30 September 2011

Towers of Babel




























© Centre Pompidou

In 1967, a shanty-town in the 13 district of Paris is being demolished and its population of migrant and minority origin, not wanted in the bourgeois centre, is relocated on the outskirts of the capital.  


Nanterre shantytowns © Photothèque EPAD

The architect Emile Aillaud is asked to transform a no man's land flanked between a motorway, a notorious prison and a couple of speed roads into a living place for 13000 people coming from 55 different ethnicities





























© Centre Pompidou

To build this boomtown, Aillaud choses the middle landscape and the garden cities as points of reference : he wants 'La Grande Borne' to be a city for the Children. So he builds vertically to free space for everyday life, conceives poetic, rhythmical apertures, fluid perspectives and succession of play areas, and covers the walls of the estate with a decorative mosaic which becomes its trademark.



























© Centre Pompidou

His vision recalls the counter-cultural experiments of the times : the swimming pool's outlook is reminiscent of Drop city's utopian pods.




La Grande Borne is a well-intentioned project, driven by utopian aspirations but it lacks of infrastructures for work and cultural life. How to create a sense of place when people live over one kilometre length of cemented land ? how to preserve one's privacy in this jungle of concrete blocks ? how to make sense of one's life 
The estate becomes a huge dormitory town with issues common to all the red suburbs (discrimination, youth criminality, unemployment etc...), a context which sadly gets worse with time.



























By chance, one area of individual units called 'Les Patios' will capture some of Aillaud's sense of space.
The smaller settlements are built on marshes as temporary housing for the builders and architects of la Grande Borne.
Following the housing crisis, Les Patios isn't demolished and becomes a council estate. 




























At first, the few trees can't mask the desolation of its location : there is no post office, no high school, no cinema, no local shops, therefore no social life
The houses are physical aliens in the landscape : with their radical blinded walls, their unique window on the outside and a flat roof; they become known as the 'garage-houses'














 




















© Jean-Claude Maugirard


Soon, the pioneer residents reclaim the space by painting the concrete in the streets, by re-designing the lay-out of the units, by bringing tables outside to eat together : they open La Halte, a Self-run Space for social and cultural events. 



Les patios is car-free so there is endless space for children to run, climb, hunt, hide : a whole underground culture develops like in most suburbs (youth centres, street-art, Parkour, graffiti, skateboarding, hip-hop, alternative music ...).


































© Unknown / Julia Feracci


Thanks to Aillaud, the houses are built around enclosed gardens; inside, a ceiling window overlooks the stars and on the facades opaque windows increase privacy. 

















© Jean-Claude Maugirard/ Julia Feracci

While the space of the houses opens onto a contemplative garden
the physical landscape around them is enliven by sculptures that size the sun's course (Pyramid, sundial...) : that living experience deepens children's spatial awareness and sense of play.



















© Unknown / Julia Feracci

The inside-outside dialectic, the play of light and shadow on the architectural volumes, connect the habitat with the landscape. The hidden gardens slowly grow over the concrete jungle preserving sheltered social/play areas : the harmony between man and nature is preserved through time.























Les patios is not inscribed in a context of romantic vision of the red suburbs but a built utopia well anchored in reality - a place where alternative visions and little spatial disturbances endlessly defeat the urban angst.




24 September 2011

My HLM is hot





Terrasse-platform, St-Jean-en-Royans, 2010 © Exyzt © De L'aire/ Photo © Emmanuel Gabily 

For De L'aire's residency, Chaux Devant, Exyzt gives a Terrasse-platform, an alternative to HLM halls where children meet and chat, an enclosed bench and decking area as a response to the cementing of play areas in the city and to reinforce convivial space.



Chaud devant, St-Jean-en-Royans 2009 © Exyzt 



The second residency, Chaud Devant ! gives the community a meeting point, a hot spot to share stories and a pizza by the warmth of an oven on wheels. The mobile oven and the terrasse-platform are built out of wooden planks which mirrors the village's past wood industry and the inhabitants' involvement as work force in its factories.












Les Fougeres, 2009-2011 © Exyzt © De L'aire/ photo ©
Emmanuel Gabily 

With the third residency, Exyzt is assembling an Autonomous Space from the leftovers of the HLM Les Fougeres' demolition : doors, windows, bathtub ... to build a Kiosk for the community.