The Olympic and Paralympic village of Paris 2024 is receiving a new life as a pioneering model for sustainable urban development in Saint-Denis. Designed by the Triptyque and Chaix et Morel architecture firms, the building of 22000 square meters meters rephes an approach with a vision of the future for adaptive reuse in Parisian real estate.
From Olympic homes to social residences
Originally built for accommodation 450 athletes in the United States during the 2024 Summer Olympic Games, the printing structure is now experiencing, the transformation into social homes is planned, which carries a new vibrant NightBorhouse to the fines time. “
“The idea was not to create a athletes village, but a new neighborhood for the city, a promotion change in less favored areas,” explains Guillaume Sibaud, co -founder of Triptyque. Duration The Games, the building tested 300 temporary rooms for the US delegation, each of approximately 15 square meters. Now, the thesis units are becoming 125 apartments ranging from 30 to 105 square meters for long -term social housing.
Strategic urban renewal
Located in the heart of the University Ecological District and the ZAC of the Olympic and Paralympic village, the building serves as a central piece in the transformation of northern Paris. This industrial and economically underdeveloped historical area is reinventing as a sustainable and inclusive urban life model.
The main facade of the Universoine building, designed by Triptyque, forms a public square with the cité du cinéma, creating a recognizable and deceptive visatal urban milestone that anchors the new district.
Innovative design features
The architectural approach addresses two crucial contemporary challenges: reversibility and mixed use functionality. Residences are distributed in four pavilions, with designs designed to optimize natural light and ventilation. Common areas face outside, while the rooms are placed internally to guarantee privacy and thermal comfort.
The distinctive exoskeleton of the building provides each unit with a private balcony that varies from 5 to 21.7 square meters, creating additional outdoor spaces so that residents connect with nature and its surroundings. These architectural characteristics are beautiful and practical, which improve the general life experience.
Leading sustainability standards
The university project is aimed at the E3C1 certification under the E + C (Energy + Carbon) label of France, recognizing buildings with positive energy production and low carbon emissions. The structure has a low carbon concrete core wrapped in wooden panels for insulation and coating. This layer approach reduces temperature fluctuations, minimizes the need for artificial cooling and encourages cross ventilation.
Other sustainable design elements include:
The building incorporates an active green roof to promote biodiversity, water characteristics designed for urban cooling and solar panel facilities for renewable energy generation. The design also maximizes natural light with careful solar orientation to reduce energy consumption, while providing wide storage of bicycles and cargo stations for electric vehicles to promote sustainable mobility.
Community -centered development
The project promotes community interaction through shared green spaces designed by reflection and commercial areas on the ground floor. Stores and offices create a dynamic mixed use environment that will guarantee the vitality of the neighborhood beyond the Olympic Games.
After complete development, the area will house approximately 6,000 residents and create 6,000 jobs, with the support of three hectares of parks and seven hectares of gardens. The modular and reversible design of the apartments offers flexibility to adapt to the evolution needs of the community over time.
Collaborative innovation
The Universoine project exemplifies the collaborative approach that defined the entire development of the Olympic village. Triptyque worked in close collaboration with Solideo (the company responsible for building the village) and other international architecture firms to create a cohesive urban landscape and prospect.
“The Olympic village was an important project, a pioneering neighborhood in terms of its sustainability objectives and its material use,” says Sibaud. “It is inspiring to know that the building will serve as a model for future development.”
A lasting legacy
Beyond its initial role in the Olympic Games, university construction exemplifies France’s commitment to environmental responsibility and community -centered design. By combining avant -garde sustainability practices with a flexible architecture focused on the human being, this project will leave a durable positive impact on the Paris Metropolitan Region for coming generations.
As Paris continues to evolve and address housing challenges, the transformation of the Olympic village demonstrates how reflexive planning and sustainable design can create lasting value facilities, establishing capital for urban development.
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