Parc des Bords de Seine by HHF Architects and AWP

Parc des Bords de Seine by HHF Architects

Swiss architects HHF and French architects AWP have won a competition to design a series of follies for a new park outside Paris.

Parc des Bords de Seine by HHF Architects and AWP

The proposed pavilions include an observatory of stacked timber huts that overlooks the Seine.

Parc des Bords de Seine by HHF Architects and AWP

Elsewhere, clusters of timber sheds will house a visitor’s centre and restaurant, while smaller follies will be scattered around the 113-hectare park.

Parc des Bords de Seine by HHF Architects and AWP

Each pavilion will be designed around a standard module size to reduce the cost of construction.

Parc des Bords de Seine by HHF Architects and AWP

Landscape architects Agence TER prepared the proposals for the new riverside park, which is to be located in Carrière-Sous-Poissy, north of the city centre.

Parc des Bords de Seine by HHF Architects and AWP

HHF Architects also designed a circular pavilion along La Ruta del Peregrino, a pilgrimage route in Mexico – see the project here and see more pavillons along the route here.

See also: more stories about projects by HHF Architects.

Here’s a few more details from HHF and AWP:


Carrière-Sous-Poissy
Architectures in the Parc des bords de Seine
AWP + HHF

The series of a pavilions with different public functions and programs are part of a future 113 hectare large public green space along the Seine river, in Carrière-Sous-Poissy, at the end station of the RER line A and close the renown Villa Savoye from Le Corbusier. The Park designed by the Paris based landscape architects Agence TER will be a public park and ecological showcase for local residents and a leisure destination for people living in and around Paris.

The competition brief included the construction of a visitor’s center, of a restaurant (“guinguette”), of an observa- tory plus about a dozen smaller infrastructure “follies” with different uses.

Similar to the popular wooden preschool toys in form of building blocks made of out of colorful wood, this collection of pavilions and small infrastructure «follies» is based on a modular wood system, repeating and combining different sized and different angled timber frames. This approach allows for interesting and unusual constructions, enabling a wide range of possible variations with a very limited number of elements, while at the same type staying very flexible for future adaptions and during the construction phase. This will result in unique atmospheres and spaces for each of the pavilions and infrastructure follies. In addition to that it’s a relatively low priced construction method which enables the integration of local building know how and local companies.

The site of the project is an exceptional one, for its location along the Seine river and for its “in-between”, dual nature (land/water, city/sprawl, wilderness/domesticated nature). The presence of barges, fishing huts and houseboats, which have been so far inhabiting the site has been a powerful source of inspiration. On the other side, the site boundary is characterized by suburban nondescript housing pavilions. The design springs from a process of hybridization between these two existing habitat models: the floating barge and the archetypical suburban house resulting in a new typology emerging in the park and dealing with the site’s memory and identity both spatially and socially, whilst providing a contemporary and forward-looking response.

By working along residential neighborhoods and along the river, we are invited by this project to come inhabit a large urban room worthy of Paris’ tradition of great terraced boulevards. This very active strip of land is made up of continuous docks, a large mooring space for barges, pontoons, lookouts, observatories, cantilevered terraces… These small, furtive constructions must stimulate the flow of people over the entire length of the park, and towards the water and city, as well as provide facilities for viewing the landscape: framing/unframing. They will bring an inspirational atmosphere, to encourage new experiences. We want to suggest windows for sharing this new kind of landscape, and bring the surrounding city to life by intensifying certain elements of the landscape plan: inscribe it within an urban strategy. The idea is to create conditions for viewing the space, to allow crossovers that are adapted to the buildings’ uses, users, to the evolution of their surroundings.

Parc des Bords de Seine by HHF Architects and AWP

Location: Carrière-Sous-Poissy, Paris, France
Net floor area: 1900m2 approx.
Type of project: Public equipments. Pavilions and Follies
Planned: 2011
Client: Communauté d’agglomération des Deux Rives de la Seine Architects: AWP + HHF
Project responsible: Alessandra Cianchetta
Team AWP: Marc Armengaud, Matthias Armengaud, Alessandra Cianchetta, Miguel La Parra Knapman, David Perez
Team HHF: Simon Frommenwiler, Simon Hartmann, Tilo Herlach
Structure: EVP
Engineering / QS: GINGER
Competition: 1st prize, 2011 / preliminary studies ongoing


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Tokyo Apartment
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Museum of Contemporary Art by SANAA Phinney Modern
by Elemental Architecture

Ruta del Peregrino: Lookout Point by HHF Architects

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

Lookout Point by Swiss architects HHF is one of eight new architectural structures along La Ruta del Peregrino, a 117km-long pilgrimage route in Mexico.

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

The route through the mountain range of Jalisco has been popular with pilgrims since the 17th Century, and the new structures are intended to provide shelter and serve as landmarks along the route.

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

Six of the eight structures along the route are now complete and the final two are under construction.

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

Other architects who have contributed are Fake Design, Luis Aldrete, Christ & Gantenbein, Dellekamp Arquitectos, Elemental, Godoylab, Omar Orlaineta, Periférica and Tatiana Bilbao.

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

Dezeen published proposed images of the Lookout Point back in 2009 (see our earlier story).

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

Photography is by Iwan Baan.

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

More stories about viewpoints on Dezeen »

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

More projects by HHF Architects on Dezeen »

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

Here is some more text from the architects:


Ruta del Peregrino
Jalisco, Mexico

Ruta del Peregrino is a religious phenomenon centred and moved by the adoration to the virgin of talpa.

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

La Ruta del Peregrino (Pilgrim’s Route) stretches out on a distance of 117 kilometers.

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

Approximately two million people participate each year in this religious phenomenon coming from different states of México to walk through the mountain range of Jalisco, starting in the town of Ameca, ascending to el Cerro del Obispo at an altitude of 2000 meters above sea level, crossing the peak of Espinazo del Diablo to descend to it’s final destination in the town of Talpa de Allende to meet with the Virgin of Talpa as an act of devotion, faith and gratitude.

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

This religious voyage has taken place since the 17th century, for the pilgrims the act of faith is carried to a penitence, the conditions of the route are harsh.

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

This sacrifice carried with austerity is an essential part of the promise or offering that become the ritual of purification.

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

This project aims to provide the historical route with better conditions for the pilgrims as well as to maximize the social and economical profit for this area by taking advantage of this massive event.

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

Based on a systematic vision the project becomes a sustainable site with different layers of meaning.

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

As we focus on the whole, the master plan consists of an ecological corridor with infrastructure and iconic architectural pieces that add to the religious ritual and also aim to appeal to a broader audience and allow the Route to have a flow of visitor beyond the religious.

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

The focus is on the iconic narrative given to the Route with 7 pieces that strongly relate both to the extraordinary landscape and to the religious ritual, becoming the imaginary landmarks of a deeply rutted phenomenon.

Ruta del Peregrino lookout point by HHF Architects

Each landmark by a different designer, a group of individual dialogues with specific sites and intentions that add up, to weave a single story.


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Top of Tyrol
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Confiserie Bachmann by HHF Architects

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