist’s work to school programmes.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Themed cross-generational tours will also create a link with Anish Kapoor’s creation.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

In addition, tours for the disabled will be available, in order to facilitate access to today’s heritage.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Finally, throughout the exhibition, an events programme will propose a dialogue between word, music, dance and Anish Kapoor’s work and the creations it shelters, in order to uncover new aspects of his creation.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Jean de Loisy is curator of Monumenta 2011. Independent exhibition curator, he has held among other positions that of creation inspector for the French Ministry for Culture and Communication, Cartier Foundation curator and curator at the Georges Pompidou Centre. He has directed and co-directed a variety of art centres in France. He has organized numerous solo artist exhibitions and memorable exhibitions such as “La Beauté” in Avignon in 2000, or “Traces du sacré” in 2008 at the Pompidou Centre. He has been working for 30 years with Anish Kapoor, for whom he organized numerous exhibitions including the 2009 retrospective at London’s Royal Academy of Arts.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

The MONUMENTA admission price is 5 Euros, with concessions 2.50 Euros. The cultural programme (free with admission) proposes concerts, performances, readings and ‘encounters’ in connection with Anish Kapoor’s artwork. A bi-lingual highly documented website will help visitors to prepare their visit.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

A fully illustrated album, co-published by the CNAP and the Rmn-GP publishing services, Paris 2011, and monograph, co-published by Flammarion and the CNAP, will be published in connection with this event.

Leviathan by Anish Kapoor

Organised by the French Ministry for Culture and Communication, the exhibition is co-produced by the Centre national des arts plastiques (CNAP) and the Etablissement public de la Réunion des musées nationaux et du Grand Palais des Champs-Elysées (Rmn-GP).


See also:

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Queens Museum of Art
by Elliot White
Metropol Parasol
by J. Mayer H.
Nissan Y150 Dream Front
by Torafu Architects

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by [BP] Architectures

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

This apartment block with a pleated facade of golden aluminium by French studio [BP] Architectures faces the Place de la Bastille, Paris.

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

When opened, shutters reveal pink, mauve and orange framed windows for the fifteen social housing apartments contained within.

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

A gallery occupies the fully-glazed ground floor, which is screened behind zig-zagging concrete columns.

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

Photography is by Sergio Grazia.

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

More projects in Paris on Dezeen »

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

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Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

The following details are from Plan01:


14 social housing + Gallery Jacques Henri Lartigues on Bastille Place, Paris

Haute Couture
Is there an architect who has not dreamed of designing a building for the Biscornet site, which lay abandoned for so long? Its location is truly spectacular: slightly set back from the Place de la Bastille, it lies where the rue de Lyon and the road running along the canal basin meet; on one side you have a perspective towards the Gare de Lyon, on the other a view of the Bassin de l’Arsenal.

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

Looking at the building that now stands here, one has to admit that the architectural response provided by BP fits like a made-to-measure suit: itís a hand-stitched design that oozes a very Parisian form of elegance.

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

Making best use of the trapezoid shape of the plot, the building abuts onto the neighbouring building then gradually tapers forward; it has a graceful, vertical outline. The side blocks are clad in golden aluminium panels whose distortions give the facades an angular relief that plays with the light.

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

When all the window shutters are closed, the continuity and unity of the material are entire; when the residents open them, the vivid colours of the windowframes appear, like an exuberant lining alternating flashes of pink, mauve and orange.

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

The pleated vertical metal panels on the facades continue upwards to form the ëhoodí of the roof, giving the design a strong sense of coherence.

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

The Lartigue Foundation gallery is on the ground floor, and this change of use facilitates interruption and differenciation: here, the metal stops. The cut is sharply done, and the hem, also pleated, turns inwards to line the inside surface. This contrast is underlined by transparency, and by a concrete structure whose zig-zag shape subtly connects the ground with the pleated surface above.

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

The building is highly responsive to changes in the light; the metallic character of the materials combined with its surface variations reinforces the interplay of contrasts and transforms perceptions of its colour. The aluminium facades can turn from mustard yellow to glittering gold in just a few seconds.

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

Although there are only about fifteen flats in the building, the loggias of the eight duplex apartments are behind glass Venetian blinds that form a coninuous, abstract vertical screen. This reflective filter running the entire height of the building is like a ship’s prow. The random angles of the slits capture fragmented reflections, fleeting images of the constantly moving, ever-changing spectacle of our irreplaceable and historic Place de la Bastille.

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

Architects: [BP] Architectures
Jean Bocabeille and Ignacio Prego
members of the architects’ collective Plan01

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

Projectís Team
BP ARCHITECTURES ñ architects
BECT ñ Ingeniering
Client: MinistËre de la Culture / SAGI – SNI

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

Program
14 social housing units + Gallery Jacques-Henri Lartigue (RDC et R-1)
Location: 75 rue de Lyon – 52 bd de la Bastille 75012 Paris
Delivery of the housings: March 2011
Delivery of the gallery: September 2011
Area: 1 609 sqm shon
Cost: 3.2 M ÄHT
Entreprises
FARC / GROS åUVRE + SECOND OEUVRE
SHMM / FACADES

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

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Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

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Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

Click above for larger image

Housing and gallery on Bastille Place by Plan01

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See also:

.

Le Monolith
by MVRDV
Monolith
by Erick van Egeraat
High Park
by Rojkind Arquitectos

Josephine Baker schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

La Courneuve by Dominique Coulon & Associés

This group of schools outside Paris by French architects Dominique Coulon & Associés has walls, ceilings and details picked out in bright orange.

La Courneuve by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The Josephine Baker schools include a primary school on the west of the site and a nursery school to the east.

La Courneuve by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Classrooms in the nursery are located on a floor that cantilevers across the building’s entrance.

La Courneuve by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The project includes playgrounds for both older and younger children, a canteen and a library, as well as a sports ground on the library roof.

La Courneuve by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Internally, brightly coloured hooks fill the walls outside of the classrooms, giving children a place to hang their coats.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

More stories about educational buildings on Dezeen »

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Above: Photograph by Olivier Nicollas

More stories about projects in France on Dezeen »

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Above: Photograph by Olivier Nicollas

Photography is by Eugeni Pons apart from where stated.

Here are some further details from the architects:


The ‘Josephine Baker’ group of schools recently completed by Dominique Coulon in La Courneuve manages to fit into the difficult context of the ‘Cité des 4000’ neighbourhood, on a site marked by the painful memory of the demolition of the ‘Ravel’ and ‘Presov’ longitudinal blocks of flats. However, it is also capable of opening up inside itself, creating a different landscape, a different place, a utopia.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Above: Photograph by Olivier Nicollas

The project is part of the very subtle town planning scheme adopted by Bernard Paurd, in an attempt to pull together the different signs and traces that are superposed on the site like the various writings on a palimpsest.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The scheme reorganises the neighbourhood on the basis of the right-angled intersection of two historic axes, one leading from Paris – from the Saint-Michel fountain – to St Denis’ Cathedral, the other starting from the cathedral and heading towards St Lucien’s church.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

This crossing of X and Y axes highlights the surfacing of various traces – ruins of a Gallo-Roman necropolis stand where the scarred landscape bears witness to the demolition of the ‘Ravel’ and ‘Presov’ blocks of flats, dynamited on 23 June 2004. As if the map had marked the territory with a tattoo.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Above: Photograph by Delphine George

The group of schools occupies a trapezoid-shaped plot of land obliterated by the non-aedificandi area corresponding to the location of one of the two buildings that were demolished.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Dominique Coulon stays in line with the scheme and the intentions of Bernard Paurd, but seems to consider this scar as the substratum for an act of resilience – a psychological process analysed by Boris Cyrulnik that makes it possible to overcome traumatic situations – rather than the stigma of an irreversible situation. He thus returns spontaneously to his work on twisting shapes, a theme that recurs constantly in his projects.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The requirement to refrain from constructing closed volumes based on the rectangle that is a feature of the plot of land, combined with the constraints in terms of density and height, has enabled him to question the separation of the primary and nursery schools in the brief.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

His proposal therefore sketches out a unitary organisation, deployed with virtuoso skill in the three dimensions of the space between two poles linked by a system of ramps. Thus the nursery school classrooms are pushed to the east, on a floor cantilevered above the entrance, and the primary school classrooms occupy areas to the west overlooking interstitial gardens.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The older children’s playground merges into the area reserved for the younger children, which already contains the shared canteen, while the sports areas have been placed on the roof of the other block, which contains the library shared by the two schools.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Despite its sliding volumes, folds and asymmetry, the building gives a first impression of an enclosed shape with few openings. The primary school classrooms, superposed on the site, only opens up to any real extent to their gardens at the side. Although on the outside the verticality is dominant as a result of the many indentations that break up the façades, it is paradoxically the horizontal aspect that is more evident once through the entrance.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

As if an infinite universe was opening up inside a strictly defined area, welcoming a heterotopia reserved for the children. An initiatory place where the pupils can be cut off from the adult world, so that they can adopt the necessary distance and momentum the better to dive into it in due course.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Particular attention seems to have been paid to passages from one space to another, to thresholds: entering the school, taking off your coat and hanging it up before going through the door into the classroom and sitting down in front of the teacher; laughing as you leave the classroom, and shouting out in the playground at playtime. That is how the building works, from the entrance onwards, in a subtle two-fold movement of advance and retreat.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

An arrangement that recalls the curves and counter-curves of the façade of the St-Charles-aux-Quatre-Fontaines church completed in 1667 by Francesco Borromini. In a protective gesture, the upper floor projects forwards to welcome the children, while the glazed ground floor withdraws and digs in to defuse the drama of separating the child from its parents.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The corridors change shape and expand in front of the classroom doors and receive abundant natural light from the zenith, as if the better to define themselves as areas for decompression before taking a deep breath and plunging into the work areas. Lastly, the canopy of the playground thrusts out well beyond the ramp that leads up to the rooftop sport areas.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

This play of compression and expansion, giving an organic feel to the concrete structure, is further accentuated by use of the colour orange. It covers the floors and occasionally spills over onto the walls and ceilings, rendering the slightest ray of sunshine incandescent and lighting up the roof area.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

This has the appearance of an open hand beneath the complementary blue of the sky, revealed in all its power. All too frequently, as in Jules Ferry’s time, schools seem to be designed as areas for adults reduced to the scale of children. The sequences of traffic paths and classrooms are witness here to a different relationship between the child’s body and space, one that is all the more fused together in that is it not yet totally mediatised by language.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The classrooms, corridors and playgrounds of the ‘Josephine Baker’ schools stretch out and break up around an indefinite body, a body in perpetual transformation, a body of feelings ready to be touched by the slightest ray of sunshine and to perceive a thousand opportunities for play in the slightest variation in the weather.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

The use of natural products – such as linoleum on the floors, and wood for the door and window frames – and the attention paid even to the smallest details contribute to making the building an almost luxurious place, a place hailed enthusiastically at its inauguration by a population of parents and pupils who are keen to turn the page of the demolitions and look resolutely to the future.

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Type of project: Group of schools (nursery + primary)
Client: City of La Courneuve
Team: Dominique Coulon & Associés, Architectes
Dominique Coulon, Olivier Nicollas, Architectes
Sarah Brebbia, Benjamin Rocchi, Arnaud Eloudyi, Florence Haenel, Architects assistants

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Batiserf: Structural Engineer: Philippe Clement, Cécile Plumier, Frédéric Blanc
G. Jost, Mechanical Engineer : Marc Damant, Annie Pikard
E3 Economie : Cost calculation
Bruno Kubler : Paysagiste

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Program: Lecture room, auditorium, administration
Primary school – 10 classrooms
Nursery – 6 classrooms
Leisure center – 6 classrooms
Restaurant
Office for the academy

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Above: Photograph by Olivier Nicollas

Surface Area: 4500 m2 SHON, 6500 m2 SHOB
Cost: 8 000 000 euros H.T

Josephine Baker group of schools by Dominique Coulon & Associés


See also:

.

Médiathèque d’Anzin
by Dominique Coulon
Tellus Nursery School
by Tham & Videgård
Azahar School
by Julio Barreno