Project Details
- Project Name
- Nouveau Stade de Bordeaux
- Architect
- Herzog & de Meuron
- Project Types
- Sports
- Size
- 829,790 sq. feet
- Year Completed
- 2015
- Shared by
- Hanley Wood Media
- Team
-
Jacques Herzog, Hon. FAIA, Pierre de Meuron, Hon. FAIA (partners); Stefan Marbach (partner in charge); Tobias Winkelmann (associate, project director); Paul Vantieghem (associate, project manager); Thomas de Vries (associate, project manager)
Design Consultant: Herzog & de Meuron France SARL
Executive Architect: Groupe-6
Landscape Design: Michel Desvigne Paysagiste
Structural Engineer: Cabinet Jaillet-Rouby; Structures Île-de-France
Civil Engineer: Ingérop
M/E/P/HVAC Engineer: Egis Bâtiments Sud-Ouest
Lighting Consultant: Agence On
Acoustics: IdB Acoustique
Signage: Agence Franck Tallon
Maintenance: Vinci Facilities
Quantity Surveyor: Mazet & Associés
General Contractor: Sogea Sud-Ouest Hydraulique; Castel & Fromaget; GTM Bâtiment Aquitaine (Contractor Group Representative); GTM Sud-Ouest TP GC; Razel-Bec; SEG Fayat
- Project Status
- Built
- Cost
- $204,000,000
Text by Sara Johnson
The Nouveau Stade de Bordeaux (New Bordeaux Stadium) is an approximately 42,000-seat stadium in Bordeaux, France. Construction began on Feb. 1, 2013, and was completed in April 2015. Bordeaux Mayor Alain Juppé inaugurated the stadium on May 18, 2015, and the soccer team Girondins de Bordeaux played its first home game on May 23, 2015. The stadium will also host games in the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) Euro 2016.
Project Description
FROM THE ARCHITECTS:
A Stadium for Bordeaux
The new Bordeaux stadium appears light and
open; it is elegant, if such a term can be used for a building of this size.
Its purity and geometrical clarity inspires a sense of monumentality and
gracefulness. One might be tempted to draw a comparison with a classical
temple, but unlike the elevated plinth of a temple, the grand stairs of
the stadium blur the boundaries between inside and outside. Countless columns
standing on the stairs accompany the visitors on their way in and out of the
stadium. The fusion of stairs and columns forms a gesture of openness and
accessibility.
Special attention was paid to the integration
of the structure into the grand landscape of Bordeaux. The meticulous
geometrical arrangement of bowl structure and columns reflects the pattern
created by trees and paths in the surrounding landscape. This stadium is made
for this specific place - an open, flat landscape in immediate proximity to the
Bordeaux Exhibition Centre stretching along the lakefront. “Elegance"
has become a depreciated term when describing architecture, but wrongly so when
one looks at Bordeaux' urban and architectural legacy. We were never looking
for inspiration in the historical part of Bordeaux with its breathtakingly
beautiful buildings and monuments all made out of typical limestone. Much of
what we perceive as elegance in Bordeaux results from its unity and
homogeneity of scale and materiality and from its precision and purity of
form. We could not copy this, but we certainly learned from it.
A bowl for 42'000 people
Seating a maximum of 42,000 people, the bowl
embraces the game area, its geometry affording optimal visibility for all,
along with the maximum flexibility in terms of capacity and usage. The stadium
is multifunctional and conceived to welcome a rich and diversified program: not
only rugby and soccer matches but also shows, concerts, and corporate
events.
The bowl consists of two superposed tiers
divided into four sectors and protected from the elements by the roof. The
underside of the visually uniform roof guides the eye onto the playing
field while allowing sunlight to pass through. Its 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 housing all the programmatic functions in a uniform and
symmetrical volume. This plinth includes the VIP spaces evenly distributed
east and west, and media areas adjacent to the spaces dedicated to players. The
architectural simplicity and pure lines of the bowl and its base
ensure smooth spectator flows and ease of orientation.
Plinth, Bowl and Roof
The bowl rests on a plinth, covered by a
sharp-edged rectangular roof. The choice of this pure and almost abstract form
responds clearly and efficiently to the site’s natural conditions and to the
main flow of spectators from east to 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 the sculpted and
organic outline of the bowl emerges.
This architectural concept gives a specific
identity to the new Bordeaux stadium. The diaphanous volume opens up to the
surrounding landscape while the grand stairs express openness and accessibility
for everyone. Its transparency reveals all the energy and activities that will
transform this piece of land into a new and vibrant part of Bordeaux.
Herzog & de Meuron, May 2015