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Montpellier City reveals four upcoming architectural projects known for their unconventional designs

Coworking offices, apartment buildings, the city of Montpellier has announced the names of the architects selected for four extravagant building projects that will mark the urban landscape. More announcements are forthcoming.

The city of Montpellier presented Tuesday, March 14, at the world real estate fair Mipim in Cannes, four future architectural “crazes”, buildings all in roundness that it wants to be emblematic of its urban landscape. The architects Odile Decq, Manuelle Gautrand, Ellen van Loon and the duo Thomas Coldefy-Isabel van Haute designed these four projects, selected by the town hall from 18 applications.

“Montpellier, at the turn of the 80s, was strongly committed to a message: that of a form of hospitality to all creators of the mind, whether scientists, artists, architects”, declared the mayor (PS) Michaël Delafosse during the presentation of the winners. A tribute to the architect Ricardo Bofill, designer of the monumental Antigone district wanted by the former mayor Georges Frêche (1977-2004).

Globular windows, sunken earth, pebble-shaped buildings…

Among these “follies” – or extravagant residences from an architectural point of view – Odile Decq has designed a building with white walls, a bright red roof and globular windows, which will house coworking offices, near the Corum congress center . Manuelle Gautrand’s project, in the Port Marianne district, consists of a set of residential buildings in sunken earth, which will face an already built folly, designed by the architect Farshid Moussavi.

Ellen van Loon has created a project of three buildings whose shape recalls that of pebbles, at the administrative limit of the municipality. The Thomas Coldefy-Isabel van Haute duo imagined two buildings, one for housing, the other for offices, facing each other and connected by a footbridge, in the recent Ovalie district, very close to the rugby stadium.

Alma Terra, project of

Eight other projects selected in a few months

The city has not set a date for the delivery of the buildings, which could take four to six years. The fifth “madness” for which the city had launched a call for applications, in the New Saint-Roch district near the station, was not awarded, the projects presented not having convinced.

Montpellier, which has regularly called on star architects or designers (Jean Nouvel, Christian Lacroix, etc.) for its major urban projects, plans to build eight additional “follies”, for which the winners will be known at the end of 2023 or the beginning of 2024.

Oasis, project of

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