Inside A Decaying Parisian Utopia

Paris is quite a spoilt city, surrounded by elegant cream-coloured stone Haussmanian’s, gifted with pockets of bucolic cobblestone streets and charmed by old-world cafés and façades. But stray to the suburbs of Eastern Paris and you’ll find what looks like an alternate universe in comparison, a failed post-war “city of Babel” with Pharaonic structures of decaying concrete.

Jacques, 82, photographed in 2015 at Ricardo Bofill’s Le Viaduc (1980) et Les Arcades du Lac (1975), Montigny-le-Bretonneux

If you’re thinking this looks like an apocalyptic film set, you’d be bang on. Hollywood has used it on two occasions to set the scene for a dystopian world; Brazil in 1985 and most recently for the final instalment of the Hunger Games trilogy.

Le Pavé Neuf, Noisy-le-Grand, 2015. Image © Laurent Kronental
Lucien, 84 ans, Les Espaces d’Abraxas, Noisy-le-Grand, 2014. Image © Laurent Kronental
Les Espaces d’Abraxas, Noisy-le-Grand, 2014. Image © Laurent Kronental

 

“Photographer Laurent Kronetal has spent four years photographing postmodern Parisian housing estates, mainly erected from the 50’s to 80’s, to address demographic growth, rural outflow and house a migrant population while meeting the needs in modern housing. These areas are today commonly stigmatised in the media and marginalised by public opinion. His ongoing series, Souvenir d’un Futur, which covers several enclaves of the Parisian suburbs, is a tribute to the senior citizens living in what is known as the “Grands Ensembles” of the Paris region.” 1

 

Joseph, 88 ans, Les Espaces d’Abraxas, Noisy-le-Grand, 2014. Image © Laurent Kronental

Kronental’s documentation included a number of large estates across the Parisian Suburbs. Among them: the Tours Aillaud of Nanterre, the Damiers in Courbevoie, the Cité du Parc and Cité Maurice-Thorez in Ivry-sur-Seine,  the Arcades du Lac and the Viaduc, the Pavé Neuf and the Espace d’Abraxas in Noisy-le-Grand and even two areas in the 19th arrondissement of Paris known as Les Orgues de Flandre and Cité Curial-Cambrai.

Jean-Claude, 82 ans, Les Espaces d’Abraxas, Noisy-le-Grand, 2014. Image © Laurent Kronental

Born of a theoretical utopia and dubbed a new French “City in Space”, the Espaces Abraxas in Noisy-le-Grand were designed by Spanish architect Ricardo Bofill in the late 70s and early 80s. The aim was to mix social classes and build a theatrical landmark. These buildings consist of 610 apartments in what looks like a surreal ocean of concrete.

Joseph, 88 ans, Les Espaces d’Abraxas, Noisy-le-Grand, 2014. Image © Laurent Kronental
José, 89 ans, Les Damiers, Courbevoie, 2012. Image © Laurent Kronental

Ricardo Bofill stated in an interview with ‘Le Monde’ Magazine, that he believed he could change the city, but in the end, “nothing happened”. In retrospect, he acknowledged these areas have suffered a lack of community spirit, emphasized by the closed nature of the structure.

Lucien, 84 ans, Les Espaces d’Abraxas, Noisy-le-Grand, 2014. Image © Laurent Kronental
Jean, 89 ans, Puteaux-La Défense, 2011. Image © Laurent Kronental

Today, town planners are discussing demolition, but of course, despite a feeling of near-apocalyptic abandonment captured consciously by the photographer, there still remains a very strong but presence of life. The council of the Espaces d’Abraxas was forced to abandon demolition plans for parts of the development in 2006 following the residents’ outright opposition. Despite all odds, this ageing concrete city of the future has become their unlikely home.

Les Tours Aillaud, Cité Pablo Picasso, Nanterre, 2014. Image © Laurent Kronental

From what Laurent Kronental observed during his frequent visits to the suburbs, “Resignation and expectation blend on dignified faces and solitary spaces together with skepticism and confidence, incompleteness and plenitude. From these disturbing contrasts, life gushes out of the depths. These ‘monuments’, living memories of their time, personify the fragile strength of a youth having blindly aged”. 2

Paulette, 83 ans, Les Damiers, Courbevoie, 2015. Image © Laurent Kronental
Les Tours Aillaud, Cité Pablo Picasso, Nanterre, 2013. Image © Laurent Kronental
Les Tours Aillaud, Cité Pablo Picasso, Nanterre, 2014. Image © Laurent Kronental
Josette, 90 ans, Vision 80, Esplanade de La Défense, 2013. Image © Laurent Kronental

“The original population is nearing the endgame, as if doomed to share the fate of the walls that have circumscribed their lives,” 3 says Kronental, who has felt compelled to capture the fate of these buildings and of the urban veterans that live in them before they all vanish.

Les Orgues de Flandre, 19e arrondissement Paris, 2014. Image © Laurent Kronental

 

  1. “Laurent Kronental shows Paris’ forgotten housing estates.” Accessed April 9, 2017. https://www.bing.com/cr?IG=0016558F365548D7AC2BCAB5890D0504&CID=2A49949080166CDB33A49EF081866DAD&rd=1&h=wjQL6SS3HwXVe8hP7LIBxuqmNpguLSQtHmR9uEeckPY&v=1&r=https%3a%2f%2fwww.dezeen.com%2f2016%2f01%2f03%2flaurent-kronental-souvenir-d-un-futur-photo-essay-paris-forgotten-housing-estates%2f&p=DevEx,5054.1.
  2. “Social sci-fi: Laurent Kronental presents photographic …” Accessed April 9, 2017. https://www.bing.com/cr?IG=D271D42480C84A02BEC4F209115D973D&CID=0081CEB27B2069152AD8C4D27AB0688C&rd=1&h=a-5X51tNEj3j4i3CMtKzx3nty0hjnw694na8ipS_swM&v=1&r=https%3a%2f%2fwww.pinterest.com%2fpin%2f386324474265647787%2f&p=DevEx,5090.1.
  3. “Laurent Kronental shows Paris’ forgotten housing estates.” Accessed April 9, 2017. https://www.bing.com/cr?IG=0016558F365548D7AC2BCAB5890D0504&CID=2A49949080166CDB33A49EF081866DAD&rd=1&h=wjQL6SS3HwXVe8hP7LIBxuqmNpguLSQtHmR9uEeckPY&v=1&r=https%3a%2f%2fwww.dezeen.com%2f2016%2f01%2f03%2flaurent-kronental-souvenir-d-un-futur-photo-essay-paris-forgotten-housing-estates%2f&p=DevEx,5054.1.
Madeleine Sammut

Masters of Architecture student at the University of Western Australia

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