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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.

Antoine de Ruffi School in Marseille, France by TAUTEM ARCHITECTURE

 
May 21st, 2021 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: TAUTEM ARCHITECTURE

Its light-colored concrete façades are sculpted, and the openwork of this thickness forms a colonnade on the port side and a grand staircase on the city side, creating the interplay of light and shadow in its embrasures. In contrast to the building’s envelope, the interiors are warm and comfortable thanks to the use of color and wood.

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

  • Architects: TAUTEM ARCHITECTURE
  • Project: Antoine de Ruffi School
  • Location: Marseille, France
  • Photography: Luc Boegly
  • Client: Euroméditerranée
  • Net floor area: 4,150 m² (44,670 sqft)
  • Cost: €10,500,000 excl. VAT
  • Competition: 2017
  • Delivered: January 2021

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

A remarkable site

The Antoine de Ruffi school group occupies a strategic spot between the entrance to the new Méditerranée district, and its “inhabited park” coordinated by the urbanist Yves Lion. Its situation offers, on one hand, a view over the developing suburban fabric, with scattered warehouses, silos, soap factories, large-scale housing estates from the 1970s, and in the distance, the Massif de l’Etoile. The reverse view, towards the west, one sees the port and its huge ships, the towers by Zaha Hadid and Jean Nouvel, as well as the continuous sweep of the highway viaduct.

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Sculpted monolith

At first glance, this monolith combines massiveness and minerality. The monumentality is the condition guaranteeing its existence in this dense district where high rise apartment buildings (up to 17 stories) are slated for construction. The architects have voluntarily limited the number of architectural and technical components to guarantee simplicity and longevity and to ensure easy maintenance. Built with “low carbon,” light-colored concrete, between the pearl white blanc and beige of the coquina sand (dear to Pouillon), the building was poured in place and without joints.  The painstaking work of the “skin” has produced alternating parts of coquina and smooth, mat and shiny surfaces and an interplay of light and shadow in the embrasures.

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Bio-climatic design: façades adapted to their exposure

The façades play a protective role.  With a thickness of 100 cm, they are the result of a “double wall”, a process of simultaneous pouring of two veils of concrete between which a rigid form of insulation is inserted. They combine thermal performance and massiveness to the two mineral façades. In their thickness, the deep embrasures placed here provide the interior with useful voids for installing storage, work stations and fluid circulations.

Placing ourselves at the height of children

The challenge of designing a school for children ages 3 to 11 is to ensure that they love to go to school and that they find the learning environment both as welcoming and protective as one expects of such an institution. The ergonomics, the comfort and the attention of taking into account the height of children guided the overall design work all the way down to the slightest details.

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Joyful and luminous interiors

To create surprise and contrast with the minerality of the envelope and always in this Mediterranean style, the interior feels joyful and colorful. The softness of curves and the use of wood enabled this children’s universe, warm and enveloping. This wood, bio-sourced larch from the Alpes, was used with restraint, for the major walls covered in wood paneling and glazed between the class rooms and circulations and for built in furnishings.

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © Luc Boegly

Image Courtesy © TAUTEM ARCHITECTURE

Image Courtesy © TAUTEM ARCHITECTURE

Image Courtesy © TAUTEM ARCHITECTURE

Image Courtesy © TAUTEM ARCHITECTURE

Image Courtesy © TAUTEM ARCHITECTURE

Image Courtesy © TAUTEM ARCHITECTURE

Image Courtesy © TAUTEM ARCHITECTURE

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Categories: Educational Center, Educational Institute, School




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