Special feature: Marseille Capital of Culture 2013

A series of new cultural venues has sprung up along the waterfront in Marseille, including the contemporary art centre by Kengo Kuma we featured yesterday and a mirrored pavilion by Foster + Partners (+ slideshow).

As this year’s European Capital of Culture, the coastal city in southern France has recently seen heavy investment in public buildings and temporary event spaces along its harbour.

Special feature: new architecture in Marseille
Vieux Port pavilion by Foster + Partners. Photograph by Edmund Sumner

The first we featured was an events pavilion by British architects Foster + Partners that reflects visitors walking beneath its polished steel canopy.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma and Associates
FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma and Associates. Photograph by Roland Halbe

More recently, Japanese designer Kengo Kuma completed the FRAC Marseille arts centre for the Provence Alpes Cotes d’Azur region with a chequered glass facade.

MuCEM by Rudy Ricciotti photographed by Edmund Sumner
MuCEM by Rudy Ricciotti. Photograph by Edmund Sumner

Also completed this year is the filigree-clad Museum of European and Mediterranean Civilisations (MuCEM) by architect Rudy Ricciotti, which connects to a seventeenth-century fort across the water via a long thin bridge.

Villa Méditerranée by Boeri Studio
Villa Méditerranée by Boeri Studio. Photograph by Edmund Sumner

An archive and research centre with a cantilevered exhibition floor and an underwater conference suite by Boeri Studio is located just down the promenade.

Le Corbusier's Cité Radieuse rooftop to open as art space
Le Corbusier’s Cité Radieuse rooftop to open as art space

Elsewhere in the city, the rooftop of Le Corbusier’s Cité Radieuse housing block was opened as a contemporary art space as part of the celebrations.

See more architecture and design in Marseille »

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FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma and Associates

A contemporary art centre with a chequered glass facade by Japanese architect Kengo Kuma is the latest in a string of cultural buildings to complete this year in Marseille.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Roland Halbe

The FRAC (Fond Regional D’art Contemporain) Marseille was designed by Kengo Kuma and Associates as a local art centre for the Provence Alpes Cotes d’Azur (PACA) region of France and it joins buildings by Boeri Studio and Rudy Ricciotti in the city’s harbour-side district.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Roland Halbe

Hundreds of opaque glass rectangles create a chequerboard of solid and void across the glazed exterior of the six-storey-high building and are arranged at opposing angles to create a variation between light and shadow.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Roland Halbe

“By this treatment, the building is given openness and transparency that are hard to gain from a conventional glass box,” said the architects.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Roland Halbe

This uniform facade is punctured in just two places. The first opening is for a street-level window, while the second is an upper-level terrace that can be used for exhibitions, events or meetings.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Nicolas Waltefaugle

“What we wanted was not a closed gallery but an elevated street that could work as an exhibition space and a workshop,” added the architects. “In this way inside and outside can be effectively linked, and this is what FRAC has aimed for since its inception.”

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Nicolas Waltefaugle

The building occupies a triangular site alongside Rue Vincent Leblanc. The larger southern section of the building accommodates the exhibition galleries, a research centre and offices, while the taller northern end contains an auditorium and children’s workshop.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Erieta Attali

Archives are housed in the basement, plus there’s accommodation for artists in residence.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Erieta Attali

Marseille is the designated European Capital of Culture for 2013. Other buildings completed in the city this year include a filigree-clad Museum of European and Mediterranean Civilisations, an archive and research centre with a cantilevered exhibition floor and an underwater conference suite and an events pavilion with a polished steel canopy. See more architecture in Marseille »

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Erieta Attali

Kengo Kuma and Associates also recently completed a timber-clad culture centre elsewhere in France and is currently working on a new outpost of the V&A museum in Scotland. See more architecture by Kengo Kuma »

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Nicolas Waltefaugle

The project description below is from Kengo Kuma and Associates:


Fonds Regional d’Art Contemporain
Marseille, France 2007-2013

The project of the contemporary art centre (FRAC) for the region Provence Alpes Cotes d’Azur (PACA) is the 3D version of the “museum without walls” invented by André Malraux, famous French writer and politician. It is a museum without a museum, a living and moving place, where the art pieces are in a constant movement and join the logic of diffusion and interaction with the visitors.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Axonometric diagram

KKAA thought the FRAC as a signal in the city, which allows a better visibility to contemporary art.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Site plan

The building stands up as a landmark which identity is clearly asserted.

It is composed with two recognisable parts:
» The main body along the street Vincent Leblanc contains the exhibition spaces and documentation centre
» A small tower with auditorium and children’s workshop, offers an upper terrace on the main boulevard.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Ground floor plan – click for larger image and key

These two clearly identified entities are connected between them by a set of footbridges and are unified by the envelope made by a glass skin, composed with panels with changing opacity.

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
First floor plan – click for larger image and key

The building explores the theme of the windows and openings on different scales. KKAA wishes to create a particular space of creation and life, which action and effect is bounded to the entire city, as well as the surrounding district and neighbourhood (cafe-terrace…).

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Second floor plan – click for larger image and key

Location: Marseille, France
Period: 2007-2013
Design: Kengo Kuma & Associates
Local architect: Toury et Vallet

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Third floor plan – click for larger image and key

Client: Région Provence Alpes Côte d’Azur, AREA
Structure engineer: CEBAT ingénierie
Mechanical engineer: ETB Antonelli
Facade engineer: ARCORA

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Fourth floor plan – click for larger image and key

QS: Campion
Acoustic: ACCORD acoustique
HGE: Tribu

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Fifth floor plan – click for larger image and key

Total floor area: 5757 sqm
Site area: 1,570 sqm

FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
Long section – click for larger image and key
FRAC Marseille by Kengo Kuma
East and north elevations – click for larger image

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Baitogogo by Henrique Oliveira at Palais de Tokyo

A twisted entanglement of tree branches appears to grow organically from the beams of Paris’ Palais de Tokyo museum in this installation by Brazilian artist Henrique Oliveira (+ slideshow).

Baitogogo by Henrique Oliveira
photograph by André Morin

Designed by Henrique Oliveira to look like an impossibly tangled Gordian Knot, the Baitogogo sculpture is installed within an exhibition space at Palais de Tokyo as a mass of tree-like plywood branches.

Baitogogo by Henrique Oliveira
photograph by André Morin

“Creating a spectacular and invasive Gordian Knot, Henrique Oliveira plays with Palais de Tokyo’s architecture, allowing a work that combines the vegetal and the organic,” said the exhibition curators.

Baitogogo by Henrique Oliveira

An existing grid of columns and beams appears to morph into the twisted branches. “Through a form of architectural anthropomorphism, Henrique Oliveira reveals the structure of the building,” added the curators.

dezeen_baitogogo_henrique_oliveira_9

The large installation was created from reclaimed tapumes – a plywood material traditionally used in Brazilian towns to construct the hoardings around construction sites. Oliveria collects the discarded tapumes from the streets of São Paulo, where he both lives and works.

dezeen_baitogogo_henrique_oliveira_8

The veneer-like strips were bent into shape and nailed together to form the installation’s branches. Further wooden veneers were fixed to the structure to give it a bark-like texture and appearance.

Baitogogo by Henrique Oliveira

Here’s a film showing the making of Baitagogo:

The Baitogogo exhibition is open at the Palais de Tokyo museum in Paris until 29th September 2013.

Baitogogo by Henrique Oliveira

Earlier this year we posted a slideshow of all our favourite stories about indoor forests and trees which includes a 30-metre-long poplar tree that protrudes a kiosk in Indianapolis and a beauty salon in Osaka that has birch trees wedged between the floor and ceiling.

Baitogogo by Henrique Oliveira

See more stories about trees »
See more installations »

Baitogogo by Henrique Oliveira

Photographs are courtesy of Henrique Oliveira.

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“Shigeru Ban’s first building in Europe is here”

In this movie we filmed at Domaine de Boisbuchet in southwestern France last month, design curator and collector Alexander von Vegesack gives us a tour round the estate, which features pavilions including Shigeru Ban’s first building in Europe, pioneering bamboo structures by Simón Vélez and experimental domes by German structural engineer Jörg Schlaich.

"Shigeru Ban's first building in Europe is here"
Boisbuchet chateau

Von Vegesack also explains how he turned the run-down 15th-century country estate into a magnet for leading architects and designers, who come to teach workshops each summer and build pavilions and installations in the grounds.

"Shigeru Ban's first building in Europe is here"
Alexander von Vegesack giving a tour round the estate

“It was always my dream to work with young people and [create] a surrounding that is very inspiring for new ideas,” he says.

"Shigeru Ban's first building in Europe is here"
Von Vegesack describing a pavilion by Jörg Schlaich

Von Vegesack, who was also the founding director of the Vitra Design Museum, bought Domaine de Boisbuchet in the eighties and set about restoring the 50-hectare estate’s agricultural buildings and commissioning a series of new structures.

"Shigeru Ban's first building in Europe is here"
Von Vegesack showing guests around a reassemled Japanese village house

“I collected for quite a long time,” says von Vegesack, who assembled an important collection that included a wide range of Thonet bentwood furniture – a subject in which he became an expert. “I was very much interested in industrial design and I sold a part of my collection to the Austrian government and acquired this property.”

"Shigeru Ban's first building in Europe is here"
The reassemled Japanese village house, which dates from 1863

The first workshops were held in 1989 and since then leading international figures including Tom Dixon, Maarten Baas, Oliviero Toscani and Patricia Urquiola have led workshops for young people in the summer months.

"Shigeru Ban's first building in Europe is here"
A workshop taking place in the grounds

Dezeen was at Boisbuchet in June for the Blickfang design workshop, which was led by designer Sebastian Wrong.

"Shigeru Ban's first building in Europe is here"
Shigeru Ban’s pavilion – his first building in Europe

In the movie above you can see von Vegesack giving the Blickfang workshop attendees a tour of the estate. “We did quite a lot of pavilions with [people including Japanese architect] Shigeru Ban and [bamboo architect] Simón Vélez, who built his first bamboo houses here in Boisbuchet. One of them blew away in the storm of 1999-2000 but the other ones became quite well known.”

"Shigeru Ban's first building in Europe is here"
Bamboo pavilion by Simón Vélez. Photograph by Deidi von Schaewen

While building his pavilions and guest houses at Boisbuchet, Vélez pioneered new ways of using giant bamboo from his native Columbia on an architectural scale.

"Shigeru Ban's first building in Europe is here"
The Log Cabin by Brückner & Brückner

Boisbuchet is dominated by the imposing nineteenth-century chateau, which is still not fully restored but which is used for exhibitions. There is also a traditional Japanese village house dating from 1863, which was dismantled, shipped from Japan and reassembled, and a contemporary bamboo building, donated by the People’s Republic of China.

"Shigeru Ban's first building in Europe is here"
Guests posing in front of the chateau

“In the garden of the chateau there is Shigeru Ban’s pavilion,” von Vegesack continues. “It was his first [permanent] building here in Europe. And there are two buildings by Jörg Schlaich, the engineer who worked with Frei Otto, building the Munich Olympic stadium.”

"Shigeru Ban's first building in Europe is here"
Relaxing outside one of the buildings in the grounds

Ban’s building uses wooden connections and recycled paper tubes to create a semi-cylindrical structure. Schlaich built two domes, one using split bamboo rods to create a structural lattice and the other employing fibreglass rods.

"Shigeru Ban's first building in Europe is here"
The chateau and grounds at dusk

Each summer Boisbuchet invites architects, designers, artists and other creative professionals from around the world to lead workshops attended by young people and students. “It’s not important to be an expert, but just to have an idea and try to make it happen,” says von Vegesack.

“It’s more about developing ideas with a goal you want to demonstrate in three dimensions. And above all to build up a network of good friends, sharing an interest in creating something that might be important for your professional life.”

See more architecture and design movies »

The music featured in this movie is a track called Filtered Sunshine by Jordan Thomas Mitchell. You can listen to more music by Jordan Thomas Mitchell on Dezeen Music Project.

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The Turbulences by Jakob + MacFarlane at the FRAC Centre

Faceted aluminium panels rise from the ground to form this pipe-shaped pavilion at the FRAC Centre in Orléans, France by architects Jakob + MacFarlane (+ slideshow).

The Turbulences by Jakob + MacFarlane at the FRAC Centre

Jakob + MacFarlane created the geometry of The Turbulences by extruding grids created across FRAC art centre‘s courtyard by the existing buildings in the public. The faceted surfaces form tubes topped with glass panels and entrances are inserted under raised parts of the undulations.

The Turbulences by Jakob + MacFarlane at the FRAC Centre

The new pavilion was designed as a reception area to funnel visitors towards the exhibitions housed in the main buildings. A tubular metal structure supports the secondary system of panels that cover the building.

The Turbulences by Jakob + MacFarlane at the FRAC Centre

Pre-fabricated concrete slabs clad the lower portion as a continuation of the courtyard surface. These are replaced by aluminium panels higher up, some of which are perforated and light up with LEDs at night.

The Turbulences by Jakob + MacFarlane at the FRAC Centre

More museum extensions on Dezeen include Zaha Hadid’s addition to the Messner Mountain Museum in the Dolomites and a new aquarium dedicated to codfish at the Ílhavo Maritime Museum in Portugal.

Photographs are by Nicolas Borel.

The Turbulences by Jakob + MacFarlane at the FRAC Centre

See more pavilion design »
See more architecture by Jakob + MacFarlane »
See more architecture and design in France »

The FRAC Centre sent us the following information:


Jakob + MacFarlane have brought to the fore an emerging dynamic form based on the parametric deformation and the extrusion of the grids of the existing buildings. As a strong architectural signal interacting with its context, this fluid, hybrid structure develop likes three glass and metal excrescences in the inner courtyard, in the very heart of the Subsistances.

The principle of emergence is extended to the immediate surroundings: the courtyard is treated like a public place, a topographical surface which forms the link between all the buildings and accommodate the Frac Centre programme. This surface goes hand in hand with the natural differences in level of the site towards the building’s entrance, reinforces the visual dynamics of the Turbulences and stretches away towards the city in a movement of organic expansion.

The destruction of a main building and the surrounding wall on Boulevard Rocheplatte has made it possible to greatly open up the new architectural complex to the city. Thanks to its new urban façade, the Frac Centre is connected to the cultural urban network of Orléans, and the inner courtyard has been turned into nothing less than a square. The new architectural presence has become the point of gravity of the Subsistances site, a new structure, and a new geometry. The architectural extension comes powerfully across through its prototypical dimension, which echoes the identity of the Frac Centre and its collection.

The glass and steel excrescences of the Turbulences house a public reception area and organize the flow of visitors towards the exhibition areas, situated in the existing main buildings.

The critical dimension of the work, conveyed by its structural complexity, is transcribed on all the project’s scales. The tubular metal structure, reinforced by a secondary structure supporting the exterior covering panels (aluminium panels, either solid or perforated) and the interior panels (made of wood), is formed by unusual and unique elements. The lower parts of the Turbulences are clad with prefabricated concrete panels, which provide the continuity of the building with the courtyard. The apparent disjunction between the two architectural orders is offset by the impression of emergence given by the Turbulences.

The light, prefabricated structure of the Turbulences has been entirely designed using digital tools. All the building trades involved worked on the basis of one and the same modelling file. The structures were subject to a trial assembly in the factory where the tubes were welded, before the permanent on-site assembly.

In this project, the at once conceptual and surgical approach to the urban fabric developed by Jakob + MacFarlane redefines the site in order to incorporate in it new points of equilibrium, “shifting” the architecture and offering contemporary art a dynamic and evolving image.

The architectural intervention, with its complex, facetted geometry, stands out against the symmetry and sobriety of the Subsistances site whose period structures and materials are left visible.

As “living” architecture permeable to urban ebbs and flows, the Turbulences – Frac Centre thus becomes the emblem of a place devoted to experimentation in all its forms, to the hybridization of disciplines, and to architectural changes occurring in the digital age.

The Jakob + MacFarlane extension, conceived like a graft on the existing buildings, introduces a principle of interaction with the urban environment activated by a “skin of light” on the Turbulences, designed by the artists’ duo Electronic Shadow (Niziha Mestaoui and Yacine Aït Kaci), the associate artist and joint winner of the competition.

Their proposal consists in covering a part of the Turbulences, giving onto the boulevard, with several hundred diodes, thus introducing a “media façade”, a dynamic interface between the building and the urban space. Using the construction lines of the Turbulences, the points of light become denser, passing from point to line, line to surface, surface to volume, and volume to image. This interactive skin of light, integrated in the building like a lattice-work moucharaby, will function in real time and develop a state of “resonance” with its environment, based on information coming, for example, from climatic data (daylight, wind, etc.) as well as animated image scenarios devised by the artists.

The building’s surface will thus be informed by flows of information, transcribing them as light-images. These luminous signs, the result of a computer programme, implement the merger of image and matter, turning The Turbulencess into “immaterial architecture”.

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Lasvit Tour de France Trophy 2013: The world’s most celebrated bicycle race marks its 100th year with a hand-blown crystal trophy

Lasvit Tour de France Trophy 2013


As the 100th Tour de France came to close on Sunday, 21 July, Briton Chris Froome hoisted the trophy for the first time. While the athletic accomplishment is an impressive one,…

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Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners to design terminal at Lyon-Saint Exupéry Airport

News: London architects Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners (RSHP) have been appointed to design a new terminal at Lyon-Saint Exupéry Airport at Lyon in France.

The terminal will double the size of the airport, which is one of two that serve France’s second-biggest city, and increase capacity from 10 to 15 million passengers per year by 2020.

RSHP were asked to design a terminal that “didn’t detract from” Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava’s TGV station, which is next to the airport. Their circular design features shops and gardens at its centre.

RSHP founding partner Richard Rogers, whose company also designed Heathrow Terminal 5 in London and Barajas airport in Madrid, is the subject of a major exhibition that opened at the Royal Academy in London this week. See all our stories about Richard Rogers.

Here’s some info from RSHP:


Lyon airport commissions Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners, architects of Heathrow Terminal 5 and Barajas Airport, for their new European gateway

Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners (RSHP) are pleased to announce their appointment to design the Future Terminal 1 project at Lyon-Saint Exupéry Airport. The new terminal will cover roughly the same area (70,000m2) as all of the existing buildings combined and will enable the airport to welcome an extra 5 million passengers by 2020 (taking the total from 10 to 15 million).

The brief for the project was challenging: to create a new identity for the site that remained in keeping with the high-calibre existing campus and didn’t detract from the distinctive TGV train station, designed by Santiago Calatrava. RSHP’s solution is a circular building made up of bold, simple and elegant structural elements.  The terminal will offer a spacious and clearly defined entrance, a hanging garden and large shopping area at the centre, which will enrich the travelling experience for passengers.

Graham Stirk, senior partner at Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners, designer of the project said:

“We are very pleased to be involved in the new terminal for Lyon Airport. The existing airport campus has a very distinctive structural and architectural language in both form and colour. This ‘DNA’ determines the character of the new proposal. We look forward to working with GFC Construction and Aéroports de Lyon to create a new European gateway to the city and its region.”

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Perceval 9.47 Table Knives: A superior solution to insufficient flatware, handmade in France

Perceval 9.47 Table Knives


When Michelin-starred chef Yves Charles couldn’t find a table knife to match the caliber of his cooking, he decided to make one. Inspired by the pocket knives carried by many of his compatriots—and the 9.47% ABV wine Charles and his friends shared when…

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Helmets Private Collection

Le studio de graphisme français BMD rend publique sa collection privée de casques au design résolument old school. Entre un style biker américain, un certain chauvinisme et une typographie inspirée des années 1930, le mélange est très réussi. La collection en images dans la suite de l’article.

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Les Cordes chandelier by Mathieu Lehanneur for Château Borély

Les Cordes chandelier by Mathieu Lehanneur for Chateau Borely

French designer Mathieu Lehanneur has created a chandelier for a château in Marseille, France, that looks like an illuminated rope suspended from the ceiling.

Mathieu Lehanneur used contemporary lighting technology to create a reinterpretation of a chandelier that contrasts with the opulent interior of the eighteenth century building.

Les Cordes chandelier by Mathieu Lehanneur for Chateau Borely

Glass tubes containing strips of LEDs puncture the underside of a mezzanine in the château’s entrance hall and seem to hang down like loops of rope.

“It is not an object. It is not a light fitting. It is the light itself that seems to live and circulate in the entrance space, as if stitched onto the building itself,” explains Lehanneur.

Les Cordes chandelier by Mathieu Lehanneur for Chateau Borely

The newly renovated Château Borély opened earlier this month and is now home to the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, de la Faïence et de la Mode (Museum of Decorative Arts, Earthenware and Fashion).

The opening is one of several events taking place this year in the city which is the European Capital of Culture 2013. Others include an installation of Konstantin Grcic’s furniture in an apartment at Le Corbusier’s Cité Radieuse and a pavilion by Foster + Partners with a polished steel canopy that reflects passers by.

Les Cordes chandelier by Mathieu Lehanneur for Chateau Borely

Mathieu Lehanneur recently designed a circular bar serving food with edible packaging and previous projects include a penthouse bar and nightclub with projectors and cables hanging from large black trees and a Romanesque church with a podium made from stacks of layered marble.

See all project by Mathieu Lehanneur »
See all lighting design »

Photography is by Vincent Duault

Here’s some more information from the designer:


For the opening of Château Borély, now Musée des Arts Décoratifs, de la Faïence et de la Mode in Marseille, Mathieu Lehanneur has designed a monumental chandelier for the entrance hall. “This chandelier was conceived as a rope of light crossing the ceiling, only bands of light and glass are visible. It is not an object. It is not a light fitting. It is the light itself that seems to live and circulate in the entrance space, as if stitched onto the building itself,” summarised the designer.

An impressive visually, on the boundary between light and special effects, since the conventional ceremonial light has been abandoned to pay tribute to the spirit of the place in a more modern fashion. Built in 1760, the Borély country house was a house for holidays and celebrations where the Borély family welcomed their friends. With this light, Mathieu Lehanneur regains the breath of fresh air that formerly blew over the Provençale house.

Materials: LEDs, tubes of borosilicate glass, luminous control system.
Production agency: Eva Albarran & Co

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