Luminous Landscape
John Hill, Thomas Geuder
18. 1月 2016
Photo: XTU/Studio A.RISPAL/Andrea Bosio
The motto of Expo 2015 in Milan, "Feeding the Planet, Energy for Life," was translated in the French pavilion into a built landscape designed by Parisian architecture firm XTU, with lighting design by Bonn's Licht Kunst Licht.
Photo: XTU/Studio A.RISPAL/Andrea Bosio
France and the fine art of dining are inseparable. Haute cuisine, the Michelin Guide and Paul Bocuse are a few of the internationally acclaimed things to come out of "the Hexagon." At last year's World Expo in Milan, France used the slogan to defend its image as a country at the forefront of global food culture. Vive la France! Just as French chefs base their cuisine on the source of their ingredients, the 2014 competition-winning design by Anouk Legendre and Nicolas Desmazières of XTU asserted that the French pavilion should deal with the agricultural landscape and the archetype of the market. "Les Halles," as the famous Parisian markets became known, started in the mid-18th century by Victor Baltard. Inspired by the Crystal Palace at the Great Exhibition in London in 1851, the halls were like pavilions of light, bringing wonder to the experience of food shopping. This archetype led XTU to design a compact pavilion with everything of necessity under one roof, its shape inspired by the hexagonal shape of France's borders.
Photo: XTU/Studio A.RISPAL/Andrea Bosio
Inside, the organic shape of the roof displays the second conceptual idea: a grid-like structure made of glulam (French spruce inside and Larch outside) that creates an overhead topography symbolizing the agricultural landscape of France. The architects wanted to point out that France, despite its progress, is still a traditionally an agricultural nation, a land with great geological diversity. The construction consisted of more than 2,000 individual parts fitted together in a manner so there was no sticky residue after dismantling, and so the materials can be assembled again in the future.
Photo: Paolo Carlini
The roof and exhibits were set by the renowned design office Licht Kunst Licht from Bonn. Their lighting system consisted of three, selectively used levels: path lighting, general lighting and accent lighting. The simulated growing field at the entrance was illuminated by hidden LED strips set into the railing and accented by irregularly arranged light bars. In the exhibition hall, pivoting lights illuminated the objects tucked into the chambers of the wooden structure, while general lighting was provide by virtually invisible uplights. For accent lighting of individual exhibits, the lighting designers selected spotlights by iGuzzini with a high color rendition. In total, the multifaceted lighting experience supported the striking architecture and drew the visitors attention to the dramatic display of the exhibits within the organic roofscape.
Photo: XTU/Studio A.RISPAL/Andrea Bosio
Drawing: XTU architects
Site plan (Drawing: XTU architects)
Floor plans (Drawing: XTU architects)
Published originally as "Leuchtende Landschaft" on German-Architects.
PROJECT DETAILS
Project
French Pavilion at Expo 2015
Milan, Italy
Architect
XTU (Anouk Legendre + Nicolas Desmazières)
Paris, France
Project Team
Mathias Lukacs (project management), Nicolas Senemaud, William Bianchi, Stefania Maccagnan, Gaëlle Le Borgne
With
Atelien Architecture
Paris, France
Lighting Design
Licht Kunst Licht AG
Bonn, Germany
Manufacturer
iGuzzini illuminatione spa
Recanati, Italy
iGuzzini illuminazione Deutschland GmbH
Planegg, Germany
Products
Front Light
Cestello
Palco
Laser Blade
Client
FranceAgriMer
Montreuil, FR
Exhibition Design
Studio Adeline Rispal
Paris, France
Structural Engineer
Grontmij GmbH
Bremen, Germany
Landscape Architect
Agence Laverne Paysagistes
Rungis, France
Sound Design
Viasonora
Multimedia
Innovision
Kitchen Design
BECP
Graphic Design
Chevalvert
Film Production
Les Films d'Ici
Competition
Januar 2014
Completion
April 2015
Photography
Paolo Carlini
XTU
Studio A.RISPAL
Andrea Bosio