OMA to Masterplan Southern Neighborhood of Bordeaux

In order to accommodate the expansion of the local tram system, La Fabrique Métropolitaine de la Communauté Urbaine de Bordeaux has commissioned OMA to design a new major urban development in the southern district of Bordeaux, France. Over the next five years, the masterplan will regenerate the neighborhoods of Bègles and Villenave d’Ornon by forging new connections to Bordeaux’s central station and unlocking the potential for both city development and public space.

This project is part of the new identity for the “Porte Sud de Bordeaux” (Bordeaux south gate) and continues OMA’s intensive recent engagement in Bordeaux, as the office has been working since 2010 on the masterplan for 50,000 new housing units in the city.

More on OMA’s Bordeaux masterplan after the break…

Spearheading the masterplan is OMA associate Clement Blanchet, who commented: “We took the tramway extension as an opportunity to rebuild this part of the city, generating a new linear condition which allows the possibility to define a fast / slow cityscape. By shifting the tram line from its previously planned location, we create potential for new types of housing and commercial development.”


The masterplan accommodates two contrasting conditions: one fast, the current Route de Toulouse; and one slow, dedicated to pedestrian traffic of the new neighborhood’s inhabitants, which will emerge around the tramline. OMA will work on the public space along the tramline in collaboration with landscape architect Coloco, sustainability adviser EGIS CONCEPT, engineering office EGIS, and real estate adviser CBRE.


OMA, with Clement Blanchet, has recently won three major competitions in France: the Bibliothèque Multimédia à Vocation Régionale (BMVR) in Caen, to go under construction this summer; the Parc des Expositions in Toulouse; and Ecole Centrale at Saclay, outside Paris.

Architects: OMA
Architect In Charge: Clement Blanchet
Landscape Architect: Coloco
Sustainable Adviser: EGIS Concept
Engineering: EGIS
Real Estate Adviser : CBRE
Client: La Fabrique Métropolitaine de la Communauté Urbaine de Bordeaux
Year: 2018
Photographs: Courtesy of OMA

OMA to Masterplan Southern Neighborhood of Bordeaux Courtesy of OMA
OMA to Masterplan Southern Neighborhood of Bordeaux Courtesy of OMA
OMA to Masterplan Southern Neighborhood of Bordeaux Courtesy of OMA
OMA to Masterplan Southern Neighborhood of Bordeaux Courtesy of OMA
OMA to Masterplan Southern Neighborhood of Bordeaux Courtesy of OMA
OMA to Masterplan Southern Neighborhood of Bordeaux Courtesy of OMA
OMA to Masterplan Southern Neighborhood of Bordeaux Courtesy of OMA
OMA to Masterplan Southern Neighborhood of Bordeaux Courtesy of OMA
OMA to Masterplan Southern Neighborhood of Bordeaux Courtesy of OMA

OMA to Masterplan Southern Neighborhood of Bordeaux originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 17 Apr 2013.

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Herzog & de Meuron Breaks Ground on ‘Grand Stade de Bordeaux’

Nearly two years after unveiling the design to the public, Herzog & de Meuron broke ground this morning on the new ‘Grand Stade de Bordeaux’ in France. Surrounded by lush vegetation typically found in this green belt district, the stepped concourse transitions visitors through a forest of slender white columns to the stadium’s bowl, whose form ensures maximum flexibility and optimal visibility for all 43,000 spectators.

Completion is set for 2015, just in time to host the Euro 2016 football championship.

The architect’s description after the break…

Click here to view the embedded video.

Vision of a stadium

Our project for the new Bordeaux stadium is an expression of fundamentally new architecture. The pure shape of the volume, by contrast to its light and open structure, creates an at once monumental and graceful architectural piece elegantly suited to the grand landscape of Bordeaux.

Stadium architecture combines three constitutive elements: the bowl containing the game and its spectators, the concourse as the transitional element between the playing field and the outside surroundings and, finally, the overall appearance. Our approach is to reinterpret these three elements in light of the site-specific characteristics: the resulting architecture is thus one-of-a-kind, reflecting the intrinsic features of the site.

We aim to present an architectural object in which highest functional quality is combined with a unique identity. We are confident that allying these two criteria, functionality and strong identity, endows our project with an emotional dimension that the public can feel, and that is inextricably bound to the stadium’s traditional role of staging sports.

The bowl

Seating a maximum of some 43,000 persons, the bowl embraces the game area, its geometry affording optimal visibility for all, together with the maximum flexibility of capacity and usage.

The bowl consists in two superposed tiers divided into four sectors and protected from the elements by the roof. Consisting of a multitude of concentric strips, the ceiling’s homogeneous appearance guides the gaze to the playing field, while allowing sunlight to seep through thanks to the strips’ angle of slant. This open ceiling structure does not show through on the inside of the stadium, to avoid distracting the spectators’ attention.

Raising the bowl above ground level is a compact base integrating all the programmatic functions into a uniform and symmetrical volume. This plinth includes the VIP loges and salons evenly distributed east and west as well as media areas adjacent to the spaces dedicated to players.

The simplicity and pure lines of the architecture characterizing the bowl and its base guarantee a smooth flow of spectators and easy orientation.

The overall appearance
The bowl resting on its base is covered by an elegant roof which has an unusual rectangular shape. The choice of this pure and almost abstract form is the clearest and most efficient response to the site’s natural conditions, and to the main flow of spectators east-west.

This white rectangle seems projected earthwards thanks to the multiplicity of slender columns that shower down. A ribbon of food stalls and restrooms undulates through this forest of columns, brought alive by the movement of the crowd.

At once dense and light, this structure creates an evanescent rectangular volume from which emerges the sculpted and organic outline of the bowl.

In its specificity, this architectural concept confers a strong and unparalleled identity to the new Bordeaux stadium. Well anchored to its site, this elegant and diaphanous volume looks out onto the grand landscape its transparency revealing all the energy and activities which will fill this new symbol of the city of Bordeaux’s dynamism.

Landscaping

The stadium’s implantation is linked to a particular situation, serving as a juncture between a high-quality natural setting to be reinforced to the north and, to the south, a structured urban periphery area in need of new development. Hence, any plans for the upcoming stadium must represent a basic step towards introducing the Secteur Nord Rocade tree belt, a project already foreseen by the city of Bordeaux’s landscape development plan.

Our proposal aspires to draw up a preliminary rendition of these future development plans. It reinterprets the tree belt’s exceptional features comprising rows of trees lining the main access ways. It defines an overall structure and organizes the various land plots in a grid.

The stadium’s surrounding areas (parvis, parking area, green corridor) belong to this language: organic tree lines serve as screens in a setting where, following the north-south orientation, they offer a variety of views while preserving a clear frontal view of the stadium’s facade. Surrounding the stadium, an entirely pedestrian public area is accessible from all sides.

The ground of the square around the stadium consists of three elements: grass-jointed concrete paving, natural lawn dotted with groups of trees forming open spaces and, facilitating stadium entry and exit, hot-rolled asphalt on surfaces around the stadium and defining the bus parking area to the east. The parking area to the north holds onto its for the most part mineral ground already anticipating the tree belt with its densely planted trees interspersed by plant beds.

These mixed area types set the stadium within a defined landscape, closely correlating the stadium site with its surrounding woodland setting.

Herzog & de Meuron Breaks Ground on ‘Grand Stade de Bordeaux’ © Herzog & de Meuron
Herzog & de Meuron Breaks Ground on ‘Grand Stade de Bordeaux’ © Herzog & de Meuron
Herzog & de Meuron Breaks Ground on ‘Grand Stade de Bordeaux’ © Herzog & de Meuron
Herzog & de Meuron Breaks Ground on ‘Grand Stade de Bordeaux’ © Herzog & de Meuron
Herzog & de Meuron Breaks Ground on ‘Grand Stade de Bordeaux’ © Herzog & de Meuron
Herzog & de Meuron Breaks Ground on ‘Grand Stade de Bordeaux’ © Herzog & de Meuron
Herzog & de Meuron Breaks Ground on ‘Grand Stade de Bordeaux’ © Herzog & de Meuron
Herzog & de Meuron Breaks Ground on ‘Grand Stade de Bordeaux’ © Herzog & de Meuron
Herzog & de Meuron Breaks Ground on ‘Grand Stade de Bordeaux’ © Herzog & de Meuron

Herzog & de Meuron Breaks Ground on ‘Grand Stade de Bordeaux’ originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 15 Apr 2013.

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Ferme Darwin Proposal / SOA + holdUP

Designed by SOA + holdUP, the FERME DARWIN Proposal synthesizes a vertical farm and cultural facilities in an original manner. Stacking these disparate elements of art, music, and education up is like celebrating the insertion of agriculture in the very heart of the city. Anchored in a visionary city like Bordeaux, the project also addresses health, food, ethical and social concerns. More images and architects’ description after the break.

Nested in the remains of niel’s barracks, the Ferme Darwin is a pilot project which accommodates multiple functions, right in between nature and culture. On the occasion of an outdoor concert or a temporary exhibition, passers-by are pleased to learn about environmental issues tightly bound to agriculture. This educational virtue seems essential in a period during which the food chain is more opaque for consumers than ever. The production technique and crops’ traceability are here crystal clear.

Set as a continuation of the future walk, the music stage and the educational gallery will both turn the existing ruin into a permeable surrounding wall, still bearing marks of time. In the background, an access is given to technical facilities supporting the vertical farm. This collection of clustered spaces is located at street level to free upper stories from any unnecessary load. Consequently, plants seem to levitate almost supernaturally, held up by a lightweight steel structure to benefit from a maximized light exposure.

The concept of stackable compartments to grow plants was developed with an entirely flexible structural frame offering multiples assets. Man works about six feet off the ground, in a traditional fashion, and grows any kind of food. Every harvest is biological and optimized throughout the year owing to a combination of complementary species. The multilevel system meets ecological and sustainable requirements, technically (auto-regulated water-efficient device, solar energy, organic farming, short supply chain) as much as sociologically (employment).

Architects: SOA + holdUP
Location: Bordeaux, France
Client: Darwin Ecosysteme
Technology: Courtirey
Typology: Vertical farm, music stage & educational gallery
Condition: Private commission
Floor Area: 2,800sqm
Status: Ongoing
Budget: 1,620,000€

Ferme Darwin Proposal (1) Courtesy of SOA + holdUP
Ferme Darwin Proposal (2) Courtesy of SOA + holdUP
Ferme Darwin Proposal (3) Courtesy of SOA + holdUP
Ferme Darwin Proposal (4) Courtesy of SOA + holdUP
Ferme Darwin Proposal (5) Courtesy of SOA + holdUP
Ferme Darwin Proposal (6) plan 01
Ferme Darwin Proposal (7) plan 02
Ferme Darwin Proposal (8) plan 03
Ferme Darwin Proposal (9) section

Ferme Darwin Proposal / SOA + holdUP originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 13 Nov 2012.

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Center for New Businesses / Barcode Architects + Habiter Autrement

As part of the masterplan, ‘Bassin a Flots’ designed by ANMA/Nicolas Michelin, Barcode Architects and Habiter Autrement recently presented the Pôle de Compétences (Center for New Businesses). The 7,000m2 project will be a part of the masterplan, which aims on a phased transformation of the present introvert industrial harbor area into a new lively precinct with an urban mixture of living, working, and recreation. The slender 90 meter long and 21 meter tall building presents itself as a pure monolith volume stretching out over the entire length of the site. More images and architects’ description after the break.

The facades are designed as a cut out of the characteristic sawtooth roof, a reference to the architecture of the former harbor area. The opposing facades are mirrored which creates an expressive and dynamic volume. Both the façade and the roof are made out of silver colored aluminum panels. This material continuity lends the building a monolithic quality, which is reinforced by the regular geometry and consistent rhythm of the openings and the cladding. On ground level this rhythm is interrupted by larger openings which mark the entrees for the public facilities, such as the restaurant and the fitness. The brightly colored two-story high public passage guides visitors into the green inner courtyard.

‘Pôle de Compétences’ is one of the first buildings developed in the area of ‘Bassin a Flots’. The design of BARCODE Architects and Habiter Autrement represents a compelling new architecture for the former harbor area, a meaningful quality boost for the waterfront of the Gironne.

Architects: Barcode Architects + Habiter Autrement
Location: Bordeaux, France
Client: ICADE Promotion
Program: ‘Centre for new businesses’, offices, restaurant, fitness, day-care, parking
Area: 7000m²

Center for New Businesses (1) Courtesy of Barcode Architects + Habiter Autrement
Center for New Businesses (2) Courtesy of Barcode Architects + Habiter Autrement
Center for New Businesses (3) Courtesy of Barcode Architects + Habiter Autrement
Center for New Businesses (4) Courtesy of Barcode Architects + Habiter Autrement
Center for New Businesses (5) plan
Center for New Businesses (6) elevation
Center for New Businesses (7) diagram

Center for New Businesses / Barcode Architects + Habiter Autrement originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 23 Sep 2012.

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Center for New Businesses / Barcode Architects + Habiter Autrement

As part of the masterplan, ‘Bassin a Flots’ designed by ANMA/Nicolas Michelin, Barcode Architects and Habiter Autrement recently presented the Pôle de Compétences (Center for New Businesses). The 7,000m2 project will be a part of the masterplan, which aims on a phased transformation of the present introvert industrial harbor area into a new lively precinct with an urban mixture of living, working, and recreation. The slender 90 meter long and 21 meter tall building presents itself as a pure monolith volume stretching out over the entire length of the site. More images and architects’ description after the break.

The facades are designed as a cut out of the characteristic sawtooth roof, a reference to the architecture of the former harbor area. The opposing facades are mirrored which creates an expressive and dynamic volume. Both the façade and the roof are made out of silver colored aluminum panels. This material continuity lends the building a monolithic quality, which is reinforced by the regular geometry and consistent rhythm of the openings and the cladding. On ground level this rhythm is interrupted by larger openings which mark the entrees for the public facilities, such as the restaurant and the fitness. The brightly colored two-story high public passage guides visitors into the green inner courtyard.

‘Pôle de Compétences’ is one of the first buildings developed in the area of ‘Bassin a Flots’. The design of BARCODE Architects and Habiter Autrement represents a compelling new architecture for the former harbor area, a meaningful quality boost for the waterfront of the Gironne.

Architects: Barcode Architects + Habiter Autrement
Location: Bordeaux, France
Client: ICADE Promotion
Program: ‘Centre for new businesses’, offices, restaurant, fitness, day-care, parking
Area: 7000m²

Center for New Businesses (1) Courtesy of Barcode Architects + Habiter Autrement
Center for New Businesses (2) Courtesy of Barcode Architects + Habiter Autrement
Center for New Businesses (3) Courtesy of Barcode Architects + Habiter Autrement
Center for New Businesses (4) Courtesy of Barcode Architects + Habiter Autrement
Center for New Businesses (5) plan
Center for New Businesses (6) elevation
Center for New Businesses (7) diagram

Center for New Businesses / Barcode Architects + Habiter Autrement originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 23 Sep 2012.

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Unusual Tactic By MVRDV To Get Residents Pumped About French Housing Project

MVRDV has taken an unusual approach to getting residents in Bordeaux excited about a neighborhood plan it designed. The Dutch firm has erected an attention-grabbing rendition of the 35-acre Bastide Niel development in a public square—and people are invited to wander through the whimsical creation.

The installation features a collection of blue buildings perched atop metal stilts. “The roofscape with its characteristic spires can be observed from elevated tennis chairs,” notes MVRDV. The development will contain approximately 2,400 homes, along with shops, offices, and other facilities. See more photos after the jump!

[ via Dezeen and MVRDV ]

Unusual Tactic By MVRDV To Get Residents Pumped About French Housing Project

MVRDV has taken an unusual approach to getting residents in Bordeaux excited about a neighborhood plan it designed. The Dutch firm has erected an attention-grabbing rendition of the 35-acre Bastide Niel development in a public square—and people are invited to wander through the whimsical creation.

The installation features a collection of blue buildings perched atop metal stilts. “The roofscape with its characteristic spires can be observed from elevated tennis chairs,” notes MVRDV. The development will contain approximately 2,400 homes, along with shops, offices, and other facilities. See more photos after the jump!

[ via Dezeen and MVRDV ]

MÉCA – Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG

Courtesy of

Team BIG+FREAKS freearchitects, dUCKS scéno, Khephren Ingénierie, VPEAS, ALTO Ingénierie, Vincent Hedont, PBNL, Mryk & Moriceau, Ph.A wins the competition to design a new 12 000 m2 cultural center on the riverfront of Bordeaux, merging three cultural institutions into one single building. More images and complete press release after the break.

Courtesy of BIG

The new Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine, MÉCA, located on the historical riverfront of Bordeaux will house three regional visual and performing arts agencies FRAC, the ECLA and the OARA in one single institution. The Regional Council of Bordeaux selected the winning team among proposals from SANAA, the Toulouse- based firm W-Architectures and Bordeaux-based FLINT.

BIG’s proposal arranges the new center for contemporary art, the performing arts institution and the center for literature and movies around a public space open towards the city of Bordeaux and the Garonne River. The building is conceived as a single loop of public space and cultural institutions as the pavement of the promenade rises to form the roof of the main lobbies, ascends vertically along the stage tower of OARA, bridges across the promenade with the sky lit galleries of the FRAC and returns vertically to the ground at the archives of the ECLA in order to reunite with the waterfront promenade.

Courtesy of BIG

“When a region or a city invests millions in a major new cultural institution – it often ends up benefiting only the informed few that already have an interest in the arts. Not only does the MÉCA spill its activities into the public realm and the urban room, but the public is also invited to walk around, through, above and below the new cultural gateway. By inviting the art into the city and the city into the arts, the MÉCA will provide opportunities for new hybrids of cultural and social life beyond the specific definitions of its constituent parts.” Bjarke Ingels, Founding Partner, BIG.

The urban room allows everyday life of Bordeaux to flow through its generous frame along the promenade, injecting the art into the city and the city life into the building. The multiple ramps and stairs of the building create an institution that is publicly accessible and welcoming on the inside as well as the outside. The urban room and the informal seating of the stairs will make the MÉCA a lively place and a natural extension of the life along the Quai de Paludate street and the new promenade. During festivals or other special occasions in the city, the outside of the MÉCA can be transformed into a stage for outdoor concerts, theatrical spectacles or art installations.

Courtesy of BIG

“The urban room is at once a frame for the artwork, a stage for the performances, a screening room for the media collections and most perhaps most importantly an open room for the urban life of Bordeaux to invade and engage with the arts.”, Andreas Klok Pedersen, Partner-in-Charge, BIG.

Tailored to accommodate the proportions of the performance spaces, the backstage requirements, the archives and the art galleries, the building is tailored to the needs and desires of its individual tenants while fused to form a single urban frame. The building and promenade is clad in the limestone which constitutes the majority of Bordeaux’s architecture. As if carved from the same material as the city itself – the stone is promenade and façade, stair and terrace, roof and ceiling all together.

“The three regional entities composing the program are idiomatic to the French public way of supporting and promoting culture all over the territory. Working on the MÉCA building in Bordeaux is a great occasion to cross views and balance between international references and local issues.” Guillaume Aubry, Cyril Gauthier & Yves Pasquet, Founding Partners, FREAKS freearchitects.

section

Architects: BIG
Location: Bordeaux,
Collaborators: FREAKS freearchitects, dUCKS scéno, Khephren Ingénierie, VPEAS, ALTO Ingénierie, Vincent Hedont, PBNL, Mryk & Moriceau, Ph.A
Partner in Charge: Bjarke Ingels, Andreas Klok Pedersen
Project Leader: Gabrielle Nadeau
Project Architect: Jan Magasanik
Team: Édouard Champelle, Lorenzo Boddi, Yang Du, Karol Borkowski
Client: Conseil régional d’Aquitaine
Size: 12,350 sqm
Images: Courtesy of BIG

MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (1) Courtesy of BIG
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (2) Courtesy of BIG
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (3) Courtesy of BIG
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (4) Courtesy of BIG
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (5) Courtesy of BIG
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (6) Courtesy of BIG
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (7) Courtesy of BIG
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (8) Courtesy of BIG
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (9) Courtesy of BIG
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (10) Courtesy of BIG
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (11) elevation
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (12) elevation
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (13) elevation
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (14) elevation
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (15) model
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (16) model
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (17) model
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (18) model
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (19) model
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (20) model
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (21) model
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (22) model
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (23) plan
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (24) plan
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (25) plan
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (26) plan
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (27) plan
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (28) plan
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (29) plan
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (30) plan
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (31) plan
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (32) section
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (33) section
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (34) site plan
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (35) site plan
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (36) diagram
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (37) diagram
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (38) diagram
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (39) diagram
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (40) diagram
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (41) diagram
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (42) diagram
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (43) diagram
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (44) diagram
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (45) diagram
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (46) diagram
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (47) diagram
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (48) diagram
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (49) diagram
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (50) diagram
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (51) diagram
MÉCA - Maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine / BIG (52) diagram