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Paris: The Latest Architecture and News

Apartment in Paris / Schemaa

Apartment in Paris / Schemaa - Apartment Interiors, Kitchen, Door, Facade, Table, Countertop, ChairApartment in Paris / Schemaa - Apartment Interiors, Kitchen, Facade, Door, Countertop, TableApartment in Paris / Schemaa - Apartment InteriorsApartment in Paris / Schemaa - Apartment Interiors, Bedroom, Beam, Handrail, BedApartment in Paris / Schemaa - More Images+ 17

  • Architects: Schemaa
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  32
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2014
  • Professionals: Spruce, Muuto

Video: Re-imagining Paris Through Archi'llusion

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Have you ever treated a famous city like your very own sketchbook? Claire and Max of Menilmonde did just that. The duo re-envisioned the buildings and monuments of Paris by capturing the lower stories through video and sketching imaginary additions in a project that viscerally challenges pre-conceived attitudes towards iconic structures. Take a walk through the City of Love and experience it anew as a work of art.

Student Hall of Residence + Family Homes / Babled Nouvet Reynaud Architectes

Student Hall of Residence + Family Homes / Babled Nouvet Reynaud Architectes - Student Hall, FacadeStudent Hall of Residence + Family Homes / Babled Nouvet Reynaud Architectes - Student Hall, FacadeStudent Hall of Residence + Family Homes / Babled Nouvet Reynaud Architectes - Student Hall, FacadeStudent Hall of Residence + Family Homes / Babled Nouvet Reynaud Architectes - Student Hall, Arch, CityscapeStudent Hall of Residence + Family Homes / Babled Nouvet Reynaud Architectes - More Images+ 25

Paris' Grande Arche to get €200 million Revamp

The French government has announced that it is committing €200 million towards restoring the Grande Arche de la Défense, the 110m tall hollow cube which marks the Western end of Paris' Axe Historique. The arch was completed in 1989 to celebrate the bicentennial of the French Revolution, however in its 25-year lifespan it has not fared well: an elevator scare in 2010 forced the rooftop facilities to close, and the area around the North tower has been closed to the public due to the risk of falling marble tiles. Studies conducted between 2004 and 2010 concluded that one in six of the facade tiles had been severely damaged by rain.

The €200 million investment will focus on the arch's Southern tower, where workers for the French ecology and housing ministries who occupy the space have complained of a lack of natural light and poor working conditions.

More on the Grande Arche's future after the break

Silos 13 / VIB Architecture

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Has The Surge Of Visitors to Museums & Galleries Reached A Tipping Point?

In an article for the New York Times Rachel Donadio examines Masterworks vs. the Masses. From the Louvre in Paris to London's British Museum, Florence's Uffizi to the Vatican Museums, the increasing surge of visitors to these international cultural nodes "has turned many museums into crowded, sauna-like spaces." Balancing everyone's right to be "nourished" by cultural experiences with protecting and preserving the works of art in question is a very real problem. According to Donadio, "even when the art is secure, the experience can become irksome." With some museums seeing annual visitors of up to 6.7 million visitors (British Museum), addressing the issues faced by institutions that are a victim of their own success is becoming more and more pressing. Read the article in full here.

Reviving Vacant Buildings: A Tale of Two Cities

A former treasure in Louisville is now nothing more than a storage facility, while a dilapidated office building in Paris has sat empty for months on end. Both of these cities are taking proactive, but wildly different, measures to help the valuable vacant buildings and lots in their jurisdictions find new life. To learn more about each city's potential solution to this global problem, keep reading after the break.

Epée de Bois - Nursery / h2o architectes

Epée de Bois - Nursery / h2o architectes - Extension, Facade, Door
© Julien Attard

Epée de Bois - Nursery / h2o architectes - Extension, Facade, DoorEpée de Bois - Nursery / h2o architectes - Extension, Facade, Fence, DoorEpée de Bois - Nursery / h2o architectes - Extension, Door, Facade, Handrail, BeamEpée de Bois - Nursery / h2o architectes - Extension, Facade, DoorEpée de Bois - Nursery / h2o architectes - More Images+ 16

The Paris Debate: Must Preservation Inhibit Urban Renewal?

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What is the preservationist's role in our modernizing world? According to Michael Allen of Next City, preservationists exist to ensure that redevelopment meets both cultural heritage and economic demands. Read his entire article, originally published on Next City, below.

Imagine Institute / Ateliers Jean Nouvel + Valero Gadan Architectes

Imagine Institute / Ateliers Jean Nouvel + Valero Gadan Architectes - Institutional Buildings, Facade
© Christophe Valtin

Imagine Institute / Ateliers Jean Nouvel + Valero Gadan Architectes - Institutional Buildings, Facade, CityscapeImagine Institute / Ateliers Jean Nouvel + Valero Gadan Architectes - Institutional Buildings, Stairs, Facade, ColumnImagine Institute / Ateliers Jean Nouvel + Valero Gadan Architectes - Institutional Buildings, Door, ColumnImagine Institute / Ateliers Jean Nouvel + Valero Gadan Architectes - Institutional Buildings, Facade, HandrailImagine Institute / Ateliers Jean Nouvel + Valero Gadan Architectes - More Images+ 38

Manuelle Gautrand to Revamp Paris' Alésia Cinema with Hundreds of LED "Pixels"

Manuelle Gautrand to Revamp Paris' Alésia Cinema with Hundreds of LED "Pixels" - Cinema, Facade, Lighting, Cityscape
Facade Closeup. Image © KDSL

Renovated numerous times during its history, Gaumont-Alésia, a Parisian cinema housed in a structure that is over 80 years old, will now be revamped by firm Manuelle Gautrand Architecture. With a design that emphasizes filmography’s presence in modern culture, the Gaumont-Alésia is set to become an inviting cultural hub for the surrounding city, showcasing cinema’s influence on both the interior and exterior.

Both street facades will be composed of glass curtain walls shaded by pleated metal panels. These panels will be perforated by hundreds of LED “pixels” which will create an image across the pleats. Both entrances to the building become animated walls, broadcasting film stills, movie trailers, and advertisements, all meant to entice passersby. The LEDS are spaced fewer and farther apart toward the edges of the building, creating a stippling effect around the border of the images. At the entrances these animated panels will peel upwards, creating a canopy under which patrons can walk.

Manuelle Gautrand to Revamp Paris' Alésia Cinema with Hundreds of LED "Pixels" - Cinema, Facade, Lighting, CityscapeManuelle Gautrand to Revamp Paris' Alésia Cinema with Hundreds of LED "Pixels" - Cinema, Facade, CityscapeManuelle Gautrand to Revamp Paris' Alésia Cinema with Hundreds of LED "Pixels" - Cinema, Facade, Lighting, ChairManuelle Gautrand to Revamp Paris' Alésia Cinema with Hundreds of LED "Pixels" - Cinema, StairsManuelle Gautrand to Revamp Paris' Alésia Cinema with Hundreds of LED Pixels - More Images+ 20

Le Clos Y / Dai Sugasawa

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  • Interior Designers: Dai Sugasawa
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  100
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2014

Welfare Centre for children and teenagers in Paris / Marjan Hessamfar & Joe Vérons architectes associés

Welfare Centre for children and teenagers in Paris / Marjan Hessamfar & Joe Vérons architectes associés - Housing, Facade, DoorWelfare Centre for children and teenagers in Paris / Marjan Hessamfar & Joe Vérons architectes associés - Housing, DoorWelfare Centre for children and teenagers in Paris / Marjan Hessamfar & Joe Vérons architectes associés - Housing, Garden, FacadeWelfare Centre for children and teenagers in Paris / Marjan Hessamfar & Joe Vérons architectes associés - Housing, FacadeWelfare Centre for children and teenagers in Paris / Marjan Hessamfar & Joe Vérons architectes associés - More Images+ 23

10 Fires That Changed Architecture Forever

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With no casualties, last week's fire at the Glasgow School of Art, which caused significant damage to parts of the building and gutted Charles Rennie Mackintosh's canonical library room, will be remembered as a tragic event that robbed us of one of the best examples of Art Nouveau of its time. The intention of the Glasgow School of Art is to restore the building in the hope that in generations to come, the fire will be all but forgotten, a strategy which has been largely well received by the profession.

However, in the case of other fires things have not gone so smoothly: for millennia, fire has played a big role in determining the course of architectural history - by destroying precious artifacts, but often also by allowing something new to rise from the ashes. Read on after the break as we count down the top 10 fires that changed the course of architectural history.

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The Victor Gelez Community Centre / Dumont Legrand Architects

The Victor Gelez Community Centre  / Dumont Legrand Architects - Community Center, Stairs, Handrail, FacadeThe Victor Gelez Community Centre  / Dumont Legrand Architects - Community Center, LightingThe Victor Gelez Community Centre  / Dumont Legrand Architects - Community CenterThe Victor Gelez Community Centre  / Dumont Legrand Architects - Community Center, FacadeThe Victor Gelez Community Centre  / Dumont Legrand Architects - More Images+ 15

ZAC Boucicaut / MG-AU

ZAC Boucicaut / MG-AU - Apartments, FacadeZAC Boucicaut / MG-AU - Apartments, Facade, Door, Handrail, LightingZAC Boucicaut / MG-AU - Apartments, FacadeZAC Boucicaut / MG-AU - Apartments, Kitchen, Facade, Door, Table, Chair, Lighting, CountertopZAC Boucicaut / MG-AU - More Images+ 24

Rare Footage of Le Corbusier Discussing his Work, Poetry & the "Ideal City"

Check out this rare footage that captures Le Corbusier as a “young man of 71-years-old” surrounded by paintings and discussing his work, poetry and the "ideal city" within his 1933, self-designed Paris flat.

Artist Fills Paris' Negative Space with Whimsical Illustrations

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When you're surrounded by buildings on all sides, what do you see? In his SkyArt series, French artist Lamadieu Thomas gives us his answer. He takes claustrophobia-inducing photographs of urban landscapes through a fish-eye lens, framing the sky with rooftops and filling the negative space with playful illustrations. Thomas describes his whimsical approach to art as an attempt to show "what we can construct with a boundless imagination" and "a different perception of urban architecture and the everyday environment around us." To see more from the collection, continue after the break.

Artist Fills Paris' Negative Space with Whimsical Illustrations - Image 1 of 4Artist Fills Paris' Negative Space with Whimsical Illustrations - Image 2 of 4Artist Fills Paris' Negative Space with Whimsical Illustrations - Image 3 of 4Artist Fills Paris' Negative Space with Whimsical Illustrations - Image 4 of 4Artist Fills Paris' Negative Space with Whimsical Illustrations - More Images+ 5