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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.

L’Étoile, Scène de Mouvaux in France by atelier d’architecture king kong

 
January 16th, 2019 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: atelier d’architecture king kong

The town of Mouvaux first created an urban hub where a school, housing units and sports hall were built. A cultural centre was subsequently added, erected on a plot of land conferring optimum visibility and bringing the urban development zone to fruition. The aim of this project was to create a cultural instrument including a performance hall, premises for associations, a venue for symposiums and conferences and workshops for artistic practices such as theatre, music and the visual and plastic arts.

Image Courtesy © Arthur Péquin

  • Architects: atelier d’architecture king kong
  • Project: L’Étoile, Scène de Mouvaux
  • Location: Mouvaux (59 – France)
  • Photography: Arthur Péquin
  • Software used: Vectorworks
  • Client: Town of Mouvaux
  • Project Manager: Frédéric Neau
  • Project Leader: Julie Dehaut
  • Scenographer: Ducks Scéno

Image Courtesy © Arthur Péquin

  • Engineering Consultants for Structure: Khephren Ingénierie
  • Engineering Consultants for Fluids & HEQ: Alto Ingénierie
  • Engineering Consultants for Access and Roadways: Iris Conseil Aménagement
  • Engineering Consultants for Acoustics: Kahle Acoustics
  • Total Cost of Building Work: 7.5 M€ VAT included
  • Surface Area: 3 295 m2
  • Capacity Main Performance Hall: Standing room 750 / 500 Seated + Auditorium: 110 seats
  • Timeline:
    • Contract Awarded: July 2012
    • Building Work Commenced: April 2015
    • Project Delivered: September 2017

Image Courtesy © Arthur Péquin

Image Courtesy © Arthur Péquin

Structured around a fault line

The building occupies the entirety of the plot’s trapezoid footprint and is positioned so at to best benefit from natural sunlight. As a response to the plurality of the design’s functions, it is split in two by a glazed fault line accommodating the entrance lobby. The fault line resembles a ‘covered street’ and is the structural backbone around which the two different universes distributed over the building’s three floors (ground floor and two upper storeys) are organised. The professional performance hall is situated to its left while all other activities are housed to the right, visible from the central public space. The fault line serves, then, at once as a frontier and meeting place, providing an efficient means of circulating through the building and ushering natural light into its very heart.

Image Courtesy © Arthur Péquin

Image Courtesy © Arthur Péquin

The poetics of geometry

The grammar of this design is conditioned by the geometry of the plot of land, from which, like a stylistic device, ‘serial’ leitmotifs are born, initiating countless variations, as in the art of Sol LeWitt. Here, the two concrete volumes on either side of the fault line are pierced with glazed trapezoid panels and these motifs are also indented into the building’s blind walls, notably those housing the main performance hall. The conference hall forms a sharp point and the entrance from the forecourt is heralded by a vast glazed triangle.

Image Courtesy © Arthur Péquin

Image Courtesy © Arthur Péquin

Hyper-modularity in the performance hall

The tiered seating in the stalls, circle and stage is all retractable, meaning the performance hall may be reconfigured thus:

– capacity with tiered seating unfolded – 500 seats; with tiered seating folded back – 750 standing places.

– a curtain positioned in direct line with the circle means the latter may be hidden from view, thereby reducing the capacity of the hall to 360 seats (stalls only).

– the stage is composed of risers so that it may be lowered into the ground, leaving the stage and stalls on the same level.

An urban beacon

When night falls, the building lights up like a beacon.

Image Courtesy © Arthur Péquin

Image Courtesy © Arthur Péquin

Image Courtesy © Arthur Péquin

Image Courtesy © atelier d’architecture king kong

Image Courtesy © atelier d’architecture king kong

Image Courtesy © atelier d’architecture king kong

Image Courtesy © atelier d’architecture king kong

Image Courtesy © atelier d’architecture king kong

Tags: ,

Categories: Building, Cultural Center, Hall, Performing Arts Center, Vectorworks




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