Le Dîner en Blanc

Paris’ secret renegade picnic takes its all-white affair to NYC

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Good weather in Paris always brings out an army of picnickers carrying folding chairs and baskets. But when Parisians-in-the-know descended on the Louvre courtyard last week, they were actually participating in an annual dining event that’s some 20 years old. Known as “Le Dîner en Blanc, the city’s clandestine dinner party attracts a crowd dressed entirely in white that comes together at an undisclosed location through a word-of-mouth campaign.

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The steadily-growing outdoor festivity makes a point to be as equally refined as it is fun, with guests dining on white linen at candle-lit tables, using cutlery brought from home. Live bands play in the background to crowds of over 8,000, who often end up dancing with sparklers in hand around the public space.

After successful picnics in Amsterdam, Berlin, Montreal and elsewhere, this year Le Dîner en Blanc is hitting NYC on 25 August 2011. Seating is limited to 1,000 guests—register for the wait list online and see more info at Le Dîner en Blanc’s New York Facebook page.


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

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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

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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

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin and Nicolas Hugon

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

French architects Stephane Maupin and Nicolas Hugon have completed this ship-like building outside Paris as a base for rail and subway employees.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

Connected to the roof of the five-storey building are three blades resembling those of a helicopter, which contain street lights and solar panels.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

Called RATP Formation Centre, the projects has a combination of circular and rectangular windows.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

More stories about industrial buildings on Dezeen »
More projects in Paris on Dezeen »

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

The following is from the architect:


The building is located on the fringe of Paris city, at ‘Porte de la Villette’, an area where the urban fabric dissolves into heterogeneous industrial infrastructures.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

Surrounded between Paris ring road, train tracks, factories, and social housings, we were inspired by the brutality of this collage where concrete pillars clashes with raw metal, gravels collides with noisy train sounds…a mineral and raw atmosphere.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

The triangular zone of intervention on the site releases itself naturally from the existing constraints.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

The result is a concrete piece of cake, a simple 22m high extrusion of that original triangular shape.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

The building regroups workshops dedicated to the maintenance of the Parisian subway transportation system that were previously dispersed in different places.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

Employees gathers to the building and get prepared before being routed towards damaged rails tracks sites.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

Each of the building’s five floors hosts a different activity and program, first floor is a warehouse, the second floor is filled by lockers, the third floor is a classroom, the fourth floor is for management, the fifth floor welcomes a restaurant with a large terrace offering overlooking views towards the Parisian’s ring road.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

The five floors of the buildings are arranged and organized around a central convivial staircase.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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We designed that staircase as an amazing interior procession.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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All other circulation spaces are designed as playful additions to the building’s main structure: footbridges, staircases and aerial lifts create a multidimensional atmosphere with varied spatial experiences.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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As the work is hard, the lockers room is designed as a welcoming and release space, where the combination of washbasin, soap dispenser and mirror with a colorized background resembles a friendly smiley.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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The project is crowned by a contemporary tripod helix.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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This tripod is in fact a combination of the vertical chimney and the light projectors for car parks and areas surrounding the building.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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It also helps to heat sanitary water, providing a large area of solar panels.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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This strong element is a sign of the architect’s engagement to environmental convictions. It proves that the French ‘HQE’ label can also be interpreted with fun.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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Trough delicate reaction to the site, and careful organization of the circulations and building’s access, we intended to affirm the building as a ‘worker’s palace’ instead of a banal utilitarian building.

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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We could easily imagine the head of this submarine bursting through the ice…

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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Credits : Stephane Maupin / Nicolas Hugon
Year :2010
Collaborators : Jérome Santel, Gwenael Lechapelain
Area : Paris
Photos credits : Cécile Septet

RATP Formation Centre by Stephane Maupin

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See also:

.

Laboratory
by TEN Arquitectos
Manny
by Tétrarc
Laboratory
by Héctor Fernández-Elorza

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

Patrick Tosani

Pictorial mind games in a contemporary French photographer’s first retrospective
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At first glance Patrick Tosani‘s photographs seem like textbook examples of monolithic, clean and simple photography. But look a little closer and objects like ice cubes, spoons and high-heeled shoes reveal themselves by a trick of perspective and massive proportions, playing with scale and drawing the viewer into a new dimension. Over 200 such clever twists (many of which have never been shown before) comprise the contemporary French artist’s first retrospective, currently on view at Paris’ Maison Européenne de la Photographie.

Tosani’s focus on the odd details has the transformative effect of making everyday objects appear extraordinary and foreign, skewing scale in order for the objects to gain new momentum and dramatic intensity in their abstraction. Intentionally misrepresenting reality in a specific way gives the images a common frame of reference, connecting the series of isolated fragments into an otherworldly experience. This unusual terrain is more absurd than menacing though; Tosani’s playful forms conceptually poke fun at the nature of photographic representation itself.

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The photographer ribs his fellow humans too, often choosing the human body as a subject, which he explores by forcing limbs into incongruous folded positions or by compartmentalizing details such as the top of a head or bitten fingernails. His quest even drives him to trace the body’s presence, illustrated by a stunning series of empty pairs of pants, shot so that the two big holes where the legs go playfully evoke the astonished eyes of primitive masks with magical properties.

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Another whimsical series turns children (all met on a trip in Syria) into colorful blooming flowers by making portraits with shirts blowing around their heads like corollas.

The exhibition is currently on view at Paris’ Maison Européenne de la Photographie through 19 June 2011.


Monumenta 2011: Leviathan

Anish Kapoor inflates a massive womb-like sculpture in Paris

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The challenge of the annual art exhibit known as Monumenta is primarily a question of volume. Works created for the site-specific show must grapple with the 13,500 square-meter nave of the Grand Palais and the shimmering glass roof (the biggest in Europe), originally built for a late-1800s world’s fair in Paris. Every year the French Ministry for Culture invites a key figure of the artistic scene to fill the space; the three previous editions featured German artist Anselm Kiefer in 2007, followed by American artist Richard Serra the next year and (skipping a year) French artist Christian Boltanski in 2010.

The choice of Anish Kapoor, who’s also been commissioned to design a 116-meter-high sculpture titled “The ArcelorMittal Orbit” for the forthcoming Olympic Games in London, speaks to the 1991 Turner Prize winner’s mastery of monumental scale (seen in Chicago with his successful “Cloud Gate”) but also to his use of color as a basic material. Indian-born but living in London, Kapoor’s multicultural references show in his choice to make his Monumenta installation decidedly non-Western by asking viewers to literally enter the artwork rather than just look at it.

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The spectacular piece consists of a huge cruciform balloon laying on the ground, almost as high and wide as the space itself. Describing his piece of work as a fiction, Kapoor explains he tried to give the idea of a presence while it’s nothing but air. He adds that the presence comes from the connection that the color as a medium makes with the eyes and senses of the visitors. To engineer the effect—to create a form that’s both light and enormous—was a technological feat to conceive and achieve, from the computerizing calculation of the flatness of its bottom and the size of each two-millimeter wide strip of material to the construction part itself.

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While from the outside the piece looks like an aubergine-red ballon with neck-like forms, the inside is a bright red tunnel with holes; the aim of the artist is about experiencing two simultaneous but reversed realities.

Entering the balloon leads the visitor on a journey of sensorial discovery, an impression of what entering a womb must be like. Awash in natural light from the glassy roof, the thin red walls are lined with the shadows of the building’s iron structure. Of the many otherworldly qualities of the work, the immersive experience changes as the light shifts throughout the day and from one day to another, creating varying hues of red as well as shapes of shadows.

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Monumenta 2011 runs through 23 June 2011, leaving plenty of time for you to jump over to Paris and experience this fantastic exhibition. Photographs from top: EMOC/Patrick Tourneboeuf, Isabelle Doal, Didier Plowy, Isabelle Doal.


HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

French designer Matali Crasset has created this Paris hotel in collaboration with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet, where visitors check-in, order food and exchange tips on the city with other guests via the hotel’s online system and a plethora of screens throughout the building.

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

The HI matic hotel allows guests to choose and change music in the public areas, collaborate on an ever-evolving city guide and collect meals from an automatic machine in the restaurant.

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

42 rooms are spread over five floors, envisioned as cabins where the specially designed furniture systems can change function throughout the day as required.

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

See also: Dar Hi hotel in the Tunisian desert by Matali Crasset

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

More hotels on Dezeen »
More stories about Matali Crasset on Dezeen »

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

Photographs are by Simon Bouisson.

The following is from the designers:


HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Phillipe Chatelet

HI matic, an urban eco-lodging facility. HI matic, when sleeping in Paris becomes easy. Located in the Rue Charonne, a stone’s throw away from Bastille. Welcome to South Bastille where restaurants, organic shops, store concepts, specialized book stores are blooming. Young designers meet here, young chefs open their restaurants, you can cruise around and meet your friends. The area is as popular as it is trendy, a condensed version of Paris in Rue de Charonne. This is where HI matic has been established, a new urban eco-logding concept.

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

Matali Crasset has collaborated once again with Patrick Elouarghi et Philippe Chatelet to inject a new vibe in the Paris lodging. With 42 cabin rooms, HI matic combines the codes of an urban hotel with that of a country lodging. Economical, ecological and automatic, this warm cocoon in the heart of the city revives the best Japanese Riokan, the youth hostel or the rest house. An ecological accommodation with a precise choice of materials (wood, rubber, natural paintings) that entice areas of conviviality and sharing.

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

Contemporary in its layout, warm in its the choice of living areas, affodable in terms of price and sincere with regards to environment awareness, Himatic is what was missing in quality city accommodation. It is adapted to current needs, ideal for green attitude addicts or more casual ecologically concerned individuals.

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

HI matic is a small hotel perfect for a city like Paris. It answers the need of the characteristics of urban tourism, for short and longer stays, a pied à terre for those who come regularly to the Capital for business or leisure trips. For a day or a year, you will want to come back to HI matic to enjoy a good night’s sleep! Because everything here is simple, informal and friendly.

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

HI matic is 100 % internet the web site created by the hotel without any intermediary, dealing directly and simply with the hotel. You are welcomed and guided in the same simple way. You live the experience in full autonomy as comfortable at the HI matic as you are with social networks.

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

HI matic, the pied à terre experience:

Hi matic has to be experienced as a direct link to the city. You can live your stay in a simple and casual way, free to move in an explanatory environment. Turned towards the exterior because of the lobby that is open to the street with large windows but also a protective cocoon in the interior. It allows you to rest in comfort and to regenerate while getting acquainted with Parisian life style. An hotel to rest, and catch your breath before plunging back into the urban rhythm. Staying at HI matic is enjoying the pied à terre experience in Paris. You move in with all the autonomy and freedom, you are never alone, for you are sure to meet friends in a new community with whom you can share each other’s experiences and tips about the city.

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

Flexible Cabins

The first impression when you discover the rooms is an appropriation of space. The 42 rooms occupy 5 floors and are conceived on a model of a cabin. Space is available and flexible. All is done to allow you to spend time. Each cabin offers all the services of a comfortable room. Flexible in its play with spaces and elements, the experience of living closer to the ground is what gives you that impression of freedom. Nothing is hung on the walls, the cabin is its own structure that leads to all services. The cabin has an extension that is a small desk. The bed is on a platform with its memory shape mattress that was custom-made. It is in the centre of the cabin. At night it becomes a large and comfortable bed for a good night’s sleep. During the day it’s a sofa for lounging, dining, working … A real freedom of action that entices you to possess the room as if it were a cabin made for children. Fluency, autonomy, simplicity: the client is in a universe without formalities while very structured.

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

The automatic dispensers and the restaurant:

When you arrive you are swept by the sound music of the label Kompakt and you can enjoy the rhythms of the HI radio. The lobby as well as the restaurant is conceived to favor encounters, meetings allowing for tips to be exchanged before going off to discover the city. You can meet people, you can leave messages, addresses. The ipad is at your disposal to discover music selections and to see various practical informations, it is a communal tool. HI matic is networking within the city. A giant map of Paris is present in the meeting point. ParHI Link is fed by important people chosen by their expertise in music, art and cooking…. they will share their experience of the city. it might become Paris’ best city guide.

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

HI matic shop:

The HI matic shop is conceived like a gift package available 24/24. This playful boutique proposes a selection of useful, pleasurable and practical objects ready to use. Guides, books, cd’s, toothbrushes and other necessities are available in an original dispenser. A real organic breakfast is available in the restaurant from automatic dispensers. You are free to take whatever you please and place it on your tray and then seat around the large communal table.

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

The new born of HI Life:

After the HI hotel in Nice and Dar HI in Nefta in Tunisia, HI matic is the new project of the HI life group. As usual, Matali Crasset, Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chapelet want to offer an accomodation concept shakes up conventional hotel business codes. They came up with new ways to welcome you and to allow you to live together in a hotel. They have managed to create very diverse entities from urban city hotel to the eco-retreat in the desert. HI matic adopts Matali’s beliefs about hospitality which were her main concerns when she first began -ie hospitality column.

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

“When Jim comes to Paris”. HI matic respects the same logic as the Hi hotel in Nice in its contemporary, dynamic yet friendly dimension. A living experience that will be renewed at your next HI Life destination.

HI matic by Matali Crasset with Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet

HI matic
71 rue de Charonne
75011 Paris France


See also:

.

Dar Hi by
Matali Crasset
Hotel Forsthaus by
Naumann Architektur
Pattaya Hotel by
Dept. of Architecture

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

An exhibition of work by London architect Zaha Hadid has opened inside her Mobile Art Pavilion (see our earlier story), which has found its permanent home in Paris having toured New York, Tokyo and Hong Kong since 2008.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

The pavilion will remain outside the Institut du Monde Arabe in Paris and the inaugural exhibition in this location opened at the end of April.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

The exhibition, called Une Architecture, includes architectural models, paintings and projections of work produced by Zaha Hadid Architects in recent years.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

The exhibition continues until 30 October 2011.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

More projects by Zaha Hadid Architects on Dezeen »

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

The following information is from the architects:


Zaha Hadid une architecture
April 29 – October 30

On 28 April, the exhibition designed by Zaha Hadid inaugurates The Mobile Art Pavilion, a new arts venue installed in front of the Institut du Monde Arabe.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

Created by Iraqi born British architect Zaha Hadid for CHANEL in 2007 and commissioned by Karl Lagerfeld, the Mobile Art Pavilion’s opening exhibition showcases a selection of work by the 2004 Pritzker Prize laureate Zaha Hadid, designer of some of the world’s most highly acclaimed projects.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

A genuine immersion into the architect’s formal and conceptual repertoire, this exhibition of Hadid’s work is presented within its own architecture.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

Translating the intellectual and physical into the sensual and using a wide range of media, the Mobile Art Pavilion unfolds through spatial sequences which engage the visitor in unique and unexpected environments.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

The Mobile Art Pavilion, donated by CHANEL to the Institut du monde arabe, will allow the institute to further develop its cultural programmes in the field of contemporary creation.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

Mobile Art Pavillon: Historic

“Zaha Hadid” will be the first exhibition held inside the Mobile Art Pavilion since the installation of the pavilion in front of the Institut du monde arabe. CHANEL donated the pavilion to the Institut du monde arabe at the beginning of 2011.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

It had previously travelled to Hong Kong, Tokyo and New York since 2007. It will now have a permanent location at the IMA, where it will be used to host exhibitions in line with the centre’s policy of showcasing talent from Arab countries.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

Zaha Hadid: About Mobile Art

“I think through our architecture, we can give people a glimpse of another world, and enthuse them, make them excited about ideas. Our architecture is intuitive, radical, international and dynamic. We are concerned with constructing buildings that evoke original experiences, a kind of strangeness and newness that is comparable to the experience of going to a new country. The Mobile Art Pavilion follows these principles of inspiration.” states Zaha Hadid.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

Arousing one’s curiosity is a constant theme in the work of Zaha Hadid. The Mobile Art Pavilion is a step in the evolution of Hadid’s architectural language that generates a sculptural sensuality with a coherent formal logic. This new architecture flourishes via the new digital modelling tools that augment the design process with techniques of continuous fluidity.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

Zaha Hadid explains this process, “The complexity and technological advances in digital imaging software and construction techniques have made the architecture of the Mobile Art Pavilion possible. It is an architectural language of fluidity and nature, driven by new digital design and manufacturing processes which have enabled us to create the Pavilion’s totally organic forms – instead of the serial order of repetition that marks the architecture of the industrial 20th Century.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

Design of Mobile Art

The Mobile Art Pavilion which has been conceived through a system of natural organisation, is also shaped by the functional considerations of the exhibition. However, these further determinations remain secondary and precariously dependent on the overriding formal language of the Pavilion. An enigmatic strangeness has evolved between the Pavilion’s organic system of logic and these functional adaptations – arousing the visitor’s curiosity even further.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

In creating the Mobile Art Pavilion, Zaha Hadid has developed the fluid geometries of natural systems into a continuum of fluent and dynamic space – where oppositions between exterior and interior, light and dark, natural and artificial landscapes are synthesised. Lines of energy converge within the Pavilion, constantly redefining the quality of each exhibition space whilst guiding movement through the exhibition.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

Content

The exhibition thematically explores a series of research agendas conducted by Zaha Hadid Architects in recent years. Different media is used to show the work; architectural models, silver paintings and projections. A variety of projects from all over the world will be shown, these will include: the Soho Central Business District in Beijing, the Spiralling Tower for the University Campus in Barcelona, the Guggenheim project in Singapore, the recently completed CGMCMA Tower in Marseille and the Pierres Vives building of the department de l’Herault in Montpellier, currently in construction.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

The exhibition will also showcase architectural projects from the Arab world such as the Abu Dhabi Performing Arts Centre in the United Arab Emirates, the Nile Tower in Cairo Egypt, the Signature Towers in Dubai and the Rabat Tower in Morocco. Furthermore the exhibition showcases Zaha Hadid Architects’ design research within the parametric paradigm. The parametric towers research project aims to develop a conceptual framework for the design of a prototype tower to be used as the basis for a set of parametric tools that can be applied to a multitude of different specific conditions.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

Individual elements such as massing, skin, core, void, and structure are modulated individually and in concert. The final result is a fully malleable system that can differentiate families and fields of towers in response to user input or environmental considerations. Applications of the research into architectural practice are exemplified via a series of Tower competition entries on large urban scales.

Une Architecture at the Mobile Art Pavilion by Zaha Hadid

The visitor is invited to experience the work of Zaha Hadid Architects on three different levels, by discovering the Mobile Art pavilion (building), viewing the exhibition design (scenography) and seeing the work of the practice (exhibits).


See also:

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Rabat Grand Theatre by
Zaha Hadid Architects
Zaha Hadid and Suprematism in ZurichEli & Edythe Broad Art
Museum by Zaha Hadid

From Photography to Design

Insight from Charlotte Perriand’s photography on the design legend’s life and work

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Even design dilettantes will know Charlotte Perriand as a famous architect, pioneer of 20th-century interiors design and as the designer behind some of Le Corbusier’s most iconic furniture. But taking on a less-known side of the legend, the exhibition “From Photography to Design” at Paris’ Le Petit Palais explores her creation process, narrowing in on her body of photographic work.

Ordered by Le Corbusier himself, Perriand began using photography for her preliminary studies before moving on to the still images as a means to observe the “laws of nature,” and the urban context in which she found ideas for her experiments with forms, materials and spatial arrangements. The exhibit consists of beautiful photographs—of natural objects like driftwood, bones, stumps and stones, as well as compressed metals and other industrial fragments sourced from scrap metal dealers—shown side by side furniture pieces inspired by the shapes or materials pictured. Suggestive of the muse Perriand found in nature, a method she called “the shapes lab,” examples include a smooth round pebble found on North Sea shores that gave way to the organic forms of her wooden tables.

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This approach led to efficient, ergonomic and outstandingly simple work, explained by Perriand’s assertion, “beauty must come out of rational organization of elements; it doesn’t need any additional decoration.” She always kept it simple, proving that less is more, in particular when it came to the materials that defined her career. Equating wood and iron used in her furniture with cement in architecture, Perriand established the tradition of the “machine age” aesthetic with minimal, bent chrome steel tube and leather furniture.

Perriand’s photographs bear the mark of her distinct approach to modernism too. Though beautifully black and white and minimal, pictures of simple objects—such as an ice cube lit up by a sunbeam, fishing nets and boat sails or crackled desert earth—feel warm and feminine. A collecter of everyday objects from Japan, she saw no hierarchy among things; from the most humble to the most complex and sophisticated, they all deserve the same attention. The result of her democratic designs were pieces of furniture that she said were made for people to live in and be comfortable, rather than reflections of her own behaviors.

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She designed her famous series of relaxing chairs (chaise lounges and swivel chairs currently in production by Cassina) after observing relaxing bodies. In the show the ergonomic seating is displayed along with the photographs she took of dozens of portraits of resting people, including lying-down fishermen in ports, a Corsican grandmother at siesta, or friends napping on tree branches.

Drawn to social commitment, the exhibition also takes a look at the survey she made of slums and other poor unsanitary areas in Paris in the early ’30s, helping to drive home a central point of the show. Positioned, as the major part of it is, within the permanent collection of the museum consists in dispatching Perriand’s unassuming pieces of furnitures among Louis the XVIth or older historical pieces from the permanent collection.

The strategy, introduced by the Louvre museum’s new initiative inviting contemporary artists to play with the permanent collections, isn’t just a smart way to have the permanent collection re-visited. In this case, the move elegantly highlights how starkly different Perriand’s populist style and influence was from the past—and how similar it is to today.

Images at the top: “Banquette Tokyo” 1954, © AChP_ADAGP, Paris 201; “Arête de Poisson” 1933, © AChP_ADAGP, Paris 2011


The Art of the Automobile

Masterpieces of Ralph Lauren’s legendary car collection on display in Paris

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Starting today seventeen of the world’s finest classic sports cars from Ralph Lauren’s legendary personal collection will be on show at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris. “The Art of the Automobile” features select cars from the designer’s prolific stockpiles, one of the most extensive in the world.

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Acting as a visual timeline of the evolution of European automobile design through the 20th Century, the cars on display—among them Bugatti, Alfa Romeo, Bentley, Mercedes-Benz, Jaguar, Aston Martin, Porsche and Ferrari—are among the most exceptional in the world and have been infrequently shown to the public. Each one, all created between the 1930s and the 1990s, stands as a masterpiece of both technological innovation and impeccable design.

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The result is a show of some of the rarest and most beautiful cars by the greatest names in automobiles, including four (a ’31 Alfa Romeo Monza 8C 2300; a
Jaguar XKSS from 1956/1958; a ’60 Ferrari 250 GT SWB Berlinetta Scaglietti and a ’64 Ferrari 250 LM) that have never been exhibited before.

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To commemorate the exhibition, a limited run book features each car, its historical and technical significance and an explanation by Lauren himself on what guides his passion for car collection. The book will also showcase many of the same images seen here, all exceptionally shot by renowned automobile photographer Michael Furman.

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The show runs through 28 August 2011 and is open to the public for a small fee of €9.