THE CHATEAU CHEVAL BLANC WINERY IN FRANCE
CHRISTIAN DE PORTZAMPARC - AGENCE 2PORTZAMPARC
THE CHATEAU CHAVEL BLANC CELLAR DESIGN BY CHRISTIAN DE
PORTZAMPARC
AT CHEVAL BLANC IS A WORK OF ART THAT IS ALSO EMINENTLY
SUITED TO PRECISION WINEMAKING.
Designed by Christian de Portzamparc and inaugurated
in June 2011, the cellar features two enormous waves of white concrete that
rise magnificently out of the ground. There is a garden of wild grasses atop
this artificial hill, whose gracious curves are overlooked by the château. The
wine cellar lets in natural light and has a pure, simple design that seems out
of time. It is entirely suited to Cheval Blanc.
The 6,000 m² cellar houses a state-of-the-art
winemaking facility where technology is guided by man, and not the reverse.
Human hands take precedence over machines. Despite its huge size, the building
conveys a gentle, intimate atmosphere. The streamlined design leaves no room for
the superfluous. Everything is kept in proportion, like the wines that
are produced there...
Natural light penetrates into the vat room, with its
fifty-two vats in six rows. Built in Italy, these concrete vats come in nine
different sizes, from 20 to 110 hectolitres.
Each one is devoted to grapes from a different plot
and displays two plaques: one permanent one with the number and the capacity of
the vat, as well as another removable one showing the plot number, the grape
variety, when the vines were planted, and when the grapes were put into
vat. This "tailor-made" winemaking means that vats correspond
exactly to individual vineyard plots, and is conducive to fine-tuning the final
blend of wines from Cheval Blanc's homogeneous terroir. The cellar is fully in
keeping with the château's extreme attention to detail throughout the
winemaking process.
In fact, the Cheval Blanc cellar was the first in its
category to be certified for the High Quality Environmental (HQE) standard.
Known for its stringent criteria, this certification recognises the care taken
in choosing building materials, energy saving, waste water management, and the
sorting of solid waste, as well as acoustic comfort and employee well-being.
On the 20th of November 2013, the Cheval Blanc cellar
received the famous International Architecture Award from the Chicago
Athenaeum, a museum of architecture and design. The cellar also received an
award from the Centre européen pour le Design d’Art architectural et d’Etudes
urbaines. The latter recognises distinctive, avant-garde, innovative buildings.
Cheval Blanc was the first wine cellar ever to receive this honour.
Work in the cellar begins with the harvest, as soon as
the grapes come off the sorting table. The crushed grapes are put into small
450 kg vats, then transported to the fermentation vat that corresponds to their
weight and the plot they came from. Every vat is filled three-quarters full by
gravity flow, without pumping. The juice is left on the skins and alcoholic
fermentation is ready to begin.
This starts on the second day due to the action of
yeast. After about 12 hours of fermentation, the CO2 that is released pushes
the skins to the top of the vat, where they form a cap. Three times a day, part
of the translucent juice is pumped from the bottom of the vat up to the top to
percolate through the cap. This pumping over is done delicately in order to
obtain the highest-quality tannin. The operation takes place manually, and a
technician makes sure to spray wine all over the cap. This pumping over is done
less frequently as time goes on and comes to a halt when the desired relative
density is attained. This is measured twice a day with a hydrometer. The other
parameters are overseen by the château technical team and the cellar master,
who takes a sample every morning from each vat.
The juice is left in contact with the cap in
temperature-controlled vats for several days at a temperature of 28-30°C
without manipulation. This post-fermentation phase helps to make the free run
juice richer and more elegant, and the tannic texture more silky. The free run
juice is put into another vat, and the marc is pressed. The various lots of
press wine (approximately 10% of the total) are put into barrel to speed up
clarification. The best lots will later become part of the château's second
wine.
In order to preserve each plot’s taste profile, malolactic fermentation takes place in vat at a temperature of 20°C. This operation softens the acidity and stabilises the wine. It lasts for anywhere from three weeks to several months. Sulphur is added at the end of this second fermentation to avoid oxidation and any harmful bacteria. Only the smallest possible amount of chemical input products is used at the château during winemaking, which must remain as simple and natural as possible.
In order to preserve each plot’s taste profile, malolactic fermentation takes place in vat at a temperature of 20°C. This operation softens the acidity and stabilises the wine. It lasts for anywhere from three weeks to several months. Sulphur is added at the end of this second fermentation to avoid oxidation and any harmful bacteria. Only the smallest possible amount of chemical input products is used at the château during winemaking, which must remain as simple and natural as possible.
https://www.chateau-cheval-blanc.com/en/cellar
AGEING AND BLENDING TO MAKE A GREAT WINE
When fermentation is finished, in late autumn, the
wine spends a further sixteen to eighteen months in long rows of barrels in a
vast underground cellar with subdued lighting at a constant temperature of
14°C. Every vintage is aged in oak: between 300 and 450 barrels.
Each one is numbered and replaced every year. The
barrels are made exclusively from French oak trees aged 180, 200, or even 350
years old. These are from the famous forests of Tronçais in the Allier
department and Bercé in the Sarthe department. Only the best parts of the trees
are used by coopers to make these barrels. The oak is split rather than sawn to
preserve its outstanding qualities.
Château Cheval Blanc purchases their
barrels from six or seven different cooperages, and the quality is constantly
controlled. This diversity avoids any dominant kind of oak influence due to a
single variety of oak or degree of toasting. Barrel ageing must help the wine
to express itself and respect its tannic structure. It must accompany rather
than overpower or overshadow the wine. Twice a year, the château's technical
team organises blind tastings along with coopers during which they evaluate
wines from different barrels to test their uniformity and to achieve the
greatest possible aromatic precision. This also allows the château be more
explicit about their requirements and preferences.
Barrel ageing begins in late November or the month of
December. A few weeks later, in January or February, the first racking is done.
This delicate operation clarifies the wine by separating it from the lees.
Cheval Blanc feels it important to obtain clear juice quickly, and to keep it
separate from the lees that would make the wine coarser. Racking is done every
three months, i.e. a total of five to seven times, depending on the vintage.
Wine is racked by hand from barrel to barrel at Cheval Blanc, via the esquive,
or small bunghole, for perfect clarification and to avoid contact with
oxygen. This age-old practice calls for special skills that have become
extremely rare. The fact that this tradition has been maintained shows the
château's commitment to a simple, fundamental value: complete, careful control
over winemaking.
Racking entails transferring 210 litres out of 225
from one barrel to the neighbouring one using an inert gas (nitrogen) that
pushes the wine out of the barrel while avoiding the risk of oxidation. Neither
pumps nor filters are used so as not to upset the wine's balance. A tripod
called a chèvre makes it possible to tip the barrel at the end of racking. During
this final stage, the wine's clarity is checked visually by a technician. He
does this by pouring a sample into a glass and holding it up to a light source.
He alone decides whether to go on with the racking or to stop.
It is only after three months in barrel, at the end of
winter and before the en primeur tastings for the wine trade and the media,
that the blend is made. This means that wines from various plots are put
together for the first time. This blending is more than just a simple step in
the long process leading to the production of a new vintage. Instead, it is the
writing of a new page in the history of Cheval Blanc. The aim is not at all to
make the same wine every year, but to produce the most beautiful Cheval Blanc
in a given year – one that combines vintage character with the estate's
intrinsic characteristics of freshness, elegance, finesse, length, and balance.
The team making the blend must work hard to create the best possible synthesis.
Every vintage leads to a new interpretation of Cheval Blanc's terroir.
During blending, wine from each barrel is tasted and
its expression of the plots it represents assayed. The extraordinary complexity
of Cheval Blanc's terroir shows through at this time, as well as the perfect
complementarity of Cabernet Franc and Merlot. Depending on the vintage, wine
from fifteen to thirty-five plots out of forty-five go into the grand vin. The
choice of plots in a specific vintage is not governed by any hard and fast
rules other than truths revealed by very careful tasting. Furthermore, the
exact proportion of Cabernet Franc and Merlot is not set in stone, nor are
production figures defined in advance. Only excellence determines which wines
are worthy to become Cheval Blanc.
Blending is an art calling for considerable expertise.
This is a very important event at the château calling for inspiration and
concentration – but also doubt and uncertainty. Every member of the team
is well aware of the precise proportions in previous years going back decades –
and that the balance can shift enormously by adding or excluding as little as
one barrel of wine.
Wines from selected barrels (and thus from selected plots) are briefly left to marry in a 220-hectolitre stainless steel vat. The blend is then put back into barrels and returned to the ageing cellar, where the wines remain for one more year in the semi-darkness, naturally ventilated by a Mashrabiya.
Wines from selected barrels (and thus from selected plots) are briefly left to marry in a 220-hectolitre stainless steel vat. The blend is then put back into barrels and returned to the ageing cellar, where the wines remain for one more year in the semi-darkness, naturally ventilated by a Mashrabiya.
https://www.chateau-cheval-blanc.com/en/cellar
OWNER OF THE CHATEAU CHEVAL BLANC BERNARD ARNAULT
THE CHEVAL BLANC
THE ORIGINES :
Although the exact location of the first vines grown
in Bordeaux is unknown, the vestiges of luxurious villas – the ancestors of
today's wine châteaux – have been found in Saint-Emilion. One such villa
belonged to Ausone (Ausonius in Latin), poet-winemaker and Roman Consul in the
4th century AD. The expansion of the Saint-Emilion vineyards continued through
the centuries, especially during the Middle Ages. The creation and development
of the port of Libourne in the 12th century, during the English occupation, led
to thriving maritime trade that spread the
reputation of Saint-Emilion wines throughout Europe. They were already
considered of superlative quality at the time, with unusual ageing potential,
and were often given as special gifts to royalty and other important people.
Poetically referred to as "the hill with a thousand châteaux",
Saint-Emilion has a colourful history. Skilled and enthusiastic winegrowers
have long contributed to its stellar reputation.
The appellation surrounds the
eponymous medieval town on a limestone plateau situated east of Libourne, where
the Isle and Dordogne rivers meet. Château Cheval Blanc has an altogether
unique terroir in Saint-Emilion. While most of the appellation's other famous
estates have limestone soil dating from the Tertiary Period, Cheval Blanc's soil
features alluvia from the Quaternary Period deposited by the Isle. And like
most of the prestigious estates in Pomerol, Cheval Blanc's soil formation has a
varied texture that does not include limestone. However, Cheval Blanc is also
different – and unique – in that the proportion of gravel and clay is just
about equal. This gift of nature is essential in understanding the estate's
history.
Archives show that wines have been
grown at Cheval Blanc at least as far back as the 15th century. Furthermore, a
document dated 1546 shows that the owner at the time leased the vineyard, and a
contract from 1587 specified that the sharecropper "will live there when
the sun goes down to keep an eye on the vines...". A century later, the
"Au Cheval-Blanc" tenant farm was sold to Bertrand de Gombaud for the
sizeable sum of 1,400 francs. Two winegrowers were living full-time at Cheval
Blanc on the eve of the French Revolution. This was very unusual at the time,
and reflects how highly the terroir was regarded.
A SUPERB REPUTATION:
The most prestigious part of Cheval Blanc's history
can be said to date from 1832, when Jean-Jacques Ducasse, President of the
Libourne Trade Tribunal, purchased the core of the present-day estate. Over the
next twenty years, the purchase of plots belonging to Château Figeac led to the
creation of the 39- hectare vineyard as we know it today. The configuration has
remained practically unchanged. The marriage of Jean-Jacques' daughter,
Henriette, with Jean Laussac-Fourcaud, a Libourne wine merchant, opened a new
chapter in the history of Cheval Blanc that would define and consolidate the
identity of this unique property.
After Henriette inherited Cheval
Blanc, her husband undertook a spectacular renovation. He was among the first
people to understand the importance of water stress to produce the finest
wines, and put in an efficient drainage system.
However, the greatest progress made by the new owners was in the vineyard. Aware of Cheval Blanc's outstanding potential, and helped by an extraordinary intuition, Jean Laussac-Fourcaud replanted part of the estate in the 1860s with a totally atypical proportion of grape varieties: half Merlot (the king of the Right Bank) and half Cabernet Franc. This replanting was finished in 1871.
Formerly known as vin de Figeac, the wine was first sold under the name Cheval Blanc in 1852. This was the beginning of a prestigious career.
However, the greatest progress made by the new owners was in the vineyard. Aware of Cheval Blanc's outstanding potential, and helped by an extraordinary intuition, Jean Laussac-Fourcaud replanted part of the estate in the 1860s with a totally atypical proportion of grape varieties: half Merlot (the king of the Right Bank) and half Cabernet Franc. This replanting was finished in 1871.
Formerly known as vin de Figeac, the wine was first sold under the name Cheval Blanc in 1852. This was the beginning of a prestigious career.
Jean Laussac-Fourcaud focused on one
goal for over thirty years: to make his wine one of the very best in
Saint-Emilion and to enhance its reputation. Cheval Blanc obtained its first
medal at the 1862 Universal Exhibition in London. In fact, a representation of
this bronze medal is found on the château's present-day label. Cheval Blanc won
their first gold medal at the 1878 Universal Exhibition in Paris, and this new
distinction also appeared on the label. In 1886, Cheval Blanc won a second gold
medal at the Universal Exhibition in Antwerp. Reflecting this series of
successes and a wine well on the way to achieving international recognition, a
château was built on the estate.
Cheval Blanc was able to realise its
greatest dream in the 1880s, when it began to be considered on a par with the
first growths of the Médoc – and one of the most dependably fine wines in
the world – by the wine trade and connoisseurs. Thus, in the latter half of the
19th century, Cheval Blanc was in the same price bracket as Margaux, Latour,
Lafite, and Haut-Brion in Paris and London auction houses. The wine's
reputation earned it a place at prestigious meals, major receptions, and state
dinners.
https://www.chateau-cheval-blanc.com/en/history
APOTHEOSIS :
After Jean Laussac-Fourcaud passed away in 1888, his
widow inherited the estate. She, in turn, left it to her son, Albert, who had
reversed his hyphenated family name by this time. Albert Fourcaud-Laussac
perpetuated the work undertaken by his father and installed twelve wooden vats
that were used until 1966. Major investments were made in the vineyard and
selected old vines reproduced by mass selection.
Albert's two sons, Jacques and Joseph
Fourcaud-Laussac, continued in their father's and grandfather's footsteps. The
same cellar master was in charge at Cheval Blanc for 44 years – Gaston
Vaissière poured his talent, energy, and enthusiasm into making the most of a
terroir he considered "magical"...
Cheval Blanc obtained the highest
possible distinction in the first classification of Saint-Emilion wines in
1954: Premier Grand Cru Classé "A". This exalted rank was confirmed
in every following classification in each subsequent decade. Cheval Blanc
became a member of the exclusive "Club of 9" comprising the first
growths of Bordeaux.
A page was turned in autumn of 1998 when Bernard
Arnault and Baron Albert Frère, two old friends and lovers of great wine,
joined forces to became the owners of this fabled château in Saint-Emilion.
They injected a dynamic new spirit, while respecting the château's history and
existing facilities. They also placed their complete trust in the winemaking
team to continue their good work. The priority today is the ultimate in
quality, which calls for enormous attention to detail and precision winemaking
Furthermore, Cheval Blanc is resolutely turned towards
the future. This is epitomised by the impressive new cellar adjacent to the château.
Designed by Christian de Portzamparc, winner of the 1994 Pritzker Architecture
Prize in 1994, this was completed in June 2011. Reflecting the desire of Baron
Albert Frère and Bernard Arnault, this building is both futuristic and in
keeping with the surrounding historic vineyard landscape listed as a World
Heritage Site by UNESCO.
Winegrowers have succeeded one another at Cheval Blanc
for six centuries in the context of a "wine civilisation" some 2,000
years old. The wine from this estate is now a joy to men and women all over the
world who are aware that a great growth such as Cheval Blanc is a treasure of
voluptuousness and pleasure.
https://www.chateau-cheval-blanc.com/en/history
VINEYARD WORK IN WINTER
The soil at Cheval Blanc is regularly ploughed and
alternately earthed-up and unearthed twice a year. This entails pushing the
soil up around the base of the vine, and later moving it away and flattening
it. This helps protect the vines from winter cold. Furthermore, "subsoiling"
is practised between alternate vines rows every other year. This entails the
mechanical disruption of plough pans beneath the normal depth of cultivation to
enhance rooting. Dead vines (less than 1% a year) are replaced in November.
The vines go into hibernation in
winter, when they are pruned. Calling for experience and considerable
dexterity, this essential operation is done slowly and with consummate skill at
Cheval Blanc. In fact, the same worker is assigned to the same plot year after
year so that he acquires a great familiarity with the vines. He observes every
vine closely, analyses its vigour, and weighs up its balance before
"sculpting" it. Depending on what he sees, he will choose one
of the fruiting canes with a few buds to leave behind, and cuts off the other
canes. The worker decides on the total number of buds to leave, according to
each vine's vigour and potential. This "bud pruning" is conducive to
spreading out bunches on the cane. Each bud will produce an average of two bunches.
Everything is a question of equilibrium: a vigorous vine can cope with more
buds than one that is less vigorous.
Every vine stake, tie, and guide wire
is checked in winter in every plot at Cheval Blanc. This operation, called
carassonnage in French, makes it possible to put the finishing touches to the
way the vine is trained (i.e. supported and guided), and to replace any stakes
damaged by bad weather. In March, workers make sure that each vine is
firmly attached and well-stabilised. The cane left after winter pruning is
delicately attached to the guide wire in order to grow horizontally. This is
only done during wet weather because, if it were dry, the cane might break.
VINEYARD WORK IN SPRING
The growing season begins after a winter rest. Buds
appear, protected by their down and scales. This is the first stage of the
growth cycle. A meticulous operation called suckering is done in spring to
remove non-fruit-bearing shoots that would sap the vigour from fruit-bearing
ones. Furthermore, the vines are attached by hand to the horizontal guide
wires three times a year. This is generally done in May, June, and July to keep
pace with vine growth.
The soil is screefed and ploughed in spring and
earthing up is done to limit the growth of grass. During an operation called
décavaillonnage in French, the narrow patch of land between wines is unearthed.
The soil is manually removed from this area inaccessible by machines. This
tilling removes weeds while mixing up and aerating the soil. That is very
important since it forces the vine roots to sink deep into the ground to find
nourishment. Furthermore, it also makes the vines less subject to excess or
insufficient water supply.
Young vines are planted in May and
June on plots left fallow for two and a half years. The old vines previously
found there had become too weak and needed to be grubbed up. The soil was then
deeply ploughed and given time to regenerate.
Everything possible is done to encourage homogeneous growth. Flowering is closely observed between late May and early June. The flowers need to bloom at the same time so the grapes will ripen together. The vines are topped for the first time during this flowering period. This consists of trimming the uppermost shoots in order to limit vertical growth, as well as to facilitate aeration and penetration by the sun's rays.
Everything possible is done to encourage homogeneous growth. Flowering is closely observed between late May and early June. The flowers need to bloom at the same time so the grapes will ripen together. The vines are topped for the first time during this flowering period. This consists of trimming the uppermost shoots in order to limit vertical growth, as well as to facilitate aeration and penetration by the sun's rays.
VINEYARD WORK IN SUMMER
Once flowering is over, the first
berries start to take shape. Leaf thinning takes place after this fruit set,
between late June and early July. Cheval Blanc's vines are oriented
north-south, so the leaves are plucked around grape bunches on the east-facing
side so they can take advantage of the sunlight. Everything is done to free the
area around each bunch and to aerate it. However, care is taken to leave a leaf
just above, a sort of "cap" to protect the grapes from scorching when
the sun is directly overhead.
By early summer, each vine has from two to twelve
bunches. Green harvesting in July helps to keep the bunches from becoming
overly compact, because this entails a risk of rot. If there are too many
bunches on a vine, excess ones are removed so that the remaining ones will be
more concentrated. However, care must be taken not to eliminate too many,
because that can lead to grapes that are too big. Cheval Blanc seeks to produce
only small, concentrated berries. The grapes swell little by little and an
important step is reached with the closing of the cluster.
The skins change colour and the grapes acquire
properties that will make them into a great wine during a process called
véraison that occurs within the space of a few days in early August. The Cheval
Blanc technical team is especially vigilant at this time because véraison must
coincide with a stop to the vine's vegetative growth. If the vine keeps on
growing, it will be to the detriment to ripening. From this point on, the
grapes need sufficient nourishment to concentrate sugar and tannin and ripen
perfectly. Making sure that this final stage of the growing season occurs
seamlessly is essential for a great terroir.
At the end of véraison, green harvesting is done once again in order to even out the ripening process. However, this time it involves removing green grapes that have not yet undergone véraison. In this way, only grapes that have reached the same perfect degree of maturity will be picked.
At the end of véraison, green harvesting is done once again in order to even out the ripening process. However, this time it involves removing green grapes that have not yet undergone véraison. In this way, only grapes that have reached the same perfect degree of maturity will be picked.
In August, aoûtement, or lignification takes place.
Shoots become hard and woody, and the veins become red, then brown. The grapes
are fragile at this stage, and workers must be careful not to jostle them
walking through the vines. Tilling operations come to a halt after an
earthing-up in the middle of summer. The grass can now grow, and will absorb
water in place of the vines. Tannin quality is vastly improved by water stress.
https://www.chateau-cheval-blanc.com/en/know-how
VINEYARD WORK IN AUTUMN
Cheval Blanc's power and density revolve around a key
factor: the grapes are only picked when they have reached the exact desired
degree of maturity which, in fact, encompasses three separate kinds of
ripeness. The first is aromatic ripeness. If a fruit's development can be
divided into four stages ranging from "green" to "rotten",
only the "fresh" stage interests Cheval Blanc. The second kind of
ripeness, called technological maturity, is also essential because it concerns
the complex balance between acidity and sugar. Acidity contributes freshness
and balance, and provides seemingly paradoxical qualities found only in the
greatest wines: engaging youthfulness and ageing potential. Alcoholic degree
does not seem to be a decisive factor, since this can vary from 12.5 to 14° at
Cheval Blanc – which maintains fine balance in all instances. The third and
final kind of ripeness is "phenolic maturity", which concerns the
wine's structure. Only the quality of the tannin counts here, as opposed to the
quantity. The château team seeks to determine what tannic grain the wine will
have, and how it will coat the palate. The aim is to obtain silky, unctuous,
rich, concentrated tannin that is neither dry nor rustic.
Analyses take place daily starting in early September.
Every morning, the vineyard manager and technical director go through the
vineyards to evaluate the three kinds of ripeness. They look at recent weather
patterns and compare different parameters: aroma, acidity, and tannin. Cheval
Blanc aims for the optimum level of all three kinds of ripeness in each of the
estate's forty-five plots. All the work done throughout the growing season is
at stake. If one of the plots does not attain the expected criteria, the grapes
will not go into the grand vin. The ripeness of the pulp, the skins, and the
seeds must all be al dente.
THE HARVEST
The waiting game must continue as long as the grapes
are not ready and the desired degree of ripeness not been reached. Logistical
or organisational priorities – in short, the easy way out – must always take a
back seat. The pickers bide their time until they receive the go-ahead to
harvest, plot by plot. The decision to begin picking can be made from one day
to the next. Only rain can upset things.
Grapes are entirely harvested by hand at Château
Cheval Blanc. Some fifty pickers with secateurs are supervised by the vineyard
manager. The harvest takes place "à la carte" according to the
ripeness of each grape variety in each plot. Altogether, this takes about ten
days of work spread over a month. The technical team may decide to pick just a
single plot in a full day – or interrupt the harvest for several days. The
availability and flexibility of pickers are major advantages here..
The grapes are picked into crates with a capacity of
20 kilos. Once a plot has been entirely harvested, the grapes are carefully
identified and weighed. Which fermentation vat they will go into depends on how
many kilos there are. The freshly-picked grapes are put onto pallets and stored
overnight in a cold room. The grapes from each different plot are processed
separately – no grapes from one plot are mixed with ones from another.
An initial sorting is made by experienced pickers in
the vineyard. They are fully accustomed to the château's strict criteria and
immediately eliminate any grapes that are not in fine condition. The
grapes are gone over a second time by four workers on a sorting table, at low
speed. At the end of this table, a further team of twelve does a final sorting
after the grapes have been destemmed. Each of these steps is done by skilled
employees who have only quality in mind. Any grapes that are green, pink, or
shrivelled are rejected. Only perfect berries are retained. The grapes that
have passed the third level of inspection go into the crusher, which splits
them open one by one. Tolerance is very small here: less than 5% of the grapes
are left whole and less than 5% are crushed.
https://www.chateau-cheval-blanc.com/en/know-how
OWNERS OF THE CHATEAU CHEVAL BLANC
ANTOINE ARNAULT
YOU MAY LISTEN ANDREAS SCHOLL - BACH - ERBARME DICH
OWNERS OF THE CHATEAU CHEVAL BLANC BERNARD ARNAULT
CHRISTIAN DE PORTZAMPARC
Christian de Portzamparc is a leading architect and urban planner, who was rewarded with the Pritzker Architecture Prize at the age of 50 as the first French winner and also with the most prestigious city planning prize in France, The Grand Prix de l’Urbanisme.
His imaginative architectural style is known for its distinctive features such as bold designs, an artistic approach and the creativity that comes from him also as a watercolor painter. He is especially esteemed as a designer of concert halls and an urban planner.
He studied architecture in Paris and New York, and became famous for his creation of the rue des Hautes Formes dwellings in Paris and the large scale project for François Mitterrand called the City of Music (1995). which involved creating music halls of different sizes, a music museum and many dwelling places.
His important works include NexusⅡ (1991), a residential complex in Fukuoka, LVMH Tower (1991), and two skyscrapers (2015) in New York, the Philharmonie of Luxembourg (2005), the City of Arts (2013), a cultural complex in Rio de Janeiro, and the U Arena (2017), an indoor stadium in Nanterre, on the outskirts of Paris. Currently he is engaged in a large scale project as in Casablanca for the larger theater in Africa and in China, for opera house in Shanghai and the Suzhou Cultural Center, scheduled to be completed in 2019.
2PORTZAMPARC
ATELIER
The
Atelier Christian de Portzamparc works on construction projects of all
sizes together with a wide variety of construction programs. Each project
represents a new challenge requiring extensive research and experimentation,
from the initial designs to the search for construction solutions.
The
Atelier is also an “urban laboratory” that performs in-depth urban and
structural analyses, a technique developed by Christian de Portzamparc since
the 70’s based on projects “manifestoes“, competitions and studies. This has
allowed him to develop his methods and apply theoretical research and analysis
principles to a multitude of practical situations.
In his
renewed vision of urban structure, which he called the “open block”, his work
focuses on research in urban planning and concerns on the quality of collective
and individual living spaces.
From singular buildings to rethought urbanism, the city is indeed one of the
founding subjects of its work, which at the same time develops around three
major themes: buildings that bring together the public as places of culture,
music or institutions, landmark buildings such as towers, and parts of the city
and neighbourhoods, from the block to the evolution of metropolises in the
Greater Paris area for example.
LANDMARK
BUILDINGS
Landmark
buildings often become urban benchmarks or symbols that draw an area together
to create the essential marks which the immense urban landscape of metropolises
requires.
Based
on these large unique objects, landmark buildings, urban poles of attraction,
the interior and exterior spaces intersect like the Cidade das Arte in Rio.
Completed in 2013 it is a unique concert hall in the world that can be
transformed into an opera hall. It houses a theatre, a chamber music and
popular music hall, a movie theatre, dance and rehearsal rooms, exhibition
spaces, and restaurants.
Since the 80’s, Christian de Portzamparc’s enduring passion for music has led
him to enter a series of music and dance-related architectural competitions,
including the Paris Opera Ballet School in Nanterre, France (awarded the
Equerre d’Argent 1988) and the Cité de la Musique in Paris, France (awarded the
Equerre d’Argent 1995), the Philharmonie Luxembourg (International Architecture
Award 2008 by The Chicago Athenaeum Museum), or Cidade das Artes in Rio de
Janeiro in Brazil (International Architecture Award 2008 by The Chicago
Athenaeum Museum, “Grand Prix AFEX 2014 of the French architecture in the
world“, awarded by the association French Architects Overseas).
In July
2009, the international competition for the Africa’s largest Theatre New Art
which took place saw projects from Zaha Hadid, Franck O. GGehry Rem Koolhaas
and Aziz Lazrak. The site, the vast Place Mohammed V in Casablanca, was a
brainteaser. Portzamparc’s project was to breathe life into this vast
institutional square and give a contemporary twist to its classical
composition. This winning project – athe 1,800-seat main hall is designed to
host musical concerts, classical theatre plays and various other large-scale
performances – gives the impression of being composed of several detached
houses, like a medina in the city.
In
2011, Bernard Arnault commissioned Christian de Portzamparc with the
construction of a Dior flagship store in the elegant neighborhood of
Cheongdam-dong, on Apgujeong Avenue in Seoul. Inspired by the haute couture
creation of this famous house, the building is a manifesto with white curves
undulating toward the sky in a subtle dissymmetry that evokes the cloth at the
genesis of every couture piece (International Architecture Award 2016 for the
best new global design awarded by The Chicago Athenaeum Museum).
Inaugurated
in October 2017, the “U Arena” is an “indoor” stadium and the ground of the
“Racing-Metro 92” rugby team, in the Hauts-de-Seine region. A French sporting
legend since 1882, the club was taken over in 2006 by its current president
Jacky Lorenzetti. The stadium is also being used as a large performance space
accommodating 10,000 to 40,000 people. It is the largest indoor multipurpose
facility with a variable capacity in France. Located in the town of Nanterre,
close to the “Grande Arche” in La Défense, this project falls within the scope
of the “Seine-Arche operation of national interest” – the status accorded by
the State to territorial projects which are aligned with national strategies
and objectives.
In
2013, Christian de Portzamparc is commissioned by the city to design the Suzhou
Cultural Center. It is one of a series of prestigious projects as part of the
Wujiang Lakefront Masterplan. As the flagship project of this brand-new
locality, the city is developing a remarkable site of over 100,000 sq.m. It
lies at the convergence of one of China’s most beautiful lakes and the major
urban perspective of the new city.
http://www.christiandeportzamparc.com/en/portrait/
NEIGHBOURHOODS AND CITY DISTRICTS
Neighbourhoods
and city districts are central to Christian de Portzamparc’s practical and
intellectual contribution to the current architectural debate. Recognizing the
central importance of the infinitely subtle human context, in which local
conditions are “grist to his mill”, his interventions operate at a number of
different levels, both as an architect in the purist sense and as an urban
planner.
TOWERS
From the city
to the object, Christian de Portzamparc has worked on towers since his first
projects in 1974, when he designed a water tower covered with vegetation, which
became a poetic landmark for a new city in Marne-la-Vallée, France, followed in
1991 by the Lille Tower, a unique, sculptural object built over a railway
station in Rem Koolhaas’s “Euralille” district (completed in 1995).
The towers
created by Christian de Portzamparc are the fruit of his research into vertical
volume and its sculptural dimension, which he has crystalized into his
characteristic prismatic forms.
His best known tower is the LVMH Tower in New York, USA, completed in 1999
(Business Week and Architectural Record award 2006), followed by the
competition for the Hearst tower in 2000 and soon to be accompanied by the
residential tower, Prism on Park Avenue in Manhattan, New York, USA, approved
by the City Planning authorities in 2004, which was opened in late May 2015.
And completed in 2014, with its 300 meters high, the One57 tower in New York is
hosting a luxury hotel occupies the first 20 floors and 130 super-luxury
condominiums in co-ownership, among which some offer breathtaking views of
Central Park and the “skyline” of the city.
Currently
under study are two towers in Paris-La Défense including offices and a hotel
complex, the Sisters towers, scheduled for delivery in 2022.
The 603-feet
high headquarters of French bank Société Générale at La Défense district in
Paris, the Granite Tower (completed in 2008) is the first sustainable high-rise
building in France (H.E.Q. certified, the French equivalent of the North
American LEED)
PRICES
1988 – Equerre
d’Argent – awarded by the press group Le Moniteur for the Dance School of the
Paris Opera in Nanterre[13]
1989 –
Commander of the Order of Arts and Letters – awarded by
the French Ministry of Culture
1990 – The
Great Prize of Architecture of the City of Paris – awarded by the Mayor of Paris
1992 –
Médaille d’Argent – awarded by the French Academy of Architecture
1993 – Great
National Prize of Architecture – awarded by the French Ministry of Urbanism and
Transport
1994 – Pritzker
Prize of Architecture – awarded by the Hyatt Foundation
1995 – Equerre
d’Argent awarded by the French press group Le Moniteur for the City of Music –
Conservatory of Music and Dance in Paris
2001 –
Business Week and Architectural Record Award for the LVMH tower in New York
(USA)[14]
2004 – The
Great Prize of Urbanism – awarded by an international jury who ‘wanted to
congratulate a work with achievements of high quality combined with city vision
and philosophy articulating theoretical concepts and concrete realisations,
while developing an optimistic vision for the future through his works and
writings’[15]
2005 – MIPIM
Award for the remodelling of the building for the press group Le Monde in Paris
2018 – Praemium Imperiale award- Architecture category
http://www.christiandeportzamparc.com/en/portrait/