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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

La Luciole in Alençon, France by Moussafir Architectes

 
April 30th, 2013 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Moussafir Architectes

Situated on the edge of Alençon, in the rural landscape of Lower Normandy, La Luciole – French for «firefly» – resulted from the efforts of its passionate director-«programmateur». Founded in 1994, this concert facility has carved itself a reputation, attracting renowned musicians to its tiny performance hall.

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

  • Architects: Moussafir Architectes
  • Project: La Luciole
  • Location: 171 route de Bretagne, 61000 Alençon, France
  • Photography: Luc Boegly
  • Client: Alençon City Council
  • Brief: Extension: reception area, 650 seat auditorium, offices, service spaces.
    Renovation: bar, rehearsal studio, dressing rooms.
  • Budget: 2,653,000 €. ex tax
  • Nsa: 1,274 sq. m.
  • Competition: 2004
  • Built: 2008
  • Team: Jacques Moussafir with Francesca De Marchi, Nicolas Hugoo, Alexis Duquennoy, Guillaume Cournut, Laurent théaux and Albert Ruiz
  • Partner Engineers: A&T (stage designers), Peutz (acoustic designers), Batiserf (structural engineers), Alto (mechanical engineers), René Micout (quantity surveyor).
  • Contractors: Sagir (concrete structure), Renaudat (metal frameworks), Arblade (roofing & siding), Vonthron  (electricity), Gondouin (waterproofing), Ates (partitions and lining), Daupley (exterior woodwork), R2C (metalwork),Polybat (paintwork), AMG Fechoz (stage machinery), Bezannier (wooden stage flooring), Ducré (HVAC and plumbing), Fabripose (interior woodwork), Qualiprofil (suspended ceilings), Assisesportive (seating), Audiotechniques (stage electrics), Azur Scénic (stage fabrics), Thyssen (elevator), Gagneux Décors (flooring).
  • Materials: colourwashed raw concrete; steel structure; veined steel siding by Haironville; multilayered plasterboard lining; polycarbonate panels by Danpalon Everlite; fibracoustic panels in wood fibre and rockwool; aluminium door and window frames (exterior); exposed concrete floor with toughening finish; wooden floor on bearing joist.

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Several years ago, the municipality has agreed to finance the extension of La Luciole. The competition brief required a larger, 650-strong concert hall that would however maintain the sense of intimacy and the enveloping quality that defined the original space. The desire to bring people maximally close to the stage has literally shaped the restructured venue wherein artists are almost surrounded by their audience.

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

The brainstorming phase saw the buildingʼs forms evolve from rectangular to cylindrical, yet the core idea – two tilted, interconnected volumes containing the audience and the stage – remained intact. «It’s somewhat bizarre, and eccentric, and very different from everything else designed by our office,» notes Jacques Moussafir.

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

This is partly explained by the projectʼs dynamic tempo: the competition proposal was done in ten days. More importantly, the bold geometry and exuberant color scheme reflect the strong, flamboyant personality of the man who has created La Luciole. Structurally, the project consists of two cylindrical steel frames and a concrete enclosure for the stage (smaller concrete boxes are used for entrances and exits).

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

An arch emerging where the two cylinders intersect marks the border between the stage and the audience. Simple in itself, the steel structure required some serious development work as the architects aimed to minimize the use of materials without compromising stability.

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Another challenge presented itself while mounting curved  insulation panels and suspending acoustic sheets from the rounded surfaces of the performance hall. Built by the west entrance to the city, La Luciole appears as an urban beacon, set in counterpoint to the linear façade of the adjacent exhibition centre. The membrane stretched over the auditoriumʼs circular roof is meant as a projection screen.

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Exterior finishing relates the building to its natural surroundings. The initial project proposed matt and polished stainless steel cladding that would reflect the ever-changing Normandy skies, yet the reality dictated a more economical solution: corrugated steel siding. Seemingly random arrangement of white and blue panels suggests a pixilated fragment of the sky, often covered with fleeing clouds. With darker shades concentrated where the two cylinders meet, the overall effect evokes a geyser linking the earth and the sky.

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy Moussafir Architectes

Image Courtesy Moussafir Architectes

Image Courtesy Moussafir Architectes

Image Courtesy Moussafir Architectes

Image Courtesy Moussafir Architectes

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Categories: Concert hall, Mixed use




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