Hamonic+Masson & Associés

Videcoq Project

Hamonic+Masson & Associés
4. May 2018
Image: Luxigon

Project: Videcoq Project, 2017 (competition win)
Location: Le Havre, France
Developer: Investir Immobilier
Architect: Hamonic+Masson & Associés
Project Manager: César Silva Urdaneta
Structural Engineer: Atelier Masse
Plumbing Engineer: BET Boulard 14
Electrical Engineer: BET Bader
Surface Area: 6,000m2

Image: Luxigon

The site is located at the nodal point of Le Havre’s history and reconstruction. This strategic position, at the articulation between the two urban fabrics of Perret’s proposed general plan, bestows a remarkable cha- racter and geometry upon the building. Benefiting from great visibility and exceptional views overlooking the docks, the building offers varied scales for neighbouring local residents and a diversity of spaces for the inhabitants. The project plays with the idea of movement, background and multiplicity. Its volume works alongside the differing scales, creating a sculpted fan effect where the concrete netting wraps around the building’s body accentuating the transforming, rising twist.

Image: Luxigon

Living here allows people to understand and appreciate the vast richness of the urban tissue that makes up this astounding site. Residents will not only be aware of the city’s heritage which unfolds before their eyes, but also of the fantastic opportunities that await this territory.

Image: Luxigon

Both an emergence and a signal, the Videcoq project strives to provide remarkable apartments. The free floor plan allows different typologies to be created upon request. This personnalisation is possible from the building’s conception. The question of housing here carries values such as quality of use, diversity, dynamism and optimism. Embracing the future with ambition, the building will be demonstrative of vertical housing in the urban environment.

Image: Luxigon

It is rare to have the opportunity to confront a subject with this much symbolic power and evocative force. During the buzz of Ré-inventer Paris, Inventons la Métropole, Réinventer la Seine and other international architecture competitions, this project primarily poses the question of our connection to history and heri- tage. Invention is introduced within historic continuation and not via style or dogma, but through a certain state of mind. Le Havre is Perret and Niemeyer, but above all it has a sense of modernity and architectural adventure on the same scale as its original history: a town built as the starting point of the quest for new territories.

Image: Luxigon

Other articles in this category