Empereur

2008 - 2016

Construction of a mixed-use housing and office building boulevard de l’Empereur in Brussels.
Streetview

Site
Boulevard de l'Empereur, 34 1000 Brussels
Client
FOREMOST IMMO sa
Structural engineering
Setesco
Services engineer
TEC-SPE sprl
owner
Politea
movie
http://www.archiurbain.be/?p=5171
Copyrights
Renaud Callebaut
Link
https://www.homify.fr/livres_idees/34584/un-diamant-brut-urbain
Contractor
DENYS nv
Surfaces
1 217 m² above ground level and 227 m² below ground level
Budget
2 285 000 € htva

Complete description

Work here concentrates on the impact of built and un-built volumes on the existing urban landscape, leading to the first obvious option not to occupy the entire terrain (as does the existing 1950s office block promised to demolition) but instead step back, re-aligning with the back-side of the left-hand neighbor. Secondly, option is taken to develop a bona fide 3-facade end-piece, finishing off an existing alignment of imposing boulevard architecture punctuated by the restored Tour Anneessens. This is therefore a strategic site articulating 19th-century-scale buildings and medieval-scale vestiges, no gestures wanted, only pertinent responses.

A neutral white ensemble serving as " fond-de-scène " for the medieval Tour is imagined, characterized by a rhythmic un-identical series of steps back, on all three sides, molding and qualifying as such the open space crystallizing between the new building and the Tour. Built and un-built space folds and un-folds, deforms then reforms, morphs, taking its cue from immediate context as well as from the ergonomics of the resulting interiors and terraces.

The outcome brings added value to the small planted garden next to the project on which the Tour once forlornly stood, with fresh and inviting perspectives to and from the vestiges, and secure and convivial public/semi-public space where tourists and passers-by can stop and admire them. A winding concrete serpentine serves as a welcoming bench, winding its way right up to the last fragment of medieval arch upheld.