The Cité du Corps Humain is conceived as a
confluence of the park and the city – nature and architecture – bookending the Charpak Park
along with the Montpellier
city hall.
Like the mixture of two incompatible substances
– oil and vinegar – the urban pavement and the parks turf flow together in a
mutual embrace forming pockets of terraces overlooking the park and elevating
islands of nature above the city.
Like a seismic fault line, the architectural
crusts of planet earth are lifted and mingled to form an underlying continuous
space of caves and niches, lookouts and overhangs. A series of seemingly singular pavilions that
weave together to form a unified institution – like individual fingers united
together in a mutual grip.
Rather than a single perimeter delineating an
interior and an exterior, the façade is conceived as a sinuous membrane
meandering across the site, delineating interior spaces and exterior gardens in
a seamless continuum oscillating between the city and the park.
The roofscape of the Cité du Corps Humain is
conceived as an ergonomical garden – a dynamic landscape of vegetal and mineral
surfaces that allow the parks visitors to explore and express their bodies in
various ways – from contemplation to the performance – from relaxing to
exercising – from the soothing to the challenging.
The façades of the Cité du Corps Humain are as
transparent as possible, maximizing the visual and physical interaction with
the surrounding city and park.
To protect from thermal exposure and glare from
the abundant Montpellier
sunlight, we propose to wrap the entire envelope in a skin tailored to the conditions
of the local climate. On the sinuous façade of the Cité du Corps
Humain that oscillates between facing North and South, East and West, the
optimum louver orientation varies constantly.
The resultant façade experience is a striated
façade with layers that bend from horizontal to vertical in a seamless
transition. Like a functional ornament adapted to its
native climate the facades of Cité du Corps Humain resemble the patterns you
find in a human fingerpri both unique and universal in nature.
Location: Montpellier, France
Architects: BIG
Partner in Charge: Bjarke Ingels, Andreas Klok Pedersen
Project Leader: Gabrielle Nadeau
Project Manager: Jakob Sand
Project Team: Birk Daugaard, Chris Falla,
Alexandra Lukianova, Oscar Abrahamsson, Katerina Joannides, Aleksander Wadas, Marie
Lançon, Danae Charatsi, Alexander Ejsin
Area: 7.800 m2
Year: 2013
Status: In Progres














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