Lyon Part-Dieu
The Lyon Part-Dieu project transforms the original shopping centre from the 1970s, “re-socialising” the massive building and transforming Lyon’s city centre. While sustainably reusing a significant amount of the existing building’s materials, the design rearranges internal programmes, adds more space, replaces a redundant car park, inserts large windows, refreshes the characteristic old concrete façade, and adds an expansive rooftop park connected to the city by monumental stairs. With this extensive transformation, a building that was once an obstruction to Lyon’s vitality begins a new chapter as a vibrant city centre attraction.
- Location
- France
- City
- Lyon
- Year
- 2022
- Surface
- 180000 m²
- Client
- URW Unibail Rodamco Westfield
- Status
- Realised
- Programmes
- Retail , Bar-restaurant
- Themes
- Architecture , Leisure , Public , Transformations , NEXT
Designed in an era when cars ruled city planning, the original design of La Part-Dieu was an introverted behemoth – it was among the largest urban shopping centres in Europe, yet had little connection to the streets around it. The transformation replaces the old car park and rearranges the building’s interior spaces to rationalise circulation, while new extensions also add an extra 32,000 square metres of leasable space to the existing 130,000 square metres.
Despite the dramatic transformation, the design retains the history of the building. The concrete panels that composed the distinctive original façade have been preserved and reused in line with circular economy principles, retaining the pattern of interlocking rectangles that characterised the original building’s striking visual identity. These concrete panels, which previously were a dull beige, are now fresh and white. They are also replicated on the extensions, with a modern twist; at the entrances and other key locations, the façade ‘evaporates’ to reveal large windows, reinforcing the building’s openness, creating a physical and symbolic gesture heralding the gateway to a revitalised Lyon Part-Dieu.
“The joy of this new façade is the many different things people think of when they see it”, says MVRDV founding partner Winy Maas. “Perhaps it’s fabric lace, and the edges have burned off; maybe it’s sugar that has dissolved; it could be snowflakes, and they are beginning to melt. All of these evocative images are in stark contrast to the heavy, unfriendly mass that characterised the building before. It turns the old monster into a gracious Grande Dame.”
Another significant element of the transformation is found on the roof: grand staircases rise next to the shopping centre’s main entrances, leading to a multi-level rooftop garden that connects three sides of the building. With restaurants and cafés as well as green spaces, comfortable seating, and play areas for children, this rooftop and terraces become a true piece of the city, connecting parts of the city – including the city’s main Part-Dieu train station – that were previously detached from one another. People can now take multiple routes through or over the building to cross the vast site; the shopping centre becomes a kind of public plateau, a vantage point that allows people to orient themselves within the city.
“When we can shop online from the comfort of our sofas, a shopping centre – especially one in the middle of the city – needs to offer a complete experience, with shopping complemented by a variety of leisure activities”, says Maas. “Lyon Part-Dieu is now more porous and contemporary, permeated by daily life. From its green public roof garden, you can relax, meet people, take in the views, and find solace away from the bustling streets below.”
The transformation of Lyon Part-Dieu shows how the urban mistakes of previous eras can be sustainably assimilated into the modern city. Rather than demolish and build anew an area that is the equivalent of around 12 city blocks, the design retains the existing structure, including much of its façade, and avoids the significant amounts of embodied carbon that rebuilding would otherwise create.
Gallery
Credits
- Architect
- Principal in charge
- Design team
- Marion Rabec
- Pierre-Emmanuel Escoffier
- Catherine Drieux
- Antoine Muller
- Daniel Diez
- Maxime Cunin
- Clara Cahez
- Jean-Rémy Houel
- Leo Stuckardt
- Saskia Kok
- Boris Tikvarski
- Paul Mas
- Paul Sanders
- Julius Kirchert
- Andrei Pedrescu
- Karolina Szostkiewicz
- Ana Melgarejo Lopez
- Clémentine Artru
- Clementine Bory
- Davide Salamino
- Séverine Bogers
- Marie Saladin
- Francesco Barone
- Pierre Des Courtis
- Michael Labory
- Solène de Bouteiller
- Jordanne Alaimo
- Bastien Legros
- Camille Ghielmetti
- Mariana López Reyes
- Javier Cuenca Solana
- Miriam Gallerani
- Irene Todero
- Pauline Dupont
- Sanne van der Burgh
- Jill Pichon
- Edgar Gervason
- Wael Borghol
- Sylvain Totaro
- Manon Vajou
- Director MVRDV France
- Partners
- Co-architect:
- Sud Architectes
- Project coordination:
- ARTELIA
- Landscape architect:
- BASE
- Structural engineer:
- IGREC Ingénierie
- WSP
- Façade engineer:
- VP&Green
- Contractor:
- Groupement LEON GROSSE
- GCC
- Interior architect:
- Saguez & Partners
- Alberto Cattani
- Lighting Design:
- Les Eclaireurs
- Photographs:
- © Ossip van Duivenbode