Manny / Tétrarc

Uploaded by — Filed under: Offices ,Selected , , , ,
 

031E8210©S

French Photographer Stéphane Chalmeau shared with us “Manny”, a  project by Tétrarc.

The building is located in Nantes, France, in a creative arts district behind the Courthouse. The project is an initiative by the Coupechoux Design Group in partnership with Nantes developer Axel Colin, and will provide a space for architecture and creative arts businesses, while open to the city and the neighborhood trough a public showroom on the ground floor, hosting exhibits, conferences and other events

The chaotic skin protects the interior by filtering the direct sunlight, creating a dynamic facade that changes during the day with different reflections.

More photos after the break.

 
 
Thumb up Thumb down 0

I personally find this building incredibly attractive, especially when contrasted with the simplicity and sincerity of the industrial sawtooth in the initial photograph. It sounds like the program of the building is great as well, as it “will provide a space for architecture and creative arts businesses, while open to the city and the neighborhood trough a public showroom on the ground floor, hosting exhibits, conferences and other events”. One thing that has been nagging me though: what is that opening in the floor? In some perspectives it looks like a glorified control joint, in others a linear diffuser, in still others something altogether unrelated. Any insight?

 
# February 18, 2010 at 22:28
Thumb up Thumb down 0
jeison says:

I am not an architect so I want to ask a question: how will this façade look in a coulple of years? Is it a strong structure to appear nice over the years?

 
# February 19, 2010 at 06:01
    Thumb up Thumb down 0
    john says:

    I imagine It will probably look the same? shouldnt get stained in this region of france.
    Or are you inferring that it will go out of fashion? even so it will still “look” the same, maybe people have a different interpretation of it…

     
    # February 19, 2010 at 10:21
      Thumb up Thumb down 0
      matt says:

      If it rains, it will stain. Weathering however is just a part of the life of a building and architects should learn to embrace this and design for it.

       
      # February 19, 2010 at 19:11
Thumb up Thumb down 0
Martin says:

I think the building is like the Beijing Bird’s Nest but after a windstorm.

 
# February 19, 2010 at 09:41
    Thumb up Thumb down 0
    far says:

    totally agree with martin :)

     
    # February 28, 2010 at 04:29
Thumb up Thumb down 0
john says:

what I find impressive about this is the coordination to construct this . Conceptually the facade reminds me the asymptote hotel, an elaborate brise soliel covering a coventional homogeneous floor plan. The last stand of creativity the facade. opinions?

 
# February 19, 2010 at 10:27
Thumb up Thumb down 0
minyoung says:

me likey

 
# February 19, 2010 at 15:29
Thumb up Thumb down 0

Unique: Manny. http://bit.ly/9IyI85

 
# February 20, 2010 at 05:31
Thumb up Thumb down 0
Esco says:

I find this building a bit attractive, however my only opinion is that you have a common building and you sort of…. put a skin on top of it to make it attractive and appealing. I really would like to know what is the idea behind the skin of the building.. yes, I know it filters sunlight throughout the day, but what is the main idea? Also, some plans and sections would do nice..just saying.

Other than that, the aluminum skin is very chaotic, so I think it attracts the eye right away from someone standing outside, but on the inside the view to the outside must be depressing.

 
# February 21, 2010 at 14:08
Thumb up Thumb down 0
t says:

What kind of material that you use for that reflective floor?

 
# February 22, 2010 at 12:10
Thumb up Thumb down 0
thompouce says:

I visited this building few weeks ago, and did not like it so much
first, this façade looks really light on the photos, if you visit you actually see the underneath structure wich is really heavy (my opinion) it looks like a lot of efforts for a arguable esthetic.
Second, no logic of the relation between the inside (very simple and, I have to recognize, elegant and the outside that is only a show off).

 
# February 26, 2010 at 05:34
Thumb up Thumb down 0
f says:

the real ‘bird nests’ :)

 
# March 1, 2010 at 06:04
Thumb up Thumb down 0
Raquel says:

To me, it seems like someone just puke over the building.

 
# June 18, 2010 at 13:24
Thumb up Thumb down 0

8:55 PM Aug 18th

good ~! Manny / Tétrarc | ArchDaily http://t.co/iQZPUAp via @archdaily

Leave a Reply »

 

Latest Comments »

Completely awesome![+]
Must try harder. Or stop.[+]
jasa fan page, jasa fanpage on Facebook Fan Page: Celebrating our 100,000 fans!
I have been browsing on-line more than 3...[+]
It’s a funny thing: someone writes (well, some simplifyings…)...[+]
why do you let this guy write here?. have anyone gone to his...[+]

Upcoming Architecture Events »

got events? invite us! click here

Architecture Books & Magazines »

Louis Kahn on the Thoughtful Making of Spaces / Michael Merrill

Louis Kahn on the Thoughtful Making of Spaces / Michael Merrill

From previously unpublished material and new analytic drawings this book explores Louis Kahn’s Dominican Motherhouse, his unbuilt masterpiece. Kahn pushed and prodded modern architecture into a crisis that questioned aspects of space that modernism had proudly banished from its…

 

Golconde: The Introduction of Modernism in India

Golconde: The Introduction of Modernism in India

Sited on the coastal edge of the Bay of Bengal, Golconde, a dormitory for the Sri Aurobindo Ashram in Pondicherry, India, was designed by architects Antonin Raymond and George Nakashima. Golconde is a remarkable architectural edifice, seemlessly negotiating between

 

Louis Vuitton Architecture and Interiors / Frederic Edelmann, Ian Luna, Rafael Magrou and Mohsen Mostafavi

Louis Vuitton Architecture and Interiors / Frederic Edelmann, Ian Luna, Rafael Magrou and Mohsen Mostafavi

“In the more recent past, it is the architecture of minimalism that has provided the most explicit and significant contribution to the reciprocal relationship between fashion and architecture. In many ways the abstraction and literal emptiness of minimalism has…

 

Our partners »

AD on iPad via Pulse

Browse by date »

Browse by category »

Friends »