Add to favorites

#LANDSCAPING AND URBAN PLANNING PROJECTS

tour ricardo bofill's monumental postmodern housing complex near paris

completed in 1982, ‘les espaces d’abraxas’ remains the landmark building of marne-la vallée — a new town built near paris in the 1960s.

completed in 1982, ‘les espaces d’abraxas’ remains the landmark building of marne-la vallée — a new town built near paris in the 1960s. conceived as an ‘urban monument’, architect ricardo bofill insisted that the housing development needed to have a ‘monumental and symbolic character’ to ensure that it formed a strong point of reference. since completion, the project, and its postmodern architecture, has been featured in numerous films including the ‘hunger games’ trilogy.

built by ricardo bofill taller de arquitectura (RBTA), the scheme consists of three key elements: ‘le palacio’, ‘le théâtre’, and ‘l’arc’. the largest structure, ‘le palacio’, is a 18-storey rent-subsidized apartment building that includes a total of 441 units. internally, three vertical ‘communication cells’ — the elevators, stairwells, and technical shafts — determine the layout of each of the properties. the apartments, some of which are duplexes, have between two and five rooms.

opposite, ‘le théâtre’ is a semi-circular structure, which comprises a series of reflective glass columns. the private building houses 130 apartments and also demarcates a communal outdoor plaza. ‘the open space is enveloped by the circularity of the building, whose convexity gives a sensation of protective shelter,’ explains RBTA. ‘an impression of privacy flows from it, inverting the initial impression of monumentality.’ finally, at the center of the scheme, ‘l’arc’ contains a smaller number of homes. the roofs of both ‘le théâtre’ and ‘l’arc’ are tree-planted, but remain inaccessible to residents.

‘thanks to a system of heavy pre-casting, it was possible to use an extensive and complex architectural language,’ say the architects. ‘different readings of the buildings, as a constant change in the scale and the references to ledoux, gaudí and gabriel, among others, lead to the specific eclectic vocabulary of this project. the façades were built from prefabricated sections, cut according to their individual shapes and not in framed panels, so that the joints are invisible. these panels are stone, a mixture of sand, gray and white cement and oxides.’

tour ricardo bofill's monumental postmodern housing complex near paris

Details

  • Rue de Paris, 77420, France
  • ricardo bofill