presse

Swimming pool in Bagneux

N°31 March - April 2015
AZURE
Langue:English
Pays:Canada
Éditeur:Azure Publishing Inc.
Disponible sur: iPhone - iPad - Android - ZR4 - RIM - Win8 - Win 8 Phone

into the blue
Dominique Coulon uses soft light to turn a neglected pool into a tranquil urban oasis
by Léa-Catherine Szacka
photography by Clément guillaume & David Romero-uzeda

Paris is renowned for its rich, eclectic swimming amenities, although a lack of maintenance over the past decades has taken its toll, eroding their original splendour. Last May, however, the legendary Piscine Molitor (where engineer and clothing designer Louis Réard introduced the bikini to the world in 1946) reopened after many years. Similarly, the public pool in Bagneux, a southern suburb, had seen better days before city council members decided to bring the facility into the 21st century. To do so, they commissioned Dominique Coulon et Associés to revive the pool’s social and public relevance.
The Strasbourg firm refurbished and expanded the original 1950s build- ing, retaining the main structure’s 25-metre-long lap pool, along with a beginners’ pool housed on the upper level; and adding to the ground floor a spa, two saunas, a hammam and an exterior solarium. These amenities transform the complex into a radically contemporary sports typology.
As one moves through the various recreational options, the right-angled world gives way to an airy ambience, soft lighting, fluid promenades and curves that suggest endless whirlpools. These gentle effects are intentional, according to Coulon: “When you are in a swimsuit, you are automatically more vulnerable. You become more sensitive and receptive to spaces and ambience.” The main reception area is flooded with an aqua-tinged light from a frosted glass porthole in the ceiling, which is the bottom of the children’s paddling pool area overhead; and a generous ledge in one rounded window doubles as a lounge seat. There is even a rooftop terrace for sunbathing in privacy.
The children’s pool, in all white, is among the most organic features, with curves that naturally reduce sound reverberation, giving kids the sensation of being wrapped in a cocoon. Embedded in a dense urban context sur- rounded by social housing towers, Coulon’s elegantly realized public space provides a welcome getaway from everyday life.