These two buildings of collective housing are being constructed in the town of Bègles, located in the French district of Bordeaux. The intervention has a dual view of the urban and experimental components that define the architectural type of collective housing. It gives a new identity to a drab neighborhood at the same time that a new model of ownership of housing is proposed.

The 79 new apartments designed by LAN Architecture seek to be as flexible and adaptable as possible to the different situations of the users: They dispose of ambiguous enough rooms which allow increase or decrease its built surface. Their climate design is also designed to be adapted to the climatic parameters of any season and moment of the day.

The project includes, in an economically responsible approach, the positive aspects of individual housing, while eliminating the negative: Acceptable values of privacy and independence are reached without the massive environmental impact that this type of development usually entails.
 

Description of the project by LAN

LAN architecture
agency has today announced the completion of "Carré Lumière" in Bègles, suburb of Bordeaux, in South West France. The 79 apartments commissioned by Ataraxia, a property management company, follows the demolition of the previously idle towers of the "Terre Neuve" district.

As part of this urban project supervised by the SAEMCIB (Société Anonyme d’Economie Mixte de Construction Immobilière de Bègles) and driven by the local government, the objectives were to “exemplify” community housing with the intention to explore new propositions within the industry.

This request was guided by 4 main principles:

1.- Reinvent community housing, or at least consider intermediary forms of habitats that combine the need for privacy with the enjoyment of sociability: The “Carré Lumière” has the same qualities as a single-family home (the sense of privacy, individual exterior spaces, independence, and easily accessible outdoor space) without the disadvantages in terms of environmental impact (stretching networks, visual and atmospheric pollution, excessive consumption of ground).

2.- To enable people to live in a place that can evolve with them: Bègles is a semi-unfinished project, it is rather a “form in movement”. It is a malleable envelope that has the potential to double in its size tomorrow, and thus, double its capacity. Each apartment can swap its winter garden for an interior space in order to increase its living area. In response to the growth of a family, inhabitants can add a room within the framework that has already been constructed, and why not, they can always remove it once the kids have left home.

3.- Give an example of "economical sobriety": Bègles was built at a cost of 1,000 € per m², a price far below the current price in this region, and double the surface area. This result was possible thanks to the work of streamlining, of control and management budget, of architectural sobriety. The fact that LAN cut out all the middle men also helped simplify the real-estate transactions.

4.- Picture a climatic model specific and sustainable: The formalised part, the urban planning requirements, allowed LAN to use a hybrid climatic model that complements the climate in this part of France. The bio-climatic design is halfway between a heavily insulated Nordic model and a Mediterranean patio-style design. It’s based on the principle of variable compactness, which introduces the notion of the housing’s adaptability both on a large scale to rhythm of the seasons and to the minute climate changes on any given day. Everyone has the option to use their outdoor space as a windbreak, a greenhouse, or, to the contrary, as a cooling unit. This is called inter-seasonal architecture.

The two buildings are very distant from the actual standards of housing production: the building is only seven metres in depth, built like a parking lot and ornamented with industrial motifs. Despite some of the radical aspects of this project, it quickly became a fundamental part of the identity of this new district.

CREDITS. DATA SHEET.-

Architecture.- LAN Architecture.
Photography.- Julien Lanoo.
Client.- Ataraxia.

Location.- Bègles, France.
Dates.- 2009-2015.
Budget.-7,5M € excl. VAT.
Surface.- 6.500 sqm.
Phase.-Under Construction.

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Benoit Jallon. 18th May 1972 Grenoble (fr). Fascinated by the body’s structure with its logical organisation, layers and strata, Benoit Jallon first turned to medical studies. However, his need for involvement and creativity soon led him to begin studying architecture. He graduated from the Villette School of Architecture in 2001 with a special mention from the jury. Curiosity and a thirst for knowledge have led him to travel widely, particularly in Italy.

Umberto Napolitano. 27th November 1975 Naples (it). Umberto Napolitano began his architectural studies in Italy and completed them in France at the Villette School of Architecture where he graduated in 2001 with a special mention from the jury. He rapidly developed a critical approach to the separation between theory and practice. In parallel with his architectural education, he also worked with a number of architects. His involvement in Franco-American workshops has given his work an international flavour and allowed him to absorb other cultures and skills.

LAN (Local Architecture Network) was created by Benoît Jallon and Umberto Napolitano in 2002. LAN has received several awards: the Nouveaux Albums de la Jeune Architecture (NAJA) prize awarded by the French Ministry of Culture and Communication (2004); the International Architecture Award from the Chicago Athenaeum and the European Urban Centre for Architecture, Art, Design and Urban Studies, the Archi-Bau Award, the Special Prize at the 12th World Triennale of Architecture, Sofia (2009); the AR Mipim Future Projects Award and the Europe 40 Under 40 Award (2010). In 2011 the office was awarded at the LEAF Awards with the Best Sustainable Development in Keeping with its Environment prize and at the SAIE Selection Awards.

 

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