Listed as a Historic Monument since 2005, the swimming pool built in 1935 has a strong architectonic character and a compelling identity, that of Art Deco – it is in the spirit of its age. After its closure, the swimming pool underwent varied and diverse uses and was transformed. The challenge was to translate some of the values intrinsic to Hermès into space: heritage and modernity, savoir-faire and creation. The project has a double aim. First of all to respect, conserve and reinterpret the architecture of the swimming pool. The only important modification was the covering of the pool by means of concrete composite floor slab supported by a light structure. Underneath, the pool has been integrally preserved. The facade, giving onto the rue de Sèvres, has kept its original appearance. Then, to tell another story, one that is resolutely contemporary. This takes form through the appearance of three monumental ash huts which both disrupt the existing volumes and converse with them. The invasion of what was once the pool by these huts, flexible, light and nomadic, suggests the creation of houses within the house. A change of scale, an invitation to wander, to drift, which produces a powerful magic… Everywhere the movements seem natural, they are fluid, rippling. The shimmering of the water that was once here is evoked in a subtle way in the tones of the mosaics, in the effects of the lights… What existed and what has been added converse in a strange harmony. They are whole, they are complementary.
THE ENTRANCE
At the foot of an elegant apartment building from the mid 1930s, the
facade of the Hermès store is discreet. An entrance portico in the
centre between two windows, nothing to hint at the surprise awaiting
once through the doors…The entrance is like a lightwell overturned,
horizontal, which attracts one irrevocably towards the light at the
back, towards what was the Lutétia swimming pool. The entrance to the
store must function like a delicious trap into which the visitor lets
himself slide, from crossing the threshold of the doors on the street
until he reaches the swimming pool and its strange inhabitants, the
huts. To guide him, the perspectives are accentuated and modified by an
imperceptible contraction, rather like the sides of the Médicis
fountain in the Luxembourg garden. The lightly inclined ceiling, the
walls curved and leaning inwards, covered with oak laths that leave
recesses open as if floating in matter. An introduction full of
mysteries inciting one to plunge into this new Hermès house…
THE HUTS
Four pavilions with an organic design, in which some will recognise
familiar forms from the plant or animal world, or from childhood…Others
will liken these huts, which occupy the volume of the swimming pool,
to the nests of tisserin birds. These pavilions of different form and
dimensions are constructed in ash wood. They are self-supporting
structures that rest on a system of woven wooden laths (profile 6x4cm)
with a double radius of curves. The documentation and
three-dimensional drawing of the complex geometry of each hut was made
possible by the computer script written for each one of them. Rising to
more than 9 m in height, they lean progressively, as if attracted by
the skylights. The huts house the Hermès collections. They seem to have
simply alighted on the ground, lending the project its nomadic
dimension. The fourth hut, which appears to be lying down, lines the
staircase that naturally leads the visitor towards the pool and forms
the link between the entrance and the open space of the swimming pool.
THE LIGHTING
In such a volume, the lighting is crucial. The entire space is bathed
in natural light that penetrates through the three large skylights
above the atrium, softened only by a metal screen. At night the
skylights are lit to avoid a “black hole” effect. In order to avoid
putting the spaces overlooking the pool that previously housed the
changing rooms, in the shade, the effects had to be measured out, the
contrasts that would otherwise have been too harsh attenuated. All the
vertical panels are therefore also lightly illuminated. The undulating
walls in white plaster, running around the ground floor, are lit from
above by LED tape with the light source hidden from view. Lit from the
interior, the huts appear as giant lanterns. A lighting device
embedded in the floor, illuminates their vaults of latticed wood. Each
hut has a large chandelier composed of a double ring of suspended wood.
The shelving is lit by integrated and invisible LED tape.
THE MOSAICS
The Lutétia swimming pool is a mineral world. The floors, the columns,
the staircases are covered in mosaics, broken tiles or granito. The
existing ornamental elements on the floor and the walls have been
preserved and restored. Through the play of this transformation, this
world has discovered several new forms of expression… In the entrance
to the store, a mosaic carpet with a Greek motif (a nod to the flooring
of the Hermès store at 24 Faubourg Saint-Honoré) welcomes visitors.
Following this desire for coherence, the steps and risers of the large
newly created staircase are in granito. Adding to this refinement, the
floors of rooms less visible to visitors (such as the fitting rooms,
the bathroom) have been worked in broken tiles. It is a means of
writing these new spaces into the history of the swimming pool. The
surface of the pool is adorned with a mosaic covering, whose texture
and composition of ceramic and glass mosaic tiles evoke the movement of
waves. Shiny and matt tesserae in different dimensions and in multiple
colours and white gold seem to vibrate as one moves around. A random
approach to the composition in graduated tones creates effects of depth
and sparkle accentuated by the play of light.
from contemporist
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