photo: Frédéric Allinne |
"The building is designed as a three-level open plan. Its façades are clad with wooden panels providing solar shading, opacities or simple window frames, according to the needs and orientations.
photo: Noëlle Hoeppe |
Its outdoor terraces and interiors in double-height provide places for relaxation which are well integrated into the composition, and provide a homogeneous figure strengthening the identity and legibility of an equipment with very diverse functions.
photo: Noëlle Hoeppe |
The East-West orientation of the parallelepiped is adapted to the prevailing winds. On the northern side of the building, the transparency of the glass, allows a view on the park and good lighting for the laboratories.
photo: Frédéric Allinne |
On the southern, eastern and western sides of the building, the sunshades are adjustable for offices and fixed for the classrooms and the research laboratory in muscle mechanics. This results in a genuine bioclimatic façade.
photo: Frédéric Allinne |
The implementation of randomly placed open panels, closed or ajar, along with the strict repetition of the carrier grid, enrich the architectural language while avoiding a trivialized reading of a mere office building.
photo: Frédéric Allinne |
The implementation of simple principles and common sense, combined with advanced techniques, delivers a sensible response to environmental issues, and to provide a meaningful identity to the facilities.
photo: Ameller |
With transparencies and large windows on the ground floor, the access and showroom are highlighted, emphasizing the building’s purpose as technological showcase and innovation center.
photo: Jean-Christophe Hecquet |
The showroom, located in the Southeast corner, presents itself to the visitors at the entrance, widely opened on the park across the hall. On the West side, the project is apt to extend itself with additional industrial halls, easily accessible by the southern common circulation along the access way" Ameller Dubois & Associés.
photo: Frédéric Allinne |
A 14-ton suspended staircase seams the three levels of the wooden multipurpose building with dark iron, softened by the light tones of beech.
photo: Jean-Christophe Hecquet |
Location: Compiègne, France
Architects: Ameller Dubois & Associés
Architect In Charge: Philippe Ameller, Jacques Dubois
Project Team: Laurent Machet, Christiaan Weiler, Arne von Seidlitz, Haithem Oueriemmi, Pascal Bardi, Stéphane Vedrenne
Contractor: Conseil régional de Picardie
Landscape: Endroits En Vert
Area: 5,200 sqm
Cost: € 8,8 Mil. HT
Year: 2014
Photographs: Frédéric Allinne, Noëlle Hoeppe, Jean-Christophe Hecquet, Stéphane Vedrenne
Architects: Ameller Dubois & Associés
Architect In Charge: Philippe Ameller, Jacques Dubois
Project Team: Laurent Machet, Christiaan Weiler, Arne von Seidlitz, Haithem Oueriemmi, Pascal Bardi, Stéphane Vedrenne
Contractor: Conseil régional de Picardie
Landscape: Endroits En Vert
Area: 5,200 sqm
Cost: € 8,8 Mil. HT
Year: 2014
Photographs: Frédéric Allinne, Noëlle Hoeppe, Jean-Christophe Hecquet, Stéphane Vedrenne
photo: Frédéric Allinne |
photo: Noëlle Hoeppe |
photo: Frédéric Allinne |
photo: Noëlle Hoeppe |
photo: Noëlle Hoeppe |
photo: Stéphane Vedrenne |