
"The renovation spans 3,000 square meters across five floors and a basement. On the street side, the original facades are restored to align with the character of the Grands Boulevards, while the commercial ground floor was redefined with new dark granite cladding. Inside, the layout was opened up to create flexible work environments. Exposed technical elements on the ceiling are painted white to reduce visual contrast, and many walls are deliberately left unfinished, revealing texture and construction traces."
"Originally a private home, the structure had been modified repeatedly over the centuries, resulting in a mix of added wings, altered floor heights, and glass canopy insertions. These accumulated changes left the building in a fragmented state, but still with architectural elements worth preserving. The Paris-based architects approached the project by working with these layers, reorganizing the interior, and restoring historic features while introducing a more unified spatial and material logic."
"Furnishings, coordinated by Maison Vincent Eschalier, include light wood desks with linen rubber surfaces that are paired with selections from independent and established design studios. These include pieces by Axel Chay, Margaux Keller, Duplex Studio, and manufacturers such as Silvera and Petite Friture. In contrast to the raw surfaces, built-in cabinets and plants throughout the space introduce softer tones and a more domestic atmosphere."
Renovation of a 17th-century Paris building created a 3,000-square-meter headquarters for SIA Partners across five floors and a basement. Original street facades were restored to match the Grands Boulevards, while the commercial ground floor received dark granite cladding. Interiors were opened to form flexible work environments, with exposed technical ceiling elements painted white and many walls left unfinished to reveal texture and construction traces. The design worked with accumulated historical layers, reorganizing interiors and restoring features within a unified spatial and material logic. Furnishings coordinated by Maison Vincent Eschalier mix light wood desks, designer pieces, built-in cabinets, plants, terracotta tiles, mineral finishes, and a central atrium paved in irregular opus incertum stone.
Read at designboom | architecture & design magazine
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