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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.

Social housing units in massive stone in Paris, France by Barrault Pressacco

 
May 6th, 2018 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Barrault Pressacco 

The Parisian practice Barrault Pressacco recently completed a social housing project in massive stone. The operation articulates an environmental approach to design whilst echoing the Hausmannian building tradition that characterizes the French capital. The use of this natural material equally contributes to the sense of wellbeing and comfort that permeate the project.

Image Courtesy © Giaime Meloni

  • Architects:  Barrault Pressacco
  • Project: Social housing units in massive stone
  • Location: 62 rue Oberkampf, 75011 Paris, France
  • Photography: Giaime Meloni, Maxime Delvaux, Clément Guillaume
  • Client: RIVP
  • Competition: Julie André-Garguilo
  • Studies: Pauline Rabjeau
  • Structure / Thermal Engineering: LM Ingénieur
  • M&E Engineering: Atelux
  • Economist: ALP ingénierie
  • Acoustics: QCS services

Image Courtesy © Giaime Meloni

  • Cost: 3,2 M€ (excluding VAT)
  • Surface: 1085 m² of Living Area
  • Floor Area: 1222 m²
  • Competition September: 2012
  • Delivery: December 2017

Image Courtesy © Giaime Meloni

Image Courtesy © Maxime Delvaux

The site

The site is located in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, where local vernacular architecture coexists alongside Hausmannian renovations from the latter half of the 19th century.

The form

The volumetry of the building derives from urban regulations and the orientation of the site. The densest part of the building is aligned with the street whereas the second part, situated inside the block, is disposed in south-facing graded terrasses.

Image Courtesy © Giaime Meloni

Image Courtesy © Giaime Meloni

Stone : from material to resource

Stone is abundant in France and notably in the vicinity of Paris. Its use is virtuous environmentally and highly contextual, drawing on local resources and engaging the regional economy. Territory, city and architecture are thus brought together by this ancestral material.

The energy necessary to extract, cut and lay stone is limited in comparison to other materials. It undergoes little transformation and its intrinsic properties are conserved in the process. Having been a geological layer, stone becomes a resource, imbued with new purpose and meaning.

Image Courtesy © Giaime Meloni

Image Courtesy © Giaime Meloni

Structure / Hybridation

The construction of the building is hybrid, composed of different materials each assuming a particular mechanical or thermal role. All the facades are in massive stone supported by reinforced concrete porticos on the ground floor. This juxtaposition recalls the parisian building tradition, wherein the materiality of the lower and higher levels was typically differentiated.

The thickness of the stone facade varies depending on the degree of its sollication, with 35 centimeters on the first level and 30 centimeters on the floors above. A metal frame associated with the facade reduces the load on the floor plates.

Hemp concrete, whose breathability is well suited for stone masonry, insulates the building.

Image Courtesy © Maxime Delvaux

Image Courtesy © Maxime Delvaux

Stereotomy and modenature

The science of stereotomy (art of cutting and assembling stone elements) leverages the significant technical advances associated with the building of cathedrals. For the project architects, an awareness of the life cycle of stone – extraction, transformation, use, reuse – gives new relevance to the architectural form and to construction details.

Image Courtesy © Maxime Delvaux

Image Courtesy © Maxime Delvaux

As opposed to ornamentation by addition, the design of the window openings proceeds by subtraction, inspired by the Haussmannian pursuit of an economy of means and materials. The modenature hereby invokes history in order to innovate.

Image Courtesy © Maxime Delvaux

Image Courtesy © Clément Guillaume

Image Courtesy © Clément Guillaume

Image Courtesy © Clément Guillaume

Image Courtesy © Clément Guillaume

Image Courtesy © Clément Guillaume

Image Courtesy © Barrault Pressacco

Image Courtesy © Barrault Pressacco

Image Courtesy © Barrault Pressacco

Image Courtesy © Barrault Pressacco

Image Courtesy © Barrault Pressacco

Image Courtesy © Barrault Pressacco

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Categories: House, Housing Development, Residential, Shop




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