Fire and rescue center | LAN Architecture

Rennes / France / 2021

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9 Love 2,168 Visits Published

To envision a technical installation’s adaptability from the get-go when its functional requirements tend to eclipse its architectural qualities may seem too lofty an ideal. Yet, there are urban situations and programs that have a certain interest in providing modifiability. The relocation of the Ille-et-Vilaine provincial fire and rescue service along the banks of the Vilaine in Rennes is one such case. Situated along the right bank, whose urban front needs reinforcement, and facing the Baud plain to the south of the river, now a development zone, the new fire and rescue service is a prototype and harbinger of future constructions and usages. The new facility will integrate a fire station into the provincial fire and rescue services office already present at the site. This offers an opportunity to optimize the fuctioning of this structure and to define the identity of this future neighborhood. As a result, its architectural presence must rise to the challenge of its operating needs. Because these requirements are not fixed to respond to the institution’s constant evolution, they become a springboard for innovation. The new fire and rescue service building proudly exhibits its formally radical nature because underneath a unifying envelope, it frees up the habitability of its interior spaces. Modules 1,35 m wide, half an office module, with three standardized 60 x 100 cm windows envelope the post and beam structure. Thus, each room has a minimum of six windows, two below, two at chair height, and two at eye height. This mechanism applies to the offices, the accommodations, and the athletics spaces, thereby facilitating any interior reconfiguration of the building. It was the manipulation of a non-standard set of specifications that enabled this rationality. While the fire and rescue service’s program required almost 3 900 m2 of built space, the empty space needed for parking and moving vehicles takes up more than 11 700 m2. This adeptly realized inverse ratio of full to void made it possible not to sacrifice urban quality of the riverbanks to the program’s requirements. The built spaces are collected within a sober, twostory volume that sits along the avenue François Château. This concentrates all traffic operations along the rear of the site. Behind the urban facade, the operational areas of the fire station (on-duty staff areas, accommodations, garages, etc.) are installed in perpendicular fashion. The exterior layout is divided into two parts to facilitate departures; manoeuvring areas are on the one side and the parking areas on the other. An office tower completes the volume. It is this emergence that announces the future constructions that will make up the skyline of the Baud-Chardonnet development zone in the future. The “T” shape also helps optimize fluidity and speed of movement within the building, which represents a priority. The core formed by the meeting point of the three axes of the base and the tower represent the project’s functional heart. All the spaces shared by the fire station and the fire and rescue service are developed around this core: the entrance, shared meeting rooms, cafeteria services, spaces for socializing (which represent 173 m² of added value for the program) and a terrace facing the Vilaine to the south. Some of these spaces have larger openings. During the day, these curtain facades reveal the intensity of the building’s inner life, and at night, the interplay of openings transforms the volume into a luminous lantern. The building thus becomes a sort of nightlight that testifies to the constant vigilance and dedication of firemen.


 


Lead Architects: Dorothée Riou


 


Photography: Charly Broyez (https://www.charly-broyez.net/) / Schnepp Renou (https://www.charly-broyez.net/)

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    To envision a technical installation’s adaptability from the get-go when its functional requirements tend to eclipse its architectural qualities may seem too lofty an ideal. Yet, there are urban situations and programs that have a certain interest in providing modifiability. The relocation of the Ille-et-Vilaine provincial fire and rescue service along the banks of the Vilaine in Rennes is one such case. Situated along the right bank, whose urban front needs reinforcement, and facing the...

    Project details
    • Year 2021
    • Work finished in 2021
    • Client Conseil Général d’Ille et Vilaine
    • Status Completed works
    • Type Military barracks, police and fire stations
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    Lovers 9 users