The playwright Tristan Bernard is alleged to have eaten lunch on the Eiffel Tower day-after-day, however not as a result of he favored the menu in its café: moderately, as a result of it was the one place in Paris with no view of the Eiffel Tower. His view wasn’t wholly eccentric within the many years after its construction, within the late eighteen-eighties, when the structure had but to change into essentially the most beloved in France, and perhaps on the planet. But not far behind the Eiffel Tower as a must-visit vacationer attraction in a city stuffed with them is Paris’ least beloved constructing: the Tour Montparnasse, which since its completion in 1973 has stood in infamy as the one skyscraper within the center of town.
In contrast to the Eiffel Tower, which was commissioned partially to celebrate the centennial of the French Revolution, the Tour Montparnasse tasks no political symbolism; not like Notre-Dame de Paris, or Sacré-Cœur de Montmartre, it has no religious significance. Its purpose is wholly commercial, befitting a big workplace constructing with a storeping mall — or now, the stays of a storeping mall — on the bottom. However when it was first conceived in 1958, it embodied the very picture of modernity in a constructed environment that was dilapidated the place it wasn’t war-torn. A modern skyscraper would present the world, unmistakably, that Paris had stepped fully into the twentieth century of indoor plumbing, electricity, quick trains, and telecommunication.
This mission gained the total againing of none other than Andre Malraux, then France’s first Minister of Cultural Affairs. Unfortunately, 9teen-fifties Europe lacked the technology, expertise, and money required for a 60-story skyscraper, not to mention one serving because the centerpiece of a sweeping redevelopment mission that included gleaming new residential blocks and a completely rebuilt Montparnasse Station. The tower mayn’t even break floor till 1969, by which period the constructing’s once-cutting-edge mid-century design — laboriously a universal hit even in maquette kind — had already begun to look passé. (A part of the problem was positively its color, which architect Philippe Trétiack described as having “a contact of the nicotine stain about it.”)
When the Tour Montparnasse turned 50 a number of years in the past, I happened to be in Paris on my honeymoon. Nothing was happening to mark the occasion, aside from the long-ongoing discussions about whether or not to renovate the factor or simply knock it down. The former choice having gained the day, you may see the small print of the deliberate excessive makeover in the B1M video above. Reasonably than destroying the existing constructing, the concept is to do the following smartest thing and make it invisible. This ambitious mission will set up a brand new façade of clear glass and bands of sky gardens, amongst other adjustments, so as to milden its burdensome visual mass. However however radical its transformation, one suspects that it’ll stay most appreciated as the one place in Paris without a view of the Tour Montparnasse.
Related content:
How Paris Turned Paris: The Story Behind Its Iconic Squares, Bridges, Monuments & Boulevards
Watch the Constructing of the Eiffel Tower in Timelapse Animation
The Architectural History of the Louvre: 800 Years in Three Minutes
The Creation & Restoration of Notre-Dame Cathedral, Animated
Why Europe Has So Few Skyscrapers
Why Do People Hate Modern Architecture?: A Video Essay
Based mostly in Seoul, Colin Marshall writes and broadcasts on cities, language, and culture. He’s the writer of the newsletter Books on Cities in addition to the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Summarizing Korea) and Korean Newtro. Follow him on the social webwork formerly generally known as Twitter at @colinmarshall.

