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Wednesday, December 22, 2010

LILLE Office Building : By LAN Architecture

Euralille, Block 4.1-A, Lille, France
LAN Architecture
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
Image © Courtesy of LAN Architecture
LAN won the competition organized by SAEM EURALILLE to design an office building for Sogeprom/Projectim in Lille, France. The project is located in the Block 4.1-A, the last area to build of Euralille urban developement design by OMA in 1994.
Image © Courtesy of LAN Architecture
"Is it possible to reaffirm the city in an architectural project?
This question, shared by our entire team, was the departure point for our search for a sensitive but daring response."
LAN Architecture
Image © Courtesy of LAN Architecture

description by LAN ArchitectureThe plot’s strategic position, at a major crossroads in an urban district, directed us towards a “multiform” architecture whose geometry could provide a specific response to problems linked to the project’s scale, geography and demands.
Image © Courtesy of LAN Architecture
We realised that the building’s location enables it to articulate different urban scales, both near and far. Its verticality can act as a visual axis and marker, whilst finding a just and respectful relationship with its immediate context.
Image © Courtesy of LAN Architecture
The purpose of this architecture is to construct a new urban space combining the private and public, the vertical and horizontal. The building’s envelope is conceived as an apparatus for the city’s constant visual reinvention.
Site strategies--drawing Courtesy of LAN Architecture
The windows break with the modularity of office buildings, creating a more domestic image and ensuring the transition between a residential and a business district. The result is a kinetic architecture constantly changing with different viewpoints.
Site plan--drawing Courtesy of LAN Architecture
To increase this visual richness, the design of each façade was generated by its orientation, use and thermal considerations. This creates successions and superimpositions of glazed areas, windows on the city, and different, fixed or mobile systems of wooden cladding, enabling constant change in function of the building’s daily life.
ground floor plan--drawing Courtesy of LAN Architecture
Materiality of the facades: networks and wood
The design of the facades and the building’s interior spaces is structured by a 1.35 metre grid composed of a U-shaped metallic element running the entire height of the building, to which the envelope’s various components are fixed.
typical floor plan--drawing Courtesy of LAN Architecture
This vertical grid is interrupted three times by horizontal wooden bands, running around the building and ending at the acroter.
Secondary horizontal and vertical grids regulate the design of the fixed or mobile wooden elements.
section--drawing Courtesy of LAN Architecture
We chose red wood for the cladding of the facades, using it in different configurations depending on their purpose, and alternating this with larges windows looking out over the city. Wood is used as a fixed cladding in the opaque or semi-glazed parts of the façade, but also, depending on the orientation, in the form of pivoting openwork shutters, enabling precise control of light penetration. But is also used as a fixed sunscreen.
detail facade--drawing Courtesy of LAN Architecture
The project’s conception provides residents and office users with a public space based on horizontality, circulation and social interaction on a human scale. Unable to build right to the plot’s limits, we opted for a form of portico, a walkway providing shelter from the weather, a lively exterior space in which passers-by and shop customers can intermingle.
Image © Courtesy of LAN Architecture
Image © Courtesy of LAN Architecture

Image © Courtesy of LAN Architecture
The people
Architects: LAN Architecture
Location: Euralille, Block 4.1-A, Lille, France
Date: 2010
Client
: Sogeprom / Projectim
Size: 3,475 m²
Cost: € 6M excl. VAT
Timetable: 2010–13
3D Rendering: IDA+
HEQ Consultant: Act Environnement
All-Trades Engineers: IOSIS
Images: © Courtesy of LAN Architecture
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