Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

French studio FREAKS freearchitects has renovated an apartment on the Rue de Rivoli in Paris, once the address of Napoleon I, so the architects decided to dress up as the former emperor for the photo shoot (+ slideshow).

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

“We’re getting more and more bored by the nice shots where everything is so clean, with the perfect Scandinavian-design chair, the perfect white orchid, the perfect art book on the table,” FREAKS freearchitects partner Guillaume Aubry told Dezeen.

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

Ober the course of the project, the architects learnt that Napoleon had been responsible for the construction of the street and that it was possible he’d lived in the apartment they were refurbishing.

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

“Napoleon supposedly having lived there was a running joke among the building team and us,” said Aubry. “That’s why we decided, the three of us, to sort of perform the photo shoot wearing Napoleon-style hats.”

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

The pictures show the architects exploring the rooms of the apartment, which include large living and dining rooms with a new kitchen and bathroom added to one side.

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

In addition to the existing bedroom, two children’s rooms are inserted into the former utilities area and each one features a mezzanine first floor accessed by an industrial ladder.

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

Period mouldings are retained in the front rooms, but the architects have added modern details such as fluorescent tube lights and faceted kitchen units. “One of the main interventions consisted of opening the new kitchen towards the dining room, while taking charge to use a contemporary architectural langage,” said the architects.

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

The renovation didn’t include the addition of furniture, which is why one of the photographs shows the architects sitting on imaginary chairs.

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

FREAKS freearchitects often take a playful approach to their projects and others we’ve featured include dimension arrows stuck to the facade of Oscar Niemeyer’s French Communist Party Headquarters and a cosmetics shop with a wooden tunnel inside.

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

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Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

Photography is by David Foessel. The dog is Merlin (photographer’s own).

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

Here’s a description from the FREAKS freearchitects:


FREAKS has been commissioned to work on the transformation of a 170sqm flat downtown Paris, Rue de Rivoli. The Rue de Rivoli, which goes from Place de la Concorde until Place de la Bastille, has been built under Napoleon the 1st. The very first part of the street, facing the Jardin des Tuileries was his own property and he might have lived here or there in one of those chic flats.

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

The order was to transform that high ceiling stateroom into a familial flat, including two new children bedrooms in addition with the parents one. Therefore, the main target was to create new connections through the rooms ; some doors have been closed, some others have been pierced to avoid the typical dead-end distribution system. The service rooms on the backyard, at the end of a long and narrow corridor, have been transformed into the children area, to which one can acces by the service door, turning that part into an independant space within the flat. The bedrooms made profit of the high ceiling by embedding mezzanine, on which one can access by using a crinoline ladder.

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

A new kitchen + bathroom have been placed on the street side. Most of the existing moldings have been painted in white. The very cute venitian style boudoir has only been renewed.

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

One of the main interventions consisted in opening the new kitchen towards the dinning room while taking charge to use a comtemporary architectural langage within the space. No furniture or decoration were required, only a dozen of industrial waterproof neons (Sammode) with a special brass cladding have been used on the dinning room and billiard room walls.

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

Above: floor plan

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

Above: long section through bathroom and kitchen

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

Above: cross section through kitchen and front room

Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects

Above: cross section of children’s bedroom

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FREAKS freearchitects
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Interview: Gwenaëlle Chassin de Kergommeaux: We talk to the GCDK De.Sign principal about eggshell maps of China, furniture re-purposing and more

Interview: Gwenaëlle Chassin de Kergommeaux

Created in 2004 by Gwenaëlle Chassin de Kergommeaux as an artistic outlet, GCDK De.Sign is an unconventional furniture design company started in Paris and is now based in Beijing. Chassin de Kergommeaux bases her work on careful research of aesthetics and materials, using eggshells, silk, gold leaf, sharkskin, mother…

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Body Language: An exhibition in Paris exploring the relationship between photography and the human form

Body Language

The Centre Culturel Suisse in Paris has gathered a selection of photos focused on the concept of the body from the Fotomuseum Winterthur’s collection, as part of the city’s “Mois de la photo” (Month of Photography) event. Throughout its history as a medium, photography has entertained an exclusive and…

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The Unknown Hipster Diaries: Sharp-witted sketches of urban adventure compiled in a new book

The Unknown Hipster Diaries

by Laila Gohar Illustrator Jean-Philippe Delhomme has spent the last 25 years documenting representations of pop culture with his pencil. Having created illustrations for an array of high-caliber clients including Louis Vuitton, Maison Kitsuné and Sotheby’s, he began compiling his quirky drawings in a blog titled The Unknown Hipster in…

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Dezeen Book of Ideas: Eiffel DNA by Serero Architects

Every day this week Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs is selecting an extract from our Dezeen Book of Ideas, which makes a great Christmas present and is available for just £12. The second project is a competition-winning proposal to add a temporary platform to the Eiffel Tower that turned out to be a fraud.

“I really wanted this project to be real, but unfortunately it’s a fake,” explains Fairs. “It’s an audacious proposal to add a cloud-like Kevlar viewing platform to the top of one of the most famous monuments in the world and it fooled Dezeen along with many other publications. The architects invented the scheme as a publicity stunt, but it’s actually quite a beautiful addition to the Eiffel Tower as well as being a good way of relieving the unpleasant crush of visitors at the top of the tower.”

“Besides being a salutary warning of the ease with which falsehoods can spread on the web, it’s a provocative suggestion of how existing buildings could be adapted in future as new building technologies emerge,” he adds. “I spent a couple of years living in Seville in Spain and my favourite building there – in fact one of my favourite buildings anywhere – is the catherdal’s Giralda tower. Originally built as a minaret, the austere brick tower was later Catholicised with the addition of a florid Renaissance belfry. The resulting mash-up is as delightful as Serero Architects’ Eiffel DNA proposal, suggesting that even the most revered architectural masterpiece might benefit from a makeover.”

Dezeen Book of Ideas: Eiffel DNA by Serero Architects

Eiffel DNA by Serero Architects

This competition-winning design to transform the Eiffel Tower – by adding a flower-like viewing platform at the top – turned out to be a fraud. The project appeared on the website of Serero Architects in March 2008; they claimed to have won a contest to temporarily make over the Parisian landmark to mark its 120th birthday.

Consequently Dezeen, along with several other publications including The Guardian newspaper in the UK, published the seductive images of the iconic tower reimagined by the addition of a Kevlar structure that mimicked the lattice framework of Gustave Eiffel’s 1889 structure.

Called Eiffel DNA, the fantasy project was designed using a generative computer script that identified the tower’s genetic design code and used this template to “grow” a structure that would most efficiently support the temporary platform.

It wasn’t until a few days later that the New York Times established that the competition was non-existent, and we admitted we’d been duped.

The episode was a sobering reminder of the ease with which false information can spread on the internet; but it was also a brilliant PR exercise by the French practice, who received worldwide publicity. We still love the design, too.

Dezeen Book of Ideas: Eiffel DNA by Serero Architects

Read more about this project on Dezeen | Buy Dezeen Book of Ideas


Dezeen Book of Ideas out now!

Dezeen Book of Ideas features over 100 fascinating ideas for buildings, products and interiors from the world’s most creative brains. The book’s A5 format makes it highly accessible and the £12 price tag makes it the ideal impulse purchase or Christmas gift.Buy the Dezeen Book of Ideas now for just £12.

Reviews of Dezeen Book of Ideas

“From flip-flop art to a mirrored retreat in the sky” – Wall Street Journal

“The Sliding House and The Book of Ideas: Radical Thinking Required” – Forbes.com

“Fairs personally guides readers through the wonders of innovations like a balancing barn, a textile-skinned car, and the first aesthetically pleasing CFL — all of which share an ‘I wish I’d thought of that’ awe factor” – Sight Unseen

“Fabulous” – It’s Nice That

“Totally wonderful!” – Naomi Cleaver

“Handsomely repackages Dezeen’s coverage of the best in architectural, interior and design ideas” – Glasgow Herald

“Teeming with innovative projects handpicked by the people behind Dezeen … readers will be hard-pressed not to find something to gawk over in this intriguing new compendium of beautifully articulated concepts” – Dwell Asia

“Beautifully laid-out, to suit the content, and straight-shooting, non-convoluted descriptions make it user-friendly as well as eye-catching” – Lifestyle Magazine

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Paris Photo 2012: The gardens of the Champs Elysées play host to international talent and broad ideas

Paris Photo 2012

by Andrea DiCenzo Each year Paris Photo grows greater and grander than the year before, ensuring that the 2012 show makes a decisive leap to the front of the line as the best art photography fair to date. Returning to the Grand Palais for the second year running, the show’s…

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Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

The residential buildings of Paris appear to be sailing through the sky like kites in these dream-like images created by French photographer Laurent Chéhère (+ slideshow).

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

“All these flying houses are the fruits of my travels in the popular districts of Paris; Ménilmontant and Belleville,” Laurent Chéhère told Dezeen, explaining how he manipulated photographs of real buildings to create impossible images inspired by “the poetic vision of the old Paris.”

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

Some of the buildings pictured look just like typical houses, while others boast unusual features like a giant window or wonky walls.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

“Sometimes I use the realistic, metaphoric, symbolic and subjective, if it is necessary to tell a story,” said the artist.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

One image shows a circus tent, with juggling sticks and balls falling out of its open base (above), while another shows a caravan gliding through the sky (below).

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

A house on fire is pictured in one shot (below), while traces of life can be spotted in some of the other residences, such as smoke billowing from chimneys and legs hanging out of a window.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

“I tried to get these sad houses out of the anonymity of the street, to help them to tell their story, true or fantasised,” said Chéhère.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

The images are on show at the Galerie Paris-Beijing in Paris until 8 December.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

See more manipulated photography on Dezeen, including images of buildings pulled apart.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

See all our stories about photography »

Here’s some more information about the exhibition from Galerie Paris-Beijing:


LAURENT CHÉHÈRE
Flying Houses

Galerie Paris-Beijing is pleased to present the work of the French photographer Laurent Chéhère.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

Employing traditional photography and digital manipulation, his surreal series, Flying Houses, elevates architecture to a new level. The artist takes a variety of residential structures out of their defining neighbourhood backdrops. Released from their choked streets, the houses float amidst the clouds, like kites.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

Inspired by the poetic vision of the old Paris and by the famous short-length film The Red Balloon directed by Albert Lamorisse, Laurent Chéhère has strolled around the Belleville and Ménilmontant neighbourhoods, glancing at their typical and “tired” houses.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

Captured mid-journey, moving above the clouds as they remain tethered out of frame, like balloons to their thin strings, these old edifices glide high above the surface, revealing their hidden beauty.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

Some of flying houses are adorned with clotheslines and flowers pots, while others carry signs and businesses away from the fire flames… All of them seem to find a second life, uprooted from their native city and heading for other skies.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

Laurent Chéhère’s Flying Houses are a real invitation to travel and a metaphor of the fleetingness of the world that allow us to plunge into a dreamlike and moving world full of cheerfulness and humour.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

Laurent Chéhère (Paris, 1972) is an award-winning creative advertiser and tireless traveller. From Shanghai to Valparaiso, from La Paz to Lhasa, from Bamako to Bogota, he feeds his imagination and gives us his view of the world.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

He loves exploring the cities, suburbs, countries, as he likes to explore all fields of photography from reportage to conceptual image. Laurent Chéhère exposed the series Flying Houses at Dock en Seine City of Fashion and Design in June 2012 where he won the Prix Special. The series is being shown in China at the 2012 Pingyao International Photography Festival.

Flying Houses by Laurent Chéhère

From Thursday 25th October to Saturday 8th December 2012.

Galerie Paris-Beijing
54, rue du Vertbois
75003 Paris

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Laurent Chéhère
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Flying Stick

Lors du salon de l’automobile, l’Atelier GH a réalisé avec l’agence Auditoire la production de cet objet « Flying Sticks » pour le stand de Valeo. Près de 60 Flying Sticks forment ici une chorégraphie réussie et veulent transposer la métaphore technique des phénomènes naturels afin de rappeler la démarche environnementale.

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Undercity Series

L’explorateur et photographe Steve Duncan a enquêté sur le monde souterrain composé d’égouts, tunnels et métros depuis des années aux 4 coins du monde. Voici des clichés dans les souterrains des villes de New York, Londres, Moscou ou encore Paris. A découvrir dans notre galerie disponible dans la suite.

Undercity Series16
Undercity Series14
Fleet River, London, England
Undercity Series12
Undercity Series11
Undercity Series10
Photo by Steve Duncan - steve@undercity.org - (646) 734-7067
Undercity Series8
Undercity Series7
Undercity Series6
Undercity Series5
Urban Archeology
Undercity Series3
Undercity Series2
Undercity Series15

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

This university library in Paris by French practice Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes has a knobbly concrete facade that looks like blocks of earth.

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

The new Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library building comprises a recessed ground floor, which contains entrance and reception areas, and two upper floors inside a large concrete volume, which holds reading rooms with space for 1200 students.

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

Boxy bay windows provide large openings on the sides of the concrete facade, which has been shaped and coloured to look like soil.

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

“The rocky fragment of the library asserts a beauty that comes from harmony and seduction, which works subjectively on the viewer who is affected and moved,” architect Aldric Beckmann explained.

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

“Between naturalism and terror, the Marne-la-Vallée Library puts us in touch with our dreams – active, joyous, sometimes disturbing, comforting, but always salutary,” he added.

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

The glazed walls of the ground floor are surrounded by a moat and lend a lightness to the concrete above, making the weighty block appear to hover above the water.

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

The library is located alongside a 17th century farmhouse and outbuildings.

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

Photographs are by Beckmann-N’Thépé and Alain Deswarte.

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

We previously reported on two competitions won by Beckmann-N’Thépé, one for a zoological park outside St. Petersburg, Russia, and another to remodel Korkeasaari Zoo in Helsinki, Finland.

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

Earlier this week we featured a university library in Poland with a grid-like facade of red sandstone.

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

See all our stories about libraries »
See all our stories about universities »
See all our stories about concrete »

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

Here’s some more text from the architects:


Future heart and social area of the Marne-la-Vallée university campus, the new central library has the significant advantage of being located on an outstanding site: the Ferme de la Haute Maison. Dating from the 17th century, this historic site endows the building with a strategic role.

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

Site plan – click above for larger image

Its identity does not just stem from the quality of the constructions: the surrounding moat, which extends into a water garden, and the central courtyard which becomes the main parvis, are two federating components of this site, generating a special emotion.

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

Lower floor plan – click above for larger image

Positioned along the horizontal line of the existing gutters, the two parts of the building are marked and differentiated. The lower part (reception) recreates a frontality with the other part of the preserved Farm. Simple and rectilinear, it drops down towards the moat and becomes the support of the upper part (reading rooms).

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

First floor plan – click above for larger image

A suspended telluric volume, as though torn out of its natural element, it extends out on the garden side, pierced by projecting golden glass inclusions and patios which bring natural lighting from underneath.

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

Second floor plan – click above for larger image

Inside, calm and whiteness prevail. Plants here and there create spatial sequences and provide additional visual comfort to the landscape installed. Special attention is also paid to the environmental quality (HEQ approach), mainly regarding energy management. Private and public spaces are clearly separated and marked out, allowing obvious management of the flows. The large functional entities can therefore be quickly identified by their morphology and their location.

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

Section – click above for larger image

Location: Cité Descartes, Champs sur Marne, Marne-la-Vallée – 77, France
Programme: Construction of a library / Landscape and moat / Reading rooms, auditorium, cafeteria, offices, logistics, car park (20 places)
Architects: Agence Beckmann-N’Thépé (Paris)
Client: Marne-la-Vallée University
Client Assistance: AURIS
Area: 8670 m2 net floor area + outside spaces
Cost: 19.6 M€ excl. VAT
Delivery date: May 2011 (site in progress)
Architectural design office team:
Project manager: Hélène Méhats

Marne-la-Vallée Central University Library by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes

Elevation – click above for larger image

Architects: Fabio Cummaudo, Wilfried Daufy, Anne-Catherine Dufros, Marc Durand, Nicolas Gaudard, Thamila Hamiti, David Malaval, David Tajchman, Frédéric Taupin
Assistant architects: Amélie Authier, Maïté Dupont, Li Fang, Linna Lay, Laetitia Pignol
BET (technical design office) team:
Structure + Fluids: COTEC
HEQ (High Environmental Quality): Franck Boutté Consultant
Landscape designer: Emmanuelle Blanc
Facade engineer: VAN SANTEN
Economist: Sterling Quest Associates
Acoustics: PEUTZ
Fire safety + Fire Safety System coordinator: Prévention Consultants
Quality and technical building control: QUALICONSULT
Health and safety coordinator: Ouest Coordination
Building supervisor and coordinator: IPCS

Special finishes and materials:
Facade made from “earth-like” bulk-dyed architectonic concrete. Metallic structure and special glazed facades. Special textile fabric for false ceilings. HEQ standard (ventilation and heating, rainwater recovery), HEQ certification.

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by Beckmann-N’Thépé Architectes
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