Close

Hey Green Design Denizen!

Are you interested in getting Inhabitat's great tips and stories about future-forward green design sent directly to your email inbox? If so, sign-up for our email newsletter!

Sign Up Today! >

Inhabitat


Herzog and de Meuron’s Stunning Triangular Skyscraper

by Bridgette Meinhold, 10/06/08

projet triangle, herzog and de meuron, sustainable skyscraper, paris skyscraper, green building, solar power, wind power, alternative energy

Recently Herzog & de Meuron revealed Le Project Triangle, an incredible structure that will rise 200 meters from the Porte de Versailles in Paris. The stunning skyscraper will feature a profile so slim that it casts virtually no shadow, and its orientation will be optimized to take advantage of both solar and wind power. Paris’ new pyramid will be the first high-rise to be approved for construction is the city’s center since 1977, thanks to the recent lifting of a 31-year-old ban established by the previous Mayor of paris, Jacques Chirac.

projet triangle, herzog and de meuron, sustainable skyscraper, paris skyscraper, green building, solar power, wind power, alternative energy

Herzog & de Meuron are famous architects from Switzerland responsible for many well-know projects, like the Portsmouth Soccer Stadium in England, Beijing’s Birdnest Stadium, and the de Young Museum in San Francisco. Their latest project is expected to restore flow to it’s environs by reconnecting the rue de Vaugirard and avenue Ernest Renan at the site of the building.

This first of many high-rise buildings currently being planned for Paris, Projet Triangle will incorporate shops and restaurants at the ground level in addition to offices, a conference center and a 400 room hotel. Upon completion in 2014, the project will be the third tallest structure in the inner city after the Eiffel Tower and Tour Montparnasse. The pyramid’s construction may be a point of contention for many Parisians, as polls have found that 62% do not favor high rises within the city, however Herzon & de Meuron are confident that their new project will integrate into the Parisian landscape perfectly:

“The Triangle is conceived as a piece of the city that could be pivoted and positioned vertically. It is carved by a network of vertical and horizontal traffic flows of variable capacities and speeds. Like the boulevards, streets and more intimate passages of a city, these traffic flows carve the construction into islets of varying shapes and sizes. This evocation of the urban fabric of Paris, at once classic and coherent in its entirety and varied and intriguing in its details, is encountered in the façade of the Triangle. Like that of a classical building, this one features two levels of interpretation: an easily recognizable overall form and a fine, crystalline silhouette of its façade which allows it to be perceived variously.”

We’re hoping that it will compete against the Generali Tower in La Defense for the best sustainably-designed high-rise in Paris.

Via Dezeen

Related Posts

4 Responses to “Herzog and de Meuron’s Stunning Triangular Skyscraper”

User Gravatar
dweep Says:

wow I’d feel naked in such a transparent building. and it looks like king solomon’s glass palace.

User Gravatar
betto Says:

manifestación de brillante creatividad en una ciudad que parecía no tener posiblidades de propuestas en esta escala en su área histórica

User Gravatar

Sad x 3. First, the skyscraper is a dead model, as the permanent energy crisis arrives. Second, completed buildngs never look as \’ethereal\’ as the slick renderings would suggest. Third, it\’s Paris. Why gunk-up the skyline?

User Gravatar
gus Says:

by allowing skyscrapers to be built, land prices will rise, old low-rise buildings will be demolished to build new taller and more profitable buildings. Paris is one of the few ‘flat’ mega-cities that still exist on this planet, i hope it’ll stay like that. like the majority of the Parisians, i support the ban.
unless this skyscraper can be rotated, can anyone explain how does it cast virtually no shadow?
i am a big fan of H&DM but i can’t find any meaning in the architects’ comment included in this article.

 

Leave a Comment

Please keep your comments relevant to this blog entry. Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments.

Please note that gratuitous links to your site are viewed as spam and may result in removed comments.

Add your comments

SIGN UP NOW

CURRENT USERS LOGIN

Lost your password?