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AVENUE PITS STOP?


A car showroom for a French manufacturer on the Champs Elysees Champs É·ly·sées  

A tree-lined thoroughfare of Paris, France, leading from the Place de la Concorde to the Arc de Triomphe.

Noun 1.
 in Paris has been designed as a cultural centre.

Franck Hammoutene's Modernist essays, designed with sombre som·bre  
adj. Chiefly British
Variant of somber.


sombre or US somber
Adjective

1. serious, sad, or gloomy: a sombre message

2.
 elegance and a great deal of drama, are imbued with influences drawn from the work of '60s artists such as Richard Serra Richard Serra (born 2 November 1939) is an American minimalist sculptor and video artist known for working with large scale assemblies of sheet metal. Serra was involved in the Process Art Movement.  and Carl Andre Carl Andre (born September 16, 1935) is an American minimalist artist.

Andre was born in Quincy, Massachusetts and educated in Quincy public schools and at Philips Academy, Andover, where he became friends with Hollis Frampton and Michael Chapman. Andre served in the U.S.
. They exploit formal simplicity and the inherent poetry of industrial materials and their conjunctions.

L'Atelier Renault at 53 Champs-Elysees, is the latest of a clutch of schemes by him in Paris, which include the Musee de la Musique La Musique is a private institution established in 1985 in Paarl, South Africa. External links
  • Official Site
 at La Villette (AR May 1997) and La Maison Blanche Maison Blanche was a department store in New Orleans and later also a chain of department stores. It was founded in 1897 by Isidore Newman, an immigrant from Germany.[1]

Maison Blanche is perhaps best remembered for introducing the locally popular Mr.
, the stylish restaurant near the Eiffel Tower Eiffel Tower, structure designed by A. G. Eiffel and erected in the Champ-de-Mars for the Paris exposition of 1889. The tower is 984 ft (300 m) high and consists of an iron framework supported on four masonry piers, from which rise four columns uniting to form one . Like advertisements (and Jean Nouvel's building for Cartier), which work by association and only obliquely betray their subjects, L'Atelier Renault is more fashionable restaurant and bar than car showroom. Renault describes it as a cultural centre.

The strategy for promoting the firm is not new. In 1911, Renault opened the first car showroom at 51 Champs Elysees and, in 1930, enlarged it by annexing adjoining premises. In the early '60s the site was redeveloped, and the showroom reinstated and reopened as the Pub Renault. More than an exhibition space, the Pub had a restaurant and was famous for ice-cream and cocktails, in its heyday attracting up to 2000 visitors a day. By 1999 it was felt to be outmoded and Hammoutene was commissioned to redesign the space.

Remodelling and the creation of L'Atelier Renault took full advantage of a triple-height space achieved by stripping everything out and back to the essential structure. A full-height glass wall onto the Champs-Elysees (designed to absorb movement caused by passage of RER RER Regione Emilia-Romagna
RER Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum
RER Respiratory Exchange Ratio
RER Real Exchange Rate
RER Réseau Express Régional (French commuter rail in Paris)
RER Replication Error
RER Rental Equipment Register
 trains underground), admits light into the deep plan, makes Renault a visible presence on the avenue and hints to passers-by at the height and extent of the space.

Hammoutene's scheme starts where the bandes dessinees (strip cartoons) so beloved of the French leave off, for woven around the idea of animation, it allows you a succession of animated frames. The ground floor is exhibition space (offices are distributed around the peripheries), where shows -- or events -- will change at intervals coming or happening with intervals between; now and then.

See also: Interval
 throughout the year and be the focus of a place where people can meet. Criss-crossing the hall overhead is a series of bridges, slung across the hall at different levels from peripheral mezzanines. Up here is where you find the restaurant and bar and where you sit and eat at tables set out along the bridges, looking down on people below and out through the glass wall into the busy avenue. A serpentine metallic bar on the main mezzanine extends into intimate islands of armchairs and low tables placed alongside and overlooking the tree-lined pavement. Visitors are participants in a perpetual cavalcade cav·al·cade  
n.
1. A procession of riders or horse-drawn carriages.

2. A ceremonial procession or display.

3. A succession or series: starred in a cavalcade of Broadway hits.
 -- a microcosm of activity -- arriving, departing, meeting, separating, moving up and down the big staircase and across bridges.

Hammoutene's background to perpetual motion is restrained. Characteristically, forms are simple, junctions articulated and the palette of colours confined to those of a few materials -- warm wood, cool silvery metal, grey concrete and glass.

Architect

Atelier Franck Hammoutene, Paris

Project team

Franck Hammoutene, Martine zilliox, Kaan Coskun, Andrei Ferraru, Serge Atallah, Halim Faidi, Sylvie Mauduit, Stephane Quigna. Tran Viet Khoan

Structural engineer

Quillery

Facade studies

RFR RFR Radio Frequency Radiation
RFR Request For Resources
RFR Right of First Refusal
RFR Radio Free Roscoe (TV show)
RFR Risk-Free Rate (investing)
RFR Rio Frio, Costa Rica
 

Heating, ventilation and air conditioning Sept

Photographs

Paul Raftery

1. L'Atelier's grand shop window onto Champs Elysees reveals the various levels and activities within.

2. Extension of the bar alongside the tree-lined pavement. Furniture designed by the architect.

3. Opening exhibition below bridges designed, by Gattl & Washer, around new Avantlme car. Furniture by Christophe Pillet.

4. Bridge dining area. Warm wood clads ceiling, walls and bridge. Tables and club chairs (at back) by architect.

5. Serpentine metallic bar, designed by architect.
COPYRIGHT 2001 EMAP Architecture
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Publication:The Architectural Review
Geographic Code:4EUFR
Date:Mar 1, 2001
Words:621
Previous Article:DRAMATIC REGENERATION.
Next Article:CONCRETE ABSTRACTION.
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