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  #501  
Old Posted Apr 6, 2011, 8:34 PM
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Renovation of Courcellor 1 in Levallois Perret (western inner suburbs), the building will be heightened from 45m to 70m.

Architects : Barthélémy & Grino Architectes
Size : 40,382m² GLA
Use : Office and a movie theater
Delivered in 2014


Picture by tracky PSS

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  #502  
Old Posted Apr 6, 2011, 8:35 PM
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Quote:
590ft controversial 'Triangle' tower to be built in Paris
Paris town council has given the green light to a controversial "Triangle" tower rising 590ft above Paris which critics say is an "attack on the beauty of the French capital".



By Henry Samuel, Paris 3:55PM BST 31 Mar 2011

The 40-storey steel and glass building will be the first skyscraper to be built inside the French capital in more than 30 years and will cost 535m euros (£472 million)
The privately financed building, scheduled for completion by 2017, will overlook Paris from its southwestern extremity at the porte de Versailles, already home to a vast exhibition centre.
It will include mainly offices, a conference hall, panoramic restaurants and ground-floor shops, creating 5,000 jobs according to local authorities.
Earlier plans to include a hotel, swimming pool and museum have been scrapped.
....
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worl...-in-Paris.html
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  #503  
Old Posted Apr 6, 2011, 8:41 PM
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I went near the new station of the line 12, Front Populaire which should open late 2012 in northern Paris.
A view of the urban redevelopment of the Plaine Saint Denis (the former industrial heart of Paris).









































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  #504  
Old Posted Apr 8, 2011, 9:08 PM
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New Samaritaine building Rue de Rivoli (1st arrondissement) by Sanaa.


http://www.leparisien.fr/paris-75/vo...11-1398360.php
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  #505  
Old Posted Apr 13, 2011, 6:32 PM
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Necker hospital in Central Paris.











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  #506  
Old Posted Apr 17, 2011, 6:39 PM
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Close to Necker hospital , the redevelopment of the old Laennec hospital (7th arrondissement).



-321 dwelling house
191 private appartement
80 social housing appartement
50 students room
-17,200m² of office space
-14 000m² of green space
-4,500 m² of commercial space
-Gerontology center
-Alzheimer's care center


Very conservative architecture





Over $30,000 per m², it is very affordable.



The work












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  #507  
Old Posted Apr 20, 2011, 5:54 PM
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thanks a lot minato for the pics and renders. some of these projects are better than others, but damn, all told, lost going on. question: how sure to rise is the port de versailles pyramidal tower? that's a beauty and in the right location too.
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  #508  
Old Posted Apr 21, 2011, 1:22 PM
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We cannot be sure at 100% before the construction of the first floors.
Anyway its chance to be built are very high.
____________________________

Gare Austerlitz (2016)
It is the least busy big railway terminal of Paris but its traffic should double by 2020.





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  #509  
Old Posted Apr 22, 2011, 11:23 AM
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Looks like the top of the pyramid has been chopped off.
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  #510  
Old Posted Apr 25, 2011, 1:16 AM
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^do we have any other sources on this pyramid? a bit more info and better renders would be great. as it is, it could be pure genius or a total disaster, or anywhere in between...

as always thanks Minato for keeping this thread up to date!
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  #511  
Old Posted Apr 25, 2011, 6:59 AM
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Here's another rendering... with a different top :

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  #512  
Old Posted Apr 25, 2011, 2:18 PM
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thanks fabb! i was looking for more but couldn't find anything.
this rendering you posted looks promising, i'm hoping we hear more of this project. then all we need to do is distract the nimbys while it gets built...
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  #513  
Old Posted Apr 25, 2011, 4:01 PM
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I guess that there aren't many nimbys in the area.
Porte de Versailles is a no-man's-land of exhibition centers between a highway and a big, unglamourous boulevard.
But the political pressure to reduce the height of the building is overwhelming. I wouldn't be surprised if this ended up being reduced to a mediocre slab like the Tour Mozart that was completed recently.
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  #514  
Old Posted Apr 26, 2011, 2:09 AM
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yeah i realize that about the area, but i was referring to overall "anti-tours" (even though this is more of a pyramid, i suppose) sentiment which i believe is alive and strong so long as something gets proposed within Paris "proper", however irrelevant this can be as a criteria for development. Plus this looks high enough to potentially be seen from a bunch of high profile spots within the city (such as the Sacré Coeur, unless it would be hidden behind the 15è skyline but i wouldn't think so), which to some seems like a big no-no.
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  #515  
Old Posted Apr 26, 2011, 7:21 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by big T View Post
Plus this looks high enough to potentially be seen from a bunch of high profile spots within the city (such as the Sacré Coeur, unless it would be hidden behind the 15è skyline but i wouldn't think so), which to some seems like a big no-no.
Yes, it will definitely be seen from Montmartre, but less so than the Tour Montparnasse.
Beside Montmartre and maybe Menilmontant, I think that this tower will be virtually invisible.
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  #516  
Old Posted Apr 27, 2011, 7:13 PM
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Necker Hospital (15th arrondissement), Institute of Genetic Diseases
19,000m²
Ateliers Jean Nouvel and Valero Gadan Architectes
2013.








http://www.lemoniteur.fr/155-projets...0800&po=2&po=1
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  #517  
Old Posted Apr 27, 2011, 7:20 PM
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Parc du Millénaire mall opened (Aubervilliers) http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...&postcount=313

The areas around are still a maze of cranes but this mall is the first step of the redevelopment of the northeastern part of inner Paris and northeastern inner suburbs.



















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  #518  
Old Posted Apr 27, 2011, 7:20 PM
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  #519  
Old Posted May 22, 2011, 1:47 PM
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Quote:
Much-loved Paris shopping shrine to become hotel

PARIS, May 20 (Reuters Life!) - By Alexandria Sage
Say "La Samaritaine" in this city and shopping-mad Parisians will wax nostalgic about a beloved department store which once boasted it had "everything".

Now, the monument to retail therapy on the right bank of the Seine which has been closed since 2005, is set to undergo a three-year, 450 million euro ($641.9 million) redesign that will transform it into a luxury hotel, with adjacent buildings housing offices, public apartments, and of course, shops.

With an Art Deco facade and its name proudly displayed in big block letters, La Samaritaine was the most egalitarian of the "grand magasins," or opulent department stores in the French capital, featuring a huge variety of goods for sale from flowers and bathing suits, to candies and hats.

Its doors closed in 2005, however, after the building fell afoul of safety codes and years of wrangling ensued between its current owner, luxury-goods conglomerate LVMH, the city of Paris and the heirs to La Samaritaine's founders.

But the wrangling appears over, the new project has received the green light and construction should begin in early 2012, with a completion date targeted for mid-2014.

Despite the blueprint that promises to restore a Paris landmark building to its full glory, many feel a pang that it will no longer house France's most famous department store.

"It's over, and it's really too bad because you could find everything there," said 88-year-old Genevieve Cotty, who remembers visiting the store with her grandparents before World War II. "They had flowers, tombstones, hardware, furniture. It was really historic."

Its name taken from the water pump at the Pont Neuf in the time of Henry IV, La Samaritaine sits on some of the most prestigious real estate in Paris, close to both the Louvre and Notre Dame and fronting the Seine.

Shoppers remember the young bellboys at the top of every escalator landing announcing what could be found on every floor, the sugared violet candies popular with children, and the large street windows which were lit up and animated every Christmas.

Tourists would flock to La Samaritaine, take the elevator to the top floor and climb a narrow stairway to the roof, for some of the best views across the Paris skyline.

And any French shopper rich and poor could find something to buy at La Samaritaine, which offered goods at a range of prices.

"There's nothing to compare with the supermarkets of today, it's just not the same," said Cotty, whose mother bought new furniture at the store after their home was bombed in the war.

LARGEST-EVER PROJECT

The 70,000-sq metre (753,470-sq feet) project is comprised of not only the historic La Samaritaine building, but three adjacent properties, which will house offices, shops, some 95 apartments and a nursery.

Some 2,500 jobs will be created, LVMH said.

It is the largest privately funded construction project ever undertaken in Paris, according to LVMH finance chief Jean-Jacques Guiony.

An earlier plan for the project had been rejected by the city of Paris for what it deemed insufficient public housing.

The historic building that fronts the Seine will be renovated and turned into a luxury hotel, "Cheval Blanc" (White Horse), but its facade will remain unchanged. The hotel will offer about 80 rooms and suites.

For the building behind the hotel, Japanese architecture firm Sanaa, which worked on the New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York, envisions an undulating glass wall with silk screens covering the offices within.

"This project will be the symbol of a continuity between the history of Parisians and the modern world," said Guiony.
reuters
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/...74H19A20110520











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  #520  
Old Posted May 23, 2011, 3:54 PM
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I actually like that pyramid tower because the Eiffel Tower is also built kind of like a triangle!
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