urban development
Transcription
urban development
RIGHT ON THE RAILS INNOVATIVE URBAN DEVELOPMENT ateliers henry dougier © Jean-Pierre Porcher “URBAN PLANNING AND PUBLIC TRANSPORT COMPLEMENT EACH OTHER; TRANSPORT THRIVES IN CITIES, AND CITIES THRIVE WITH TRANSPORT.” EDITORIALS OUR PROJECTS 02. G uillaume Pepy 03. Jacques Rapoport 04. B enoît Quignon 06. Cotentin-Falguière block of flats 09. Campus Rimbaud 13. Rennes Technicentre P. 16 P. 35 KNOW-HOW & METHODOLOGY THE FULTON BLOCK: AN ARTISTIC INNOVATION 17. One property, a multitude of skills 18. Maintenance goes digital 21. The ‘Petite Ceinture’ grows up 24. Immo Futures 25. Interview with Philippe Fosset 27. Reinventing Paris: ICF Habitat’s winning project 28. Saussure-Pont Cardinet neighbourhood: 32. Chapelle International 33. I’ll huff and I’ll puff and I’ll blow your house down 01 37. 3 questions for Medhi Ben Cheick 39. Before / After 43. The ephemeral t the service of urban transformation I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T P. 05 CONTENTS P. 02 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T EDITORIAL Guillaume Pepy, Chairman of the Board of Directors and Chairman and Managing Director of SNCF Mobilités 02 SNCF is one of the leading property owners in France, with real estate assets built up over more than 150 years. With the creation of SNCF Immobilier (SNCF Real Estate) on July 1, 2015, it was essential for the new public railway group to have the real estate skills and know-how to move the group forward in the future. Amalgamating the management of all the components of its land and real estate holdings (excluding passenger railway stations) allows the SNCF group to advance and efficiently capitalise on property that does not contribute to our railway business. Many of the big urban developments underway in Paris are carried out in cooperation with SNCF on property recovered from historical railway land. We wish to develop and extend this approach on a national scale. With our subsidiary, ICF Habitat, owner of 100,000 housing units, 90% of which are social housing, SNCF Immobilier is one of the leading social housing stakeholders in France, housing mainly people who are not employed by SNCF (75%). Real estate, one of our five businesses, has a rightful place in the SNCF Group’s activities and areas of expertise. Urban planning and public transport complement each other; transport thrives in cities, and cities thrive with transport. I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T © @Patrick Lazic, SNCF Réseau EDITORIAL Jacques Rapoport, Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors and Chairman and Managing Director of SNCF Réseau Over the years we have acquired recognised know-how and expertise, particularly in restructuring complex spaces where railway activity and urban projects coexist. SNCF Immobilier’s mission, through its planning subsidiary Espaces Ferroviaires, is to manage the process from beginning to end: releasing the railway property, project design, construction and marketing. With our real estate development potential, particularly in the big metropolises, we are tasked with becoming one of the major stakeholders in current urban transformations. Through SNCF Immobilier, SNCF wishes to build a new partnership with communities, developers, architects and promoters fully taking into account the legitimate needs and interests of everyone. “WE ARE TASKED WITH BECOMING ONE OF THE MAJOR STAKEHOLDERS IN CURRENT URBAN TRANSFORMATIONS” 03 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T © Droits réservés EDITORIAL Benoît Quignon, Chief Executive Officer of SNCF Immobilier 04 With our railway land holdings we are realising a threefold ambition: to invent new uses for and transform a neighbourhood through outstanding developments; to find housing solutions that promote social diversity; and to modernise and optimise our industrial and service sites or those used for social activities. This means using our imagination and audacity with our land and property holdings to clear unusual pieces of real estate with our partners and open up new ways of building sustainable cities. But it also means getting off the beaten track, sharing, pooling resources, moving forward together. In short, it means being adventurous. The urgent question of energy transition has a strong impact on SNCF Immobilier as a property owner and manager. Transforming and renovating includes mastery of resources and the use of new materials and technologies to find solutions favouring biodiversity which make living together easier. It involves setting out on a new, green, ethical path. But it is also a question of a collective and individual approach – the driving force behind all SNCF Immobilier’s partners in both their daily missions and in the big projects we are developing. At every decision-making and operational level of the company, we realise that with regard to sustainable development, the key word is innovation. OUR PROJECTS I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T OUR PROJECTS COTENTIN-FALGUIÈRE BLOCK OF FLATS: AN EXAMPLE TO FOLLOW Built in 1959, an eight storey building became, in the space of two years, a European model for renovation and high energy efficiency: the story of a metamorphosis. 06 At first sight the Cotentin-Falguière block of flats in the 15th district of Paris has not undergone serious changes. The work carried out between 2012 and 2014 at a cost of 5.3 million euros, will, in fact, make a 75% decrease in energy consumption possible. The 87 flats in this building managed by ICF Habitat Novedis previously had under floor heating. “The result was that the top floors were cold and the lower ones too hot. The system was old and in poor condition and the occupants were complaining about it. It was time to replace it and begin renovations,” Olivier Slominski, manager of the project, remembers. This renovation project was carried out within the framework of the European Beem-up (Building Energy Efficiency for Massive Market Uptake) programme, which aims to have construction stakeholders, researchers and manufacturers collaborate to develop innovative and economical solutions that can be reproduced to speed up energy-efficient renovation in Europe. Three manufacturers were involved in France, Sweden and the “THIS RENOVATION Netherlands respectively and they received grants to successfully complete PROJECT the work. The objectives were to reduce WAS CARRIED consumption, put in place a long-term quality approach, raise the renters’ OUT WITHIN awareness, use innovative materials and THE FRAME WORK analyse the profitability of the project and OF THE EUROPE its potential for being replicated. To achieve this the communal boilers were AN BEEM-UP replaced by condensing boilers and the PROGRAMME” under floor heating by radiators. Innovative technical equipment was also installed. Household water is now heated by a Biofluides Environnement® E.R.S. (Energy Recycling System) that recovers the heat lost from wastewater, particularly from showers, bathtubs, washing machines and dishwashers, to preheat water for household use. If necessary, backup can be provided independently by a boiler. Another innovation was the installation in each flat of a multifunction URMET® videophone which, among other things, monitors energy consumption (electrical, heating and hot water). The occupants could take courses on how to make optimal use of the new equipment – the different dustbins for selective sorting, the tap aerator, consumption monitoring system, etc. 07 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T OUR PROJECTS NOT QUITE THE SAME, NOT QUITE DIFFERENT In addition to the work done inside, the building envelope also got a facelift. The outside insulation went from two centimetres to eighteen. Following a thermal study, expanded polystyrene was chosen for insulation. Thanks to the Beem-up programme a totally new product was selected and installed on the balconies. Only five centimetres thick, it provides highperformance thermal insulation. The roof was also rewaterproofed. Finally, ventilation is now provided through a mechanical extraction system that allows humidity levels to be controlled. This ensures the occupants of this building certified BBC (Bâtiment Basse Consommation /low energy building) maximum temperature and energy comfort. Feedback from the 82 households is planned in order to encourage the renovation of other buildings. n 08 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T OUR PROJECTS A NEW ENVELOPE I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T © Sébastien Godefroy OUR PROJECTS CAMPUS RIMBAUD: EMINENTLY LIVEABLE WORKSPACES ‘Flexible, bright, convivial’ are the key words that guided the choice of layout for the brand-new SNCF Immobilier head office in Saint-Denis. A guided tour of these offices that are reinventing the workplace. 09 “The company’s premises should reflect its DNA. We wanted to do this at Campus Rimbaud, and our task was made easier because SNCF Immobilier is a new entity. Moving into these offices gives us the opportunity to create a community, a sense of belonging, and to approach the layout like a management project,” states Frédéric Goupil de Bouillé, SNCF Immobilier real estate management and optimisation director. The top three floors of an office building designed by the architect Jean-Paul Viguier were chosen for the offices. The building has high thermal, sound and visual quality and Haute Qualité Environnementale (high environmental quality) certification; a Very Good BREEAM® (Building Research Establishment Environmental Assessment Methodology) rating; and is classified as a BBC. The 430 employees of SNCF Immobilier and the Direction des Centres de Services Environnement de Travail (Services and work environment centres department) moved into the 7,000 sq. m. premises at the end of 2015. Some essential ideas emerged from the analysis of the needs expressed by the employees about the organisation of their workplace, and from more general studies on the evolution of office use. Frédéric Goupil de Bouillé sums them up: “We no longer come to the office because everything we need for our work is there. We come to the office to meet our colleagues and discuss ideas – today the occupation rate of a workstation is 50 to 60%. The rest of the time employees are in meetings or out of the office. Therefore our priority was to create open, convivial spaces for discussion.” The result is that offices are made up of open spaces with four workstations. Low cupboards beside them avoid visual obstacles and reduce noise. The partitions for the few individual offices and meeting rooms are for the most part made of glass to ensure natural light and transparency. “MOVING INTO THESE OFFICES GIVES US THE OPPORTUNITY TO CREATE A COMMUNITY, A SENSE OF BELONGING, AND TO APPROACH THE LAYOUT LIKE A MANAGEMENT PROJECT” 10 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T OUR PROJECTS A SITE THAT LOOKS LIKE US © Sébastien Godefroy 11 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T OUR PROJECTS Other meeting places are scattered here and there in the building with tables surrounded by fabric ‘walls’ of varying heights. These green, black or red alcoves designed for two, four or six people break up the layout of the offices and add a very original touch – conviviality combined with flexibility. Since the end of the 1990s the increase in laptops, then the appearance of smartphones and tablets has encouraged employee mobility. It doesn’t matter where they work as long as they are connected. At Campus Rimbaud, therefore, some rooms are set aside for project groups who have to work together over a certain time. At the request of employees, shared offices have also been installed for people who work from home part of the week. Flexi-offices that are not attributed to specific people have also been made available. The premises have been designed to adapt to present conditions without losing sight of future changes. “Organisations are constantly evolving. A layout cannot be based on an operating mode that is dominant at a specific time. Today the majority of employees have their own workstation but tomorrow desk sharing will be the preferred model. The rigid system of closed offices is foreign to the new generation; they need a modular environment conducive to exchanging ideas,” Frédéric Goupil de Bouillé says. This need has also been met by a very unusual 240 sq. m. room with a 200 sq. m. terrace: baptised ‘Chez Arthur’, a reference to the name of the campus. It contains a kitchen, lounge, dining room and a library. There is even a piano – some employees have formed a group and practise there – and a billiard table: everything needed to encourage discussion and conviviality. The employees are delighted with it all. They say they like the layout and how bright and quiet the premises are. “In an 18 metre section, each employee has the right to 13.5 sq. m., a very good ratio so that they feel neither crowded nor suffocated,” the real estate management and optimisation manager points out. Campus Rimbaud has thus met the employees’ specifications; and the icing on the cake: they have an unrestricted view of the north of Paris. It’s enough to make one want to go to work. 12 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T OUR PROJECTS SPACE AND LIGHT I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T OUR PROJECTS RENNES TECHNICENTRE: THE FIRST OF MANY INNOVATIONS The brand-new Rennes technical centre in Saint-Jacques de la Lande, was opened in January 2015: a major change for the 350 employees who work at the centre specialising in brakes. Interview with Philippe Delaveau, manager of the Industrial Real Estate Division. 13 Philippe Delaveau: The centre is innovative for its users in particular, as the production process has been completely rethought. The old buildings in the centre of Rennes were more than eighty years old and were no longer suitable. This resulted in multiple operating problems and maintenance was becoming increasingly difficult. Before moving to the new site, preliminary industrial optimisation studies were carried out by our equipment unit. Our main requirement was to group all the processes together in a single building which would be much more efficient from both an industrial and a real estate point of view. In short, we left a 17 acre site, 40,000 sq. m of which was developed with 27 buildings for an eight and a half acre developed site with a single building on 19,000 sq. m. Moreover, it is the first plant not connected to the railway system. The centre in Rennes specialises in brakes, so, contrary to the centres specialised in rolling stock, it does not need to be close to the railway. This seems obvious but it is a real break with railway culture. Another change is that we are only renting a fairly standard building that meets our needs.” “OUR MAIN REQUIREMENT WAS TO GROUP ALL THE PROCESSES TOGETHER IN A SINGLE BUILDING WHICH WOULD BE MUCH MORE EFFICIENT FROM BOTH AN INDUSTRIAL AND A REAL ESTATE POINT OF VIEW“ 14 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T OUR PROJECTS IN WHAT WAY IS THE RENNES TECHNICAL CENTRE INNOVATIVE? Philippe Delaveau: In January 2016, a year after opening, we estimated a 13% increase in industrial efficiency. Production costs have decreased and the number of items leaving the plant has increased. These figures are all the more encouraging as we were in our shakedown year. From the real estate point of view, reducing and modernising our space led to energy savings of about 40% and a 50% decrease in maintenance expenses. In addition, on a long-term basis, a new building reduces risk exposure with regard to various regulations (waste management, fire safety, decontamination etc.). Sustainable development systems have also been installed – water for sanitation purposes heated by solar energy, rainwater recovery and an air/water heat exchanger between the compressors and the heating system. OTHER PLANTS WILL BE OPENED BETWEEN NOW AND 2019. WILL THEY BE EVEN MORE INNOVATIVE THAN THE ONE IN RENNES? Philippe Delaveau: The Rennes technical centre is a pilot project. The Equipment Department will carry out optimisation studies of its processes in all the industrial technical centres – there are ten in France – and three other facilities similar to Rennes will be developed, in Vénissieux, Hellemmes and Romilly-sur-Seine. Our objective in Vénissieux, is to create a second version going much further with sustainable development and connectivity. For example, we are going to work on recovering the energy used for testing engines to heat the building. We are also focusing on improving working conditions for employees with balanced airflow. Finally, we wish to develop objectoriented programmes to make interactivity between the building and industrial production possible. This will allow us to gather information on the life of the building and better manage our buildings. The Vernissieux technical centre will be a laboratory. Our goal is for it to gain industrial and operational excellence certification. 15 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T OUR PROJECTS HAVE YOU MEASURED THE INCREASE IN EFFICIENCY? KNOW-HOW & METHODOLOGY KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY ONE PROPERTY, A MULTITUDE OF SKILLS SNCF Immobilier and its subsidiaries Espaces Ferroviaires, S2FIT and ICF Habitat, combine all the skills necessary for developing a site, from clearing the property or land to managing a newly built block of flats. The different steps include: master plan managed by SNCF Immobilier to establish possible optimisation A of property and land that can be freed up for new urban use. nce it has been confirmed that the site is not useful for railway use, O SNCF Immobilier, in agreement with the local authorities, works on developing the site which can either be unoccupied (wasteland) or still occupied by the business or facilities. Studies are carried out on the infrastructures and the technical facilities or equipment to be moved (railway lines for example) and financial analysis of work has to be done. NCF Immobilier has several project structuring options at its disposal, S depending on the project, the programme and the stakeholders: they may look for a buyer, the first of which would be the local authority; the site could be developed by Espaces Ferroviaires, a subsidiary of SNCF Immobilier; a block of flats could be built by ICF Habitat (for social housing) as a joint development project or it can be developed by a buyer. nce the structure of the project has been defined, the land is cleared of O technical facilities – the most common situation. In some cases the activity on the site has to be moved and re-established elsewhere. SNCF Réseau is responsible for the preliminary studies and the work. “This stage can take time – generally 18 months – because due to the complexity of the work to be carried out, several specialised trades have to be involved. In AquitainePoitou-Charente, we innovated by putting in place a special office to coordinate all the work, arbitrate on priorities and manage the different components of infrastructures. This resulted in significant time savings and increased reliability for the buyers”, explains Jérôme Marlier, southwestern region real estate manager. 17 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY MAINTENANCE GOES DIGITAL With a property portfolio of 35,000 buildings, SNCF Immobilier has launched a big data optimisation campaign, making data available upon application. This will improve management of their properties and of energy transition, a major preoccupation of the Group. 18 that the data for the 35,000 buildings in the SNCF Immobilier property portfolio was scattered and difficult to use. Thus the idea arose to create a health record for each building noting its surface, general state, energy consumption, market price and maintenance costs. “With this tool, we wanted to develop avenues for optimisation and, armed with the information it provided, decide on the future of the property, whether to demolish or renovate it,” Frédéric Goupil de Bouillé, SNCF Immobilier real estate management and optimisation director, explains. A book of specifications was created to draw up a health record prototype. The initial idea was to create Word documents but this was quickly abandoned in favour of creating a multimedia website. Brainstorming sessions were organised with maintenance managers on how to best meet users’ needs and, since the end of October 2015, the west and southwest IT departments have been testing the application in the field. Feedback is being provided and will contribute to the specifications book for the digital application between now and the end of 2016. The application will work without an Internet connection and data collected in the field by portfolio managers or received directly from connected objects in our buildings (real-time consumption for example) can be added. This will make it much easier to rate the buildings. “Today we have a low-tech approach to the application – information about geographic localisation, fluid consumption and about the occupants is imported from a multitude of different databases. Our objective is to automate these processes,” Christophe Borde, assistant information systems manager at SNCF Immobilier says. Frédéric Goupil de Bouillé agrees: “The data on 33,800 buildings has already been entered but to carry out innovative maintenance we must be able to target our requests precisely – for example, identify high-energy consuming buildings and propose alternatives. It is also a way of raising the occupants’ awareness of their energy consumption and how they can reduce it.” 19 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY THE INITIAL ANALYSIS WAS The digital health record is a particularly efficient tool for reducing energy costs - one of the main problems of the Group, which has put other mechanisms in place in this area. In partnership with different contractors responsible for carrying out the work, it is conducting an experiment on four particularly high-energy consuming industrial plants. The objective is to save 20% on fluids and make a return on investment in less than five years. “The idea is to put in place a system that will allow us to measure the savings made and pinpoint anomalies in electricity and heat consumption,” Jerome Piechowiak, manager of the technical optimisation and management department, states. Methods used will include replacing technical equipment, increasing use of renewable energy (photovoltaic, wood, etc.) and optimising the efficiency of equipment through technological solutions developed with DigitalSNCF and a subsidiary of GDF Suez. “Today, we are at the experimental stage with these methods and are waiting to apply them across the board. Other examples include Mobil’immo, a tool available on tablets, which will allow us to instantly monitor maintenance services when in the field, update inventories more quickly, notify of the installation of new equipment etc.,” Jérôme Piechowiak adds. There is a plethora of tools to support analysis and improve information sharing. “THE APPLICATION WILL WORK WITHOUT AN INTERNET CONNECTION AND DATA COLLECTED IN THE FIELD BY PORTFOLIO MANAGERS OR RECEIVED DIRECTLY FROM CONNECTED OBJECTS IN OUR BUILDINGS CAN BE ADDED.” 20 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY TOWARDS ENERGY TRANSITION I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T © APUR KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY THE ‘PETITE CEINTURE’ GROWS UP This 32 km railway passes through nine districts of Paris. Parisians know the Petite Ceinture by name but few of them have travelled on it since it has been closed to the public for a long time. An agreement between the city of Paris and SNCF will open a large part of it to the public. 21 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY PARISIANS KNOW IT BY NAME © APUR A few fortunate people have had a meal or a glass of wine near it in abandoned stations that have been converted into restaurants. Few are aware of its history. The Petite Ceinture, a 32 km stretch of railway encircling the capital inside the boulevard des Maréchaux, was built at the end of the 19th century to connect Paris railway stations. In 1934, because of competition from the Metro, it was closed to passengers and a few years later to goods traffic except for a few stretches that were still in use (the north section). Apart from the western stretch (between Auteuil and la Muette and the Pereire section) the rest is still the property of the national railway network. In 1999 the Paris City Hall set up a research committee to consider the future of the Petite Ceinture. The municipal team’s idea is to bring the site back to life for Parisians through different types of developments. A charter was drawn up recording its main characteristics, its historical value and in particular its evolution – in the south certain parts of it have become a pedestrian zone; in other places its abandoned easements have been taken over by flora and fauna. In 2006 the City of Paris and RFF (now SNCF Réseau) signed a five-year agreement designed to propose a variety of uses, render the easements attractive and allow some stretches to be opened to the public. Different sections were then developed by agreement, in particular pedestrian walks in the 16th, 12th and 15th districts. 22 Between 2011 and 2013 studies and public meetings were carried out simultaneously in order to develop a vision for the future uses of the Petite Ceinture. Several important principles emerged – the ability to change the facilities, maintaining the continuity of the line, highlighting it as a heritage site with a variety of uses (sport, agriculture, culture, meeting place), “THE OBJECTIVE opening it up to the public. In 2015 WAS TO OPEN UP the City of Paris, SNCF Réseau and SNCF Mobilités signed a new framework THE SECTIONS agreement. The objective was to open up OF THE PETITE the sections of the Petite Ceinture that were of no use to the railway system and CEINTURE THAT transform them little by little into public WERE OF NO USE spaces while preserving the landscape and the architectural and natural aspects. TO THE RAILWAY “The focus will remain on the railway with SYSTEM AND the addition of other uses for the benefit of the city – a pedestrian walk for example. TRANSFORM THEM Consultants to the project owners (the LITTLE BY LITTLE City of Paris and the SNCF) are finalising INTO PUBLIC SPACES.” a programme to determine how the Petite Ceinture will be developed. This programme will, in particular, ensure that the uses are suited to the different local stakeholders such as district administrations, associations and the private sector, among others.” Xavier Horth, project manager at SNCF Immobilier, explains. The first stretch in the 13th district was inaugurated on January 23, 2016. Other sections will be opened progressively since some places require preliminary work to ensure public safety and accessibility during the development of cultural, sporting, artistic and other activities. 23 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY A NEW LEISURE SPACE KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY “We chose the title ‘futures’ with its connotation of projecting beyond the present to describe SNCF Immobilier’s approach: setting up a forwardlooking think tank based on the know-how of the SNCF Innovation Research Department,” Alexia Rincé, Immo futures project manager explains. To ensure that the right methodology is applied they have entered into a partnership with the Ecole des Mines de Paris, a specialist in open innovation labs. The objective is to completely change the attitude to real estate in order to generate innovation. A working group made up of one third members of the SNCF Group specialised in different fields such as communication, transport, etc, and two thirds from outside SNCF – property developers, researchers, industrialists, meets once a month. Their mission is to think about the city of tomorrow, understand basic trends and discover game changing innovations. Alexia Rincé explains, “Each session opens with a presentation by an expert on an unconventional vision of real estate and the urban environment to enable the group to think outside the box. For example, will the type of business we know today still have a place in the city of the future?” “TO THINK ABOUT THE CITY OF TOMORROW, UNDERSTAND BASIC TRENDS AND DISCOVER GAME CHANGING INNOVATIONS“ Six sessions have been scheduled between January and June 2016. The first one to take place focused on the social divide in cities and possible ways to increase a sense of community. In the words of the project manager, “Our idea is to take the results of our brainstorming and transform them into urban projects that are adapted to tomorrow’s society. This could take the form of urban farming, collective living spaces or flexible, adaptable buildings. All of which will fuel current and future SNCF Immobilier projects.” 24 KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY PHILIPPE FOSSET HR Manager at SNCF Immobilier Launched in July 2015, the Real Estate Institute’s mission is to develop SNCF Immobilier’s training courses and adapt them to new needs. WHY WAS THE REAL ESTATE INSTITUTE CREATED? Philippe Fosset: The Real Estate Institute was created in July 2015 to support the development of SNCF Immobilier. The first objective of the Institute is to consolidate the various course offerings and make new proposals in order to be in step with the reality on the ground. Above all it focuses on developing the real estate skills of our collaborators. With the arrival of new professions such as portfolio management and energy transition advising, the Institute aims to assist them in acquiring new skills. In short, our role is to help them to work better together and meet the new demands of the real estate profession. WHAT TYPES OF COURSES DO YOU OFFER? Philippe Fosset: The portfolio managers are in direct contact with clients. In the summer of 2015 we offered them a training course related to their field which served as a test. Based on feedback we are currently finetuning the course content. We have also offered ‘Dimension débat’ (a discussion management course) to help managers in their role as team leaders. In 2015 we organised 65 training sessions (this represents 5,560 course hours) for 539 participants. Our objective for 2016 is for each of 25 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T INTERVIEW WITH WHAT IS THE PLACE OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY IN YOUR COURSE OFFERINGS? Philippe Fosset: Digital technology will play an increasing role. We are working on launching an LMS (Learning Management System) platform between now and the end of 2016. It will be available on computer and smartphone and will give access to MOOC or e-learning style modules. Courses specific to each profession will be offered. Among other things, digital technology will allow people to better prepare themselves for face-to-face courses. The main points of the course will be provided upstream leaving more time for discussion during the face-to-face sessions. In partnership with the CNAM (Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers / National Conservatory of Arts and Crafts) we also plan to set up a learning lab focusing on new learning methods, with the help of researchers and taking advantage of the unconventional approach of start-up creators. However we are aware that new technologies are just tools – a means and not an end. We must concentrate on the digital applications that are best suited to developing our colleagues’ skills. n 26 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY our colleagues to have taken one to three courses. I should point out that we have just signed an agreement with Sciences Po (The Paris Institute of Political Studies), in partnership with ICF Habitat, to set up a real estate management course. This initiative addresses the fact that while everyone has an overall view of the profession that view does not always encompass the entire value chain: development, promotion, valorisation, technical management and relations with institutions. SNCF Immobilier is a player across the entire chain. We need colleagues with a systemic approach. We will be offering three sessions between 2016 and 2017. © Maquette Vincent Saulier architecte KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY REINVENTING PARIS: ICF HABITAT’S WINNING PROJECT Mansions, public baths, undeveloped land... Make up a few of the 23 sites listed in a call for innovative urban projects, named Réinventer Paris, issued by the city in November 2014. The objective was to promote the development of new forms of living, work and meeting places. At the outset 372 multidisciplinary teams applied, 75 reached the final selection phase and 22 were chosen. Among them a group made up of ICF Habitat La Sablière, the Paris-Belleville School of architecture, the ALJT which manages residences for young people between 18 and 32, an architect (Vincent Saulier) and an engineering company selected undeveloped land on rue Piat (Paris 20th). The project to construct a residence for architecture students will consist of self-contained accommodation and numerous communal spaces. To plan this Serre habitée, as the project is named, a working group was set up to gather the students’ opinions and allow the different stakeholders involved to create a vision of a place that will be innovative in design and in the way it is managed and run. The Serre habitée will evolve according to the changing needs of its occupants, will be open to the neighbourhood, energy efficient, run cooperatively and, as an experimental aspect, it will house an urban agriculture laboratory. Martine Gillot, ICF Habitat La Sablière communication manager, tells us, “This experiment is a source of both motivation and inspiration for our teams as the innovative design process will be put into practice on other projects.” 27 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T © Jean-Pierre Porcher KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY SAUSSURE-PONT CARDINET NEIGHBOURHOOD: SOCIAL MIX IS THE NAME OF THE GAME Offices, businesses, housing, public facilities and more: the brand new Saussure-Pont Cardinet neighbourhood, in the 18th district of Paris, is all this in one. 28 On one side, there are 5.5 acres and an approximately 65,000 sq. m. SHON (surface hors oeuvre nette / net surface area) developed by Espaces Ferroviaires, a subsidiary of SNCF Immobilier; on the other is the Clichy-Batignolles sector, the urban development of which is managed by the City of Paris. This immense area, planned for the 2012 Olympic Games, is now home to a new neighbourhood. The two neighbourhoods are separated by the Saint-Lazare and PontCardinet Station railway tracks - part of the landscape and a constraint for the new development. Another constraint was the site of the future neighbourhood situated eight metres below the level of the existing streets. These constraints did not slow down the preliminary studies which began in 2008. In 2015, all the lots except one – social housing which will be finalised in 2017 - had been handed over. The speed of delivery was due to the innovative nature of the project. “We chose to develop individual lots rather than go through the ZAC (zone d’aménagement concertée/mixed development zone) process,” explains Régis Leclercq, development operations manager at Espaces Ferroviaires. “As both owner and developer of the land, we were able to do everything in parallel. We also worked with developers upstream. The demolition of the SNCF IT centre building was swiftly followed by the preparation of the site including cleanup, building new roads and connecting to services. We didn’t waste any time.” “AS BOTH OWNER AND DEVELOPER OF THE LAND, WE WERE ABLE TO DO EVERYTHING IN PARALLEL… WE DIDN’T WASTE ANY TIME“ “This efficient process was accompanied by constant consultation with the residents between 2008 and 2009. Several public meetings with local residents were held where they gave their opinions on part of the programme, such as the construction of public facilities (a middle school and a gymnasium) by the City of Paris which purchased the land required,” Régis Leclercq explains. * Surface hors œuvre nette. 29 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY A GUIDED TOUR COMFORT, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT AND FLUIDITY Besides the offices, ICF Habitat La Sablière built a 98 unit block of flats, ten of which are special needs housing; and a day nursery. The goal was housing with low energy consumption. The development includes 200 winter gardens that act as a thermal and sound buffer, resulting in a 25 to 30% saving on heating. The flats have double or triple exposure and a heat recovery system from wastewater serves as a backup for hot water heating. The development blends well with the urban landscape. “On the Batignolles side they have taken more risks with architecture as they were less constrained by the surrounding buildings. On our side we had to blend in with the nearby Hausmannian buildings by compromising between tradition and modernity with warm mineral materials which reflect the old materials,” Régis Leclercq tells us. “THE DEVELOPMENT INCLUDES 200 WINTER GARDENS THAT ACT AS A THERMAL AND SOUND BUFFER, RESULTING IN A 25 TO 30% SAVING ON HEATING“ 30 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY Two office buildings, named Rezo and Strato, were built alongside the railway lines. “A considerable amount of preparatory work had to be done on the railway, some under the authority of SNCF Réseau and some, such as trench shoring, by the SCI (a non-trading property company - 50% Espaces Ferroviaires and 50% Linkcity – created to carry out the operation).The architecture of the buildings is particularly innovative: one of them, because of its rounded shape, is reminiscent of a stationary railway carriage, and the other of a moving train,” explains Raffaella Cavallazzi, marketing manager at Espaces Ferroviaires. * Surface hors œuvre nette. 31 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY The new neighbourhood counted on sustainable development to reduce its carbon footprint and to maximise residents’ and occupants’ comfort through green spaces, sun exposure, environmentally friendly transportation, etc. Espaces Ferroviaires has received ISO 14001 certification for the environmental management and sustainable development systems they applied throughout the operation. The buildings have also been awarded environmental certification. Strato and Rezo have obtained double certification: HQE (high environmental quality) and a Very Good BREEAM rating as well as BBC Effinergie (French energy efficiency certification), attesting to the performance of the buildings and the optimal comfort afforded to their occupants. Eventually the Saussure-Pont Cardinet and Clichy-Batignolles neighbourhoods will be connected by a road bridge and a footbridge, combining mixed use with fluidity of movement. © l’AUC - Luxigon KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY CHAPELLE INTERNATIONAL Bounded by the Paris-Nord station railway lines, boulevard Ney and the rue de la Chapelle, this 15 acre site in Paris’s 18th district will soon be home to an entirely new neighbourhood. The SNCF Logistics Centre that occupied it has been moved to make room for a major development project starting in 2017, which will include a multi-modal logistics facility, a warehouse for the reception of goods arriving by train and their dispatch by lorry, blocks of flats, a daycare centre, a school, a gymnasium, an amateur arts centre, a park and SOHOs (Small Offices/Home Offices). One of the innovations of this urban development zone is that the housing will be based on the SOHOs concept of combining work and living spaces in one unit. This will be a unique development facilitating mixed use, with the juxtaposition of urban, rail and logistical functions. 32 AND I’LL BLOW YOUR HOUSE DOWN This venture could make the Three Little Pigs children’s story seem like a downright lie. In this block of twelve flats in Le Mans, wood has a place of honour – an advantage at every level. The building, named “Les Ombres” after a protected species of freshwater fish in the river that flows not far from the building, houses twelve flats on four levels (ground floor and three storeys) and was handed over on January 25, 2016: a great occasion! The property of ICF Habitat Atlantique, the building stands out because of the extensive use of wood in its construction. “It is the first multi-family building constructed with a wood framework for ICF Habitat - a type of construction that is still not common in France. This pilot project required an innovative procedure because the challenge was not so much building with wood, which we sometimes find in single family dwellings, as it was building a several storeys high block of flats with that material,” explains Fabien Gras, operations manager at ICF Habitat Atlantique. To achieve this, the architect designed the framework of the building’s walls and floors in wood. The walls are 40 to 50 centimetres thick since they are made up of several types of insulation, one of which is wood wool, a rain barrier and a vapour barrier. “A building is vulnerable to the vagaries of the wind, which blows from all directions. To ensure the stability of the building, concrete slabs and toppings were combined with the wood flooring. Different species of wood were used for the woodwork, insulation, cladding and the stairs. Wood is a natural renewable resource and has the added advantage that the carbon dioxide accumulated during the trees’ lifetime is stored in the building,” Fabien Gras points out. 33 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY I’LL HUFF AND I’LL PUFF This project, which presented serious technical challenges, required a very detailed book of specifications in order to ensure airtightness and sound insulation. Fabien Gras explains that when the building is in use, it will have the following characteristics: “It will ensure the comfort of the occupants in both summer and winter due to the use of mixed wood/ concrete floors; the components of the building will age at the same rate because largely the same type of material was used. Hot water and central heating will be provided by using wood as an inexpensive, renewable energy source in a highly efficient wood furnace.” This high environmental quality approach reflects the owners’ aim for the project to be awarded Qualitel BBC Effinergie and Habitat & Environnement certification, which, when the project was launched in 2010, did not have a quality standard for wood. Design, use... demolition: ICF Habitat Atlantique has also foreseen the future disappearance of its building since wood is a noble, biodegradable material. But this is in the distant future. To return to the present, a similar project is being launched – twenty public housing flats in Saint-Pierredes-Corps – with delivery planned for July 2017. This project will take into account feedback from the “Les Ombres” block of flats. Some elements, such as the insulation system materials or the prefabrication of wood components, have been rationalised - resulting in cost reduction and easier installation. “TO BE AWARDED QUALITEL BBC EFFINERGIE AND HABITAT & ENVIRONNEMENT CERTIFICATION“ 34 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T KNOW-HOW AND METHODOLOGY DESIGN, USE, DEMOLITION BEFORE THE FULTON BLOCK: AN ARTISTIC INNOVATION 35 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T AN ARTISTIC INNOVATION I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T © Ivan Mathie 2011 AN ARTISTIC INNOVATION © Ivan Mathie 2011 36 The Fulton block of flats in the 18th district of Paris, built in the 1950s, was made up of 133 flats. Following consultation with the occupants and the different parties involved – local authorities, developer, etc. – an urban renewal operation was launched in 2010. The project consisted of demolishing the existing buildings, developing the area to build business premises and 320 flats and public facilities. The occupants of the first phase buildings were rehoused nearby while waiting to move into the new flats that will be ready at the end of 2016. All the occupants were involved in each stage of the process, as members of the competition jury, writing a rehousing charter setting out the landlord’s commitments, and, aided by actors, artists and authors, participating in a project to help them remember and honour their life in the building and to view the future with equanimity. They also had a front row seat when one of the buildings was taken over by 108 street artists with an unusual group exhibition that extended the process of involving the occupants before the tower disappeared. AN ARTISTIC INNOVATION MEHDI BEN CHEICK Manager of Galerie Itinerrance Mehdi ben Cheick, previously a visual arts teacher and now manager of a gallery in Paris specialised in street art, was behind the cultural event that marked the end of 2013: the Tour Paris 13. He recalls how the project came into being and its effect. HOW DID THE TOUR 13 IDEA COME INTO BEING? Mehdi ben Cheick: I wanted a daring, temporary artistic project and had the idea of taking over the wall of a building that was going to be demolished so as to have more artistic freedom. I contacted Paris property owners and only ICF La Sablière replied, offering me a nine storey social housing building on rue Fulton. I was immediately enthusiastic as its situation beside the Seine made it particularly visible. I started painting a giant orange bubble on one of its outside walls and, as I was painting, I realised that, as the occupants were leaving the flats little by little, I also – absolutely – had to take over the interior. With the support of the 13th district town hall, a stakeholder in the project, I made a request to ICF which approved it. HOW DID THE PROJECT TAKE SHAPE? Mehdi ben Cheick: I have been a gallery owner for 12 years; I know a lot of artists and it wasn’t difficult to convince them. There were 108 of them in the end, representing 18 different nationalities. They worked without pay for seven months; each of them was assigned a room in one of the 37 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T 3 QUESTIONS FOR HOW WAS THE EXHIBITION RECEIVED? Mehdi ben Cheick: We were all surprised by the unbelievable reception. We counted 30,000 visitors in a month, an average of 1,000 per day. Some of them queued for 13 hours. We credit the success of the project to its concept and originality. Entrance to the “ENTRANCE TO exhibition was completely free, there was no commercialisation because nothing was for THE EXHIBITION sale and nothing could be recovered as WAS COMPLETELY F everything was going to be destroyed a month later. So it wasn’t an exhibition in the REE, THERE WAS NO classical sense of the word but a once-in-aCOMMERCIALISATION… lifetime experience of entering into a different work in each room. Then, as an NOTHING WAS FOR integral part of the project, we filmed the SALE … EVERYTHING demolition and put it on the Internet because whenever a wall was demolished a new work WAS GOING appeared. I got the idea of the Tour Paris 13 TO BE DESTROYED from Gordon Mata-Clark, an American artist who took over buildings that were being A MONTH LATER“ demolished. For me it was the one and only experience of this kind in spite of numerous requests from landlords. I’m not interested in doing the same thing somewhere else. 38 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T AN ARTISTIC INNOVATION 36 flats in the building. The idea was that this exhibition, open to all for a month in October 2013, would allow the demolition of the building, planned for April 2014, not to go unnoticed. The project was approved by the owner because it had absolutely no impact on their schedule. Just before the exhibition, all the occupants had not yet moved out and when they did we could take over their flats. In addition, we organised art workshops with the occupants who were the first and last people to visit the exhibition. This made for an interesting partnership; all the more so as the artists created memories. They sometimes used things left behind by the old occupants: a wooden bicycle, a stuffed toy, a bookcase. They played the role of archaeologist. This relationship with the occupants was good also because the entire operation was carried out very considerately: the landlord had undertaken to give them priority for rehousing in the new buildings at the same rent. There were positive vibes in the building which was important for me and the artists. WHILE 39 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T AN ARTISTIC INNOVATION I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T AN ARTISTIC INNOVATION David Walker (United Kingdom) © Anne Dhoquois Jimmy C (Australia) © Anne Dhoquois Etnik (Italy) © Ivan Mathie 40 JB Rock (Italy) © Ivan Mathie Money-Less (Italy) © Anne Dhoquois JB Rock & Orticanoodles (Italy) © Ivan Mathie I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T AN ARTISTIC INNOVATION Bom.K & Liliwenn (France) © Ivan Mathie Flip (Brasil) © Anne Dhoquois C215 (France) © Anne Dhoquois 41 Jimmy C (Australia) © Anne Dhoquois Sambre (France) © Ivan Mathie Hogre (Italy) © Ivan Mathie AN ARTISTIC INNOVATION AFTER 42 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T © Eric Baudet AN ARTISTIC INNOVATION THE EPHEMERAL AT THE SERVICE OF URBAN TRANSFORMATION SNCF Immobilier has decided to revisit some of its properties through cultural and artistic projects: a novel approach in step with the transformation of cities. 43 © Lionel Boulanger 44 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T AN ARTISTIC INNOVATION Railway lines, workshops, warehouses, old stations, offices: so many sites, for the most part situated in the heart or on the edge of our cities, which have been part of the fabric of the urban landscape for over a century. Some have been abandoned, others are being developed. They can all be home for an evening, a few days, or several months to a cultural, gastronomic or recreational event. The objective of the Appel à Manifestation d’Intérêt (AMI) (a call for expression of interest) launched in May 2015 by SNCF Immobilier was to approach city stakeholders – artists, collectives, associations, cultural development businesses, etc. and offer them the opportunity to take over these places and give free rein to their imagination. “There were no terms and conditions, just a blank page for interested cultural and artistic event organisers to fill. They each had to position themselves in a particular venue – 16 sites were proposed – and present a quality project that was technically viable and financially supported by public or private partners. Finally, the project had to be open to all. Our objective with this novel experiment is to transform these sites, that were part of the railway yesterday, into new enclaves in the urban landscape,” Caroline de Jessey, SNCF Immobilier Communications Department director, tells us. A committee composed of people from outside and within the Group provided an added dimension to the view of life in the city. It announced its decision on January 5, 2016. Of the 81 proposals received, 14 projects for six* sites were selected (one site could host several projects) including live performances, fun events, multidisciplinary urban concepts and artistic creations. The first project will be developed on the Faubourg Saint-Martin site in spring 2016 by a company that, for five months, will transform it into a third place featuring upcycling and ‘Case’ design. “Temporary occupation of the sites will allow us to create new uses for them and thus maximise their possibilities. This will make it easier to transform them or, if they are to disappear, to mourn them. It is an approach that encourages the co-construction of future urban projects,” Caroline de Jessey states. Ground Control, the name given to the La Chapelle depot (Paris 18th) when it was opened to the public for a few months in 2015, is a perfect example (see Ordener Project). Given its success the operation will be repeated in a different form in 2016. “OUR OBJECTIVE WITH THIS NOVEL EXPERIMENT IS TO TRANSFORM THESE SITES, THAT WERE PART OF THE RAILWAY YESTERDAY, INTO NEW ENCLAVES IN THE URBAN LANDSCAPE.” *The Rail Cathedrals (Saint-Denis), la Halle Dubois (Paris 18th), The Les Mines Building (Paris 18th), The Faubourg Saint-Martin site (Paris 10th), The Pyrénées Garden (Paris 20th) and the Otterswiller Viaduct. 45 I N N O VAT I V E U R B A N D E V E L O P M E N T AN ARTISTIC INNOVATION 14 PROJECTS SELECTED SNCF Réseau (management and engineering of the French railway network) Illustration : Vianney Chupin/SNCF SNCF is one of the world’s leading groups in passenger transport and goods logistics with a projected turnover of 32 billion euros for 2015; 30% of which is from international business. With extensive expertise in railway networks and transportation services in France, the Group employs over 240,000 people in 120 countries. Its objective is to set the world standard for excellence in services, transportation and logistics. SNCF has 5 business lines: SNCF Voyageurs (regional and intercity passenger transport, Transilien – suburban rail service –, TGV – high-speed train service – in France and Europe, management and development of stations) Illustration : AREP/SNCF Keolis (a major player in public transport for passengers in Europe and throughout the world) Illustration : AREP/SNCF SNCF Logistics (goods transportation and logistics) Illustration : AREP/SNCF and SNCF Immobilier (management and optimisation of properties and land holdings) Illustration : AREP/SNCF SNCF IMMOBILIER ONE OF THE FIVE MAIN BUSINESSES OF SNCF SNCF Immobilier has three missions: managing and optimising the Group’s industrial properties; through its subsidiary, Espaces Ferroviaires, developing land and buildings that cannot be used by the rail system; Photo : Maxime Huriez/SNCF Over 600 employees (plus 1,965 ICF Habitat employees) 12 million square metres of industrial and service buildings* and, with its subsidiary, ICF Habitat, managing some 100,000 residential properties, 90% of which are social housing. SNCF has 7 regional real estate departments that work with local players throughout France. 20 000 acres of land holdings* including 7,425 acres ready to be urbanised 100 000 social and market price rental housing units *excluding ICF Habitat WWW.SNCF.COM / WWW.PRESSE-SNCF-IMMOBILIER.FR PUBLISHER Les Ateliers Henry Dougier / TEXTS Anne Dhoquois, TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH BY Margaret Wilson Fuller / Layout Vianney Chupin / ATELIERSHENRYDOUGIER.COM
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