This Town Did The Impossible

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The Aesthetic City

The Aesthetic City

Күн бұрын

This Town Did The Impossible City Transformation
What happens if you totally transform a town? This suburb was dominated by modernist urbanism and was transformed by introducing traditional, mixed use urban fabric, beautiful architecture inspired by its local traditions, a lot of green and a more balanced housing supply.
In this video you'll hear everything about Le Plessis-Robinson, a town in the suburbs of Paris, and how it was completely transformed - and I'll give 7 lessons of how this town did it.
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📖 Favourite Urbanism & Architecture Books
Léon Krier: The Architecture of Community - amzn.to/4cVhS8e
Nir Buras: The Art of Classic Planning - amzn.to/3Wjhriz
Jane Jacobs: The Death and Life of Great American Cities - amzn.to/4cy7CTq
Vitruvius Pollio: The Ten Books on Architecture - amzn.to/4cyxwXh
Charles Montgomery: Happy City - amzn.to/3LldSlC
Malcolm Millais: Exploding the Myths of Modern Architecture - amzn.to/3Wh45mJ
James Stevens Curl: Making Dystopia - amzn.to/3zFzN4s
Branko Mitrovic: Architectural Principles in the Age of Fraud - amzn.to/3RZTD0s
Tom Wolfe: From Bauhaus to Our House - amzn.to/3S5mgtb
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-- Special Thanks ---
Special thanks to my patrons, you rock! Also, big thanks to the team that organised IMCL 2022 in Le Plessis Robinson and to Xavier Bohl
This video was not sponsored, except by the support of our patrons.
-- Soundstripe Music --
BDNM41SML2RTRTV0 - Falls Magenta
NOMITYZB0IYLGQSK - Moonlight Drive
F4T31SDNLWRZCLCK - Balade du Soir
LBX0PTSC2GYFFZX6 - Falls Glasgow
DUFJR9GIXYNDVGEU - Falls Runner
4VYFN5SQ9TAUSW7W - Falls The Corporation
HPYR6PI96WHX20JW - Sun and the Moon
NIUVJQVZBVTDIP5K - Falls Synergy
0FXA4RNJOGEUBL3Q - Cody Martin - Loaves Fish
LUN2KAWUSLKQUD2M - Dresden Kind Hearted
DQ9WWR5VQJTOM8C0 - Revenant
TAGS:
le plessis robinson,architecture,Philippe Pemezec,hauts de seine,ile de france,urban renewal,The Aesthetic City,lego city update,city transformation,leplessis robinson,gothic revival architecture,municipal development,housing crisis,garden city mall,smart city,smart urban planning,coeurde ville,sustainable development,sustainable development goals,united nations,public private partnerships,community development,mixed housing,housing,france 24

Пікірлер: 4 600
@the_aesthetic_city
@the_aesthetic_city Жыл бұрын
Thank you for watching - do you think this method would work for other towns as well? Why so, or why not? How can we convince policymakers to take beauty serious?
@pietervoogt
@pietervoogt Жыл бұрын
I think the direction is great but I see a few problems. Most important: 1.The detailing of the buildings is not really creative. We need people who can design ornaments that are more unique and refined. One way to do this is cost effectively is by designing the buildings in a way that more or better ornament can be added later. So owners or renters can invest in beautifying their house. Also, in the 19th century they used a lot of plaster to create ornament. A lot of art-nouveau ornament is just plaster and a lot of Art-Deco ornament is concrete. Relatively cheap, allows for a lot of trying and error. 2. Let people buy their houses is a bad idea if you just allow the market to inflate the prices. I believe there are in-between options. For instance a contract that says you can only buy the house if you sell it for the same price. You can specify this any way you want, you can also allow people to buy the house but they can't make more profit than 10%+inflation if they sell it again. This gives the freedom of property (rebuild the interior as you like, inheritance rights) without the speculation.
@denysl5738
@denysl5738 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely I think this should be a trend. Man I think you are doing a wonderful and meaningful job, you already inspired me with two of your videos. Im actually surprised it`s only your second video I think if you continue youll find great success. Cause the philosophie you expose in these videos are what architects should really strive for
@mikeyfraile2402
@mikeyfraile2402 Жыл бұрын
There was a plan to rehabilitate the old delapidated city of Manila to bring it's back it's lost glory Manila was called Paris of the east and Pearl of the Orient beautiful building were destroyed during the war when the city was rebuild unsightly post war buildings was erected centuries old achitectural treausures laid in ruins buldorized and demolished the city is like a honky tonk district.the plan is to recapture the beauty of old Manila by rebuilding old landmarks new buildings should follow colonial skyline and incentives will be given to building owners who will maintain their old buildings planting trees and greeneries and flowering plants around the city clean and green and Manila will recapture it's old world charm sadly the project was good but did not continue by the new administration. a new mayor of Manila came to power Mayor Isko Moreno and rehabilatate Manila and called his Project Ang Bagong Maynila or New Manila Manila became more urbanized old landmarks restored and beautification followed by planting flowers and plants around the city when he decend into power the city loose a leader who had a political will the success of any project to beautify a city is in the hand of a good leader who have a will to achieve this goal. Make more video of this kind it help teaches the world to make a city that is livable and beautiful
@lavillenouvelle
@lavillenouvelle Жыл бұрын
Our plan is to buy some plots of land here and there, and to start building new constructions according to our principles.
@danielbugby4149
@danielbugby4149 Жыл бұрын
I love this scheme. Keep up the videos
@Don-ds3dy
@Don-ds3dy Жыл бұрын
A lot of people don't seem to understand how important trees, grass, and decent architecture are to improving people's lives.
@JC-vq2cs
@JC-vq2cs Жыл бұрын
Yes! Too often in the US urban planning so-called YIMBY movement the proponents focus on simplistic "density" redevelopment and utterly fail to integrate diversity, beauty, and nature - urban areas as ecologies - into their advocacy. The outcomes we are seeing are often grim, a capitalist developer version of the 40 years of brutalist communist design.
@carkawalakhatulistiwa
@carkawalakhatulistiwa Жыл бұрын
@@JC-vq2cs Soviet microdistrict vs USA Suburbia
@geroutathat
@geroutathat Жыл бұрын
They understand, why do you think the most expensive apartments in new york look at trees in central park, or out over the ocean, and ones that look at walls are cheaper
@juhomattimannisto6575
@juhomattimannisto6575 Жыл бұрын
I think the whole movement towards modernist architecture started from left wing academic circles who believed that you fundamentally shouldn't make a capitalist country beautiful, but what they percieved to be an ugly system should also look ugly on the outside. Combine that with a preference for equality over quality and you get modernist architecture. And the rest of the society was just duped into it.
@RedHanded1969
@RedHanded1969 Жыл бұрын
Oh trust me, a lot of ppl understand that. What the video dont talk about the amount of money needed, the support of the citizens & the regulations or political will, that goes into it.. Its not as simple for a poor country or corrupt gov..
@mogznwaz
@mogznwaz 11 ай бұрын
Why are beautiful old towns and cities so popular? Because they’re beautiful!
@ccattery
@ccattery 9 ай бұрын
This isn't old .
@theFORZA66
@theFORZA66 9 ай бұрын
​@@ccatterywhat a pointless comment lmao. it evokes the old
@Max-jt8gq
@Max-jt8gq 9 ай бұрын
@@ccattery Damn, you managed to watch the whole video without getting the point...
@oceansunset6147
@oceansunset6147 9 ай бұрын
@@ccatterythe point is that the old architectural style is beautiful hence there recreated this shown in this video
@oceansunset6147
@oceansunset6147 9 ай бұрын
.
@richardgonzalez6409
@richardgonzalez6409 Жыл бұрын
i recently graduated with an architecture degree, during all those years I've always tried to prove that classical design mixed with modern tecnology and techniques are the future of architecture. but everyone even the professors stayed stuck with this dreadful abstract and depressing buildings. This town proves that beauty and tradition will always triumph over mass produce minimalism. Thank you for this great video!
@TailsDollOS
@TailsDollOS Жыл бұрын
Show your profs the vid if you have free time. I think they'll be quite surprised
@richardgonzalez6409
@richardgonzalez6409 Жыл бұрын
@@TailsDollOS oh I already am!
@sanniepstein4835
@sanniepstein4835 Жыл бұрын
I wish you success.
@financethis3411
@financethis3411 Жыл бұрын
Don’t forget; if they’re stuck, reminding them how much less people want to pay for modern or contemporary brutal architecture might be a reminder… 😉 Otherwise they’re just religious.
@sirvipernoodle6954
@sirvipernoodle6954 Жыл бұрын
Hey man, congratulations on graduating! I'm barely starting off my architecture studies myself at a community college with the hope of one day achieving a master's myself. But it's pretty cool to see you've gotten far
@omg.mesohungry
@omg.mesohungry 10 ай бұрын
This is a slap across the faces of those modernist architects and their supporters, and I love it.
@bluewren2
@bluewren2 10 ай бұрын
A slap across the face sounds a little harsh but definitely a wake up call?
@eily_b
@eily_b 9 ай бұрын
Architects always build the ugliest of houses for others. Concrete high-rises without any appeal and live in the woods in a designed house for themselves. The hypocrisy...
@BebeDaull
@BebeDaull 9 ай бұрын
Our city council has allowed horrible development in our city in recent years, dark, boxy, ugly, modern, uninviting apartment buildings everywhere. They let a foreign developer come in and demolish the oldest stone building in the city, and the lot has sat empty for half a decade. They redid the art gallery in a modern style and are tearing down our gorgeous old playhouse and replacing it with a modern building. They demolished our 150-year-old wading pool in favor of a modern splash pad, ripped out the Victorian-era wrought iron fencing downtown, cut down so many gorgeous old trees for nothing. I'm so sad about it all.
@JeBo-iw6gt
@JeBo-iw6gt 9 ай бұрын
​@@eily_bkinda lame to speak for all architects, there are also a lot of cool futuristic designs out there without faking classic
@Solaire-lo4vg
@Solaire-lo4vg 9 ай бұрын
Modernists are satanists
@NimrodClover
@NimrodClover Жыл бұрын
I visited this town in 1989 while studying Architecture in Versailles, nearby to the northwest. It was very grim and had a brutal rundown feeling. It is amazing to see how a focused mayor, good architectural design, and around 30 years can transform a place. Yes, short sighted developers can destroy a place.
@carkawalakhatulistiwa
@carkawalakhatulistiwa Жыл бұрын
You think the person living in the building you said is ugly. can buy a house in the new build. who stood over the house you destroyed
@RalseiGaming
@RalseiGaming Жыл бұрын
@@carkawalakhatulistiwa probably since they would have been paid for the land when it was destroyed or atleast given a part of the new property
@bayousbambino427
@bayousbambino427 Жыл бұрын
Sorry, where's the good architecture there? It's better than soul-crushing communist blocks, which are also not good architecture. But, otherwise, it's the French equivalent of the McMansion: a bunch of styrofoam doo-dads slapped on a box and covered in stucco to achieve the bare minimum look of a beaux-arts or neoclassical building. It's fake. It's immitation. It's pseudo. Not good architecture.
@verynice5574
@verynice5574 Жыл бұрын
@@carkawalakhatulistiwa You clearly didn't watch the video. The inhabitants were offered the choice to buy the (now improved) apartments they lived in for a fraction of their value. 80% took the offer.
@MH-tn3pp
@MH-tn3pp Жыл бұрын
It’s not only a focused mayor, it’s a republican (not left wing communist Marxist that will keep it poor and dirty to keep votes, like in the Soviets).
@estebanod
@estebanod Жыл бұрын
It’s my dream to see the entirety of my country heal overtime like this 🇫🇷
@unlink1649
@unlink1649 Жыл бұрын
we need to stop building things that look terrible and go back to building places for people.
@Itashino2
@Itashino2 Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately, this town is an exception in the region, my city, which is located only 20km away from the one showed in the video, has taken the exact opposite path and is becoming uglier every year thanks the corrupt mayor who allows construction companies to do whatever they want as long as he gets his bribes.
@ActuallyDoubleGuitars
@ActuallyDoubleGuitars Жыл бұрын
I wish my country would do this (Ireland) but not a single one of our leaders has any vision or is thinking this way at all.
@admiralnelson5851
@admiralnelson5851 Жыл бұрын
You need to stare repatriations before you can heal
@B0Sajwah
@B0Sajwah Жыл бұрын
@@ActuallyDoubleGuitars I swear, Dublin is grim! I prefer to walk the streets of Kilkenny to escape that
@Bombur888
@Bombur888 Жыл бұрын
This actually moved me. I did not thinks this was still possible in our days and age.
@tinayoga8844
@tinayoga8844 Жыл бұрын
I cried.
@kora4185
@kora4185 Жыл бұрын
Same. Especially the ending. I spend most of my life dreaming of going away from my country duo to simply wanting to live in a more inspiring place, not somewhere where I go out everyday to work and it looks like I’m in a prison. It ruins everyone’s mood, and makes you do poorly at everything cus what’s the point. Not many people would feel like moving away from home, family and even society, if quality of life was always this prioritized. My country still puts necessity above comfort cus that’s all it understand about life, not realizing that’s precisely what imprison us in this cycle of constant _need_ cus we’re not genuinely getting anything ever. Life is supposed to be lived so how we do it is just as important as simply doing it
@ActuallyDoubleGuitars
@ActuallyDoubleGuitars Жыл бұрын
Let's just say it moved me... TO A BIGGER HOUSE.
@backintimealwyn5736
@backintimealwyn5736 Жыл бұрын
as a french citizen let tell you it's a miracle. I did'nt even know about it, I live 15 miles from there.
@churblefurbles
@churblefurbles Жыл бұрын
they retain compatible demographics
@katherinegrace5881
@katherinegrace5881 9 ай бұрын
I am an architect and admire this effort, congratulations to all who made it happen, and thanks for the video. This type of urban design is exceptional and should be taught in architecture schools, where strident, harsh, cold oppressive buildings are considered the new age and only way....yet are ruining cities. This town here as shown is GREAT!!!!!
@darthwiizius
@darthwiizius 9 ай бұрын
I live in the original Garden City (Letchworth) and I really like the what they've done here. Even if you copy a layout the buildings must be culturally appropriate or the place will come across as alien to the locals. We have all types of the good and bad design, from the early quaint more traditional cottage and family housing design (my house is of the latter, a 1917 3 bed semi) through to estates containing 60s concrete block builds to 70s less brutal blocks in parks builds to cheap and nasty 80s interior dry wall builds (these have been banned here now as it was discovered they violated bylaws relating to the town). Now, you might say Letchworth could use something like this to get back to the original plan of building village lifestyles on a town scale but in England 30 miles north of London it's kind of culturally appropriate to have this constant reflection of ever changing building trends. Though there are a few places that need redeveloping, there's 2 blocks of flats on one estate that need levelling, they're the exact problem highlighted here. Ugly living environments lead to ugly behaviour, just as we know nature around us improves our health we know that brutalist uncaring buildings lead to communities not caring.
@Pegasvs
@Pegasvs Жыл бұрын
I've lived in this town my entire life. It feels so strange to see the building you live in and the streets you walk through every day in a high quality English speaking video. I've learned so much from this video and makes me appreciate this town even more, as I've always took this place for granted. Thank you very much for this video .
@TheFuelInjected
@TheFuelInjected Жыл бұрын
I would suggest that your community will likely continue to see international attention. The problems caused by the legacy of Brutalist designs affects city's around the world and the idea of solving it without gentrification is a significant problem that this project seems to address effectively.
@shakey3306
@shakey3306 Жыл бұрын
You’re and i’m envy, adopt me?
@Pegasvs
@Pegasvs Жыл бұрын
@@TheFuelInjected It would be great if more people and cities could understand how this model is beneficial and take inspiration from it, but even in cities around mine things still work quite differently, with some horribly ugly projects being build around nice parks, focusing on stores and "eco friendliness" and modernity while disregarding the actual beauty of the architecture, preferring concrete masses with some plants and pieces of wood strapped to it. It seems local governments don't want to commit to long term projets that surpass their time in office and prefer taking faster and easier solutions
@TheFuelInjected
@TheFuelInjected Жыл бұрын
@Pegasvs Absolutely. My city council just spent over a million dollars of taxpayers money on repaving a parking lot downtown and plopping down 8 sea cans, called the project "town square" to make it seem like it's not just a parking lot with sea cans commonly found in derelict industrial districts.
@Pegasvs
@Pegasvs Жыл бұрын
@@jcd-k2s Je pensais à ce qui se fait le long de la coulée verte vers Chatenay et Sceaux... De ce que j'ai vu ils font des gros rectangles blancs et des aplats de béton sur des kilomètres, mais cette fois ci avec des fenêtres un peu plus grandes et quelques plantes
@adnanbezerra6014
@adnanbezerra6014 Жыл бұрын
I, as a Brazilian, am so used to see people thinking only on the next four year (i.e., the next elections), that it's absolutely astounding to think of someone developing a city planning project for 20+ years
@AnaSilva-tl1zy
@AnaSilva-tl1zy Жыл бұрын
Infelizmente é pq a mentalidade aqui é criar um Projeto de Poder e não um Projeto de Nação. Isso explica os inúmeros elefantes brancos superfaturados e cidades completamente disfuncionais.
@ItIsTheLordWhoKeepsme
@ItIsTheLordWhoKeepsme Жыл бұрын
​@@AnaSilva-tl1zya razão que monarquismo precisa ser voltado
@marcosv.ribeiro1073
@marcosv.ribeiro1073 Жыл бұрын
Mas existem planos de longo prazo, o problema é que ninguém liga pra eles, as pessoas devem participar mais das decisões tomadas, um Plano diretor Urbano/municipal por exemplo é revisto de 10 em 10 anos, mas se ninguém participa acaba ficando para a gestão atual decidir o que lhe convém.
@warribe
@warribe Жыл бұрын
@@marcosv.ribeiro1073 eu sou literalmente da comissão de PDM da minha cidade. O plano está pronto desde 2020 e nenhum dos dois prefeitos tiveram interesse em mandar aprovar e publicar. O atual é um PDU de 2001, disfuncional e basicamente inutilizado.
@AnaSilva-tl1zy
@AnaSilva-tl1zy Жыл бұрын
@@ItIsTheLordWhoKeepsme eu simpatizo um pouco com a ideia monárquica e gosto de como D. Pedro II tinha carinho pelo Brasil. Mas não sei se uma monarquia iria resolver nosso problema (sei lá, não gosto muito da nossa república, mas se uma monarquia fosse voltar, deveria ser em uma conformação mais inovadora, na minha opinião de não muito entendedora do assunto). Mas de qualquer forma vc acha que existe uma possibilidade remota da monarquia voltar e, seria ela uma solução?
@h4st3didk7
@h4st3didk7 Жыл бұрын
I lived in Plessis-Robinson for 4 years. Coming from Paris, what surprised me most at first was the cleanliness and respect of the people who live there. The facilities are well thought out (car parking in the basement, efficient and punctual garbage collection, shops with long opening hours, armed local police, so you can come in late without worrying about security). I think the most important thing is to give residents the desire to preserve their homes, whether social or otherwise. It's well described in this video: empowerment is key.
@pneron2032
@pneron2032 Жыл бұрын
Is it quite an old city (are the people old)? It looks like a retirement town
@NPJGlobal
@NPJGlobal Жыл бұрын
@@pneron2032 nah, it's just a civilized town
@MyILoveMinecraft
@MyILoveMinecraft Жыл бұрын
​@@pneron2032traditional architecture seems to actually attract young people. Look at Heidelberg in Germany for example. One of the youngest cities in the nation. It's basically all tradional architecture, or at least buildings build in a tradional style
@the_aesthetic_city
@the_aesthetic_city Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your insights!
@nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115
@nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115 Жыл бұрын
That means it's not melanin enriched enoough as Paris or London.
@Hadibe-b8t
@Hadibe-b8t 10 ай бұрын
Aesthetics is so pivotal to our wellbeing that it can be the difference between depression and joy
@dogdjinn
@dogdjinn 5 ай бұрын
just like feng shui
@buckodonnghaile4309
@buckodonnghaile4309 3 ай бұрын
Someone should mention that to architects in Canada.
@KS61055
@KS61055 Ай бұрын
I’m glad others get it! It’s def a need for me! I wonder where I can move that has the right aesthetic it’s such a vibe!
Жыл бұрын
As a French living in Paris region, I heard Robinson for its pleasant living quality, I never ever thought it was like that in the 80's
@Simon-je6ck
@Simon-je6ck Жыл бұрын
Je sais pas, certe c’est un peu mieux, mais pour tout l’argent dépensé, il aurait put mieux faire que du neo-haussmanniens qui va extrêmement mal vielllir
@Huka.H
@Huka.H Жыл бұрын
@@Simon-je6ck Neo-haussmanniens qui va mal vieillir ? L’usure ce fera ressenti mais infiniment moins que sur les affreux blocs sociaux post-guerre mondiale qui ont été construit en masse. Puis si les gens restent respectueux, qu’ils prennent soin du lieu où ils habitent, il n’y a pas de raison que ça ne marche pas.
@Simon-je6ck
@Simon-je6ck Жыл бұрын
@@Huka.H j’en suis pas si sûr, ma critique envers ce genre de bâtiment c’est faire du pseudo historicismes, j’aime beaucoup l’Hausmannien car ils sont avant tout authentique, ce sont de véritables immeubles en pierre et en bois, et de leur époques, il n’essayer pas d’émuler un style précédent, ils ont juste repris les canons de leur époque qui était l’architecture neo-classique et l’on appliquer à des règles d’urbanisme avec le système en étoiles et une hiérarchie économique dans le bâtiment (commerce - propriétaire-locataire/employé), le bâtiment avait une logique alors que ce que l’on construit aujourd’hui sont des sortes de truc que l’on retrouverai en dans un parc d’attraction tout est dans la façade et cela ce voit que c’est juste des bâtiments en béton préfabriqué avec un peau qui recouvre l’ensemble, il y’a une ville en Chine dans lequel ils reproduit le style Haussmannien, et c’est juste décevant, mon argument est juste que avec les moyens que l’on utilise pourquoi pas essayer de faire mieux avec de l’architecture contemporaine que d’une très mauvaise copie de bâtiment qui appartient à une tout autres époque cent fois révolue en tout points
@Simon-je6ck
@Simon-je6ck Жыл бұрын
@@Huka.H et pour les immeuble d’après guerre, je suis d’accord la plupart sont horribles, mais si il y a un une opportunité de les rénover pourquoi ne pas le faire, regarde les architectes Lacaton et Vassal et ce qu’ils ont fait a un grand ensemble à Bordeaux pour pas très cher, c’est une véritable solution, l’extérieur est correct mais l’intérieur est sincèrement magnifique avec le simple ajout d'un espace type jardin d’hiver
@abpast5319
@abpast5319 Жыл бұрын
​@@Simon-je6ckI agree with everythink you said.Its cringe to copy old archetecture if its not puprosly made to sofisticate some center or simmilar
@marykirmo
@marykirmo Жыл бұрын
“Beauty and human dignity go hand in hand.” You are so right. This video is absolutely amazing. There are so many lessons here. Allowing people to purchase and therefore take ownership of the area seems pivotal. Not only do they have a developing asset, I imagine it increases their personal investment in the area. And attachment to it as you said. I live in Los Angeles and we are in need of some more human centered solutions to the housing crisis.
@Adrian-op5ni
@Adrian-op5ni Жыл бұрын
I don’t believe in labeling what’s happening in LA as a housing crisis. You develop a city, build as many houses as possible then move out when there is no where left to expand and you can’t deal with the prices. I moved out of SF because of this. LA can’t just turn into NY by building up just because everyone wants to live in LA. Once the housing construction peaks, it’s time to move on if you don’t have a home. There is SD, Sacramento, Inland Empire, etc etc.
@LucificNight
@LucificNight Жыл бұрын
Isn't "allowing people to purchase and take ownership of the area" how LA got into their current situation in the first place? I feel like although the language is always "allow", in truth, what people are asking for is to "prohibit"": "prohibit" the sale of property to non-residents, "prohibit" the ability of homeowners to sell to corporate entities, "prohibit" anything that raises prices, so that whoever is making these suggestions may afford it.
@the_aesthetic_city
@the_aesthetic_city Жыл бұрын
Thank you Mary! Agreeing with what you say :)
@VangoghsDoggo
@VangoghsDoggo 11 ай бұрын
The whole US is in need of this! We tore down beautiful Victorian old world architecture to build the very boxes in this video. Now, it's all we have with the old building few and far between. Where I live, they knocked down blocks of beautiful buildings to build a mall back in the 1970's. By the early 2000's it had been closed for quite some time. Then it was torn down and replaced by a high rise office building. Another box, just taller. They built a common town square by it-to "beautify" it. There isn't any shade, doesn't get used because between the building and the concrete, it's hotter than hell. No one wants to be there.
@sophiepooks2174
@sophiepooks2174 7 ай бұрын
@@VangoghsDoggo They are doing the same in Australia, Chinese and other developers demolishing old theaters and other buildings with character, to replace with concrete and glass high rise luxury apartments, so eventually only the wealthy can live in the city, they have already turned many streets into wind tunnels.
@goncaloteixeira8009
@goncaloteixeira8009 Жыл бұрын
Beauty is not a luxury, but a human need. Instant subscription, very much looking forward to seeing more from you
@meilinchan7314
@meilinchan7314 Жыл бұрын
Yes but beauty requires high upkeep. Any time you have corruption and money being siphoned away, all the beauty you can get will sooner or later become a burden.
@TheLemonBird
@TheLemonBird Жыл бұрын
@@meilinchan7314 not really, beauty is not expansive, often it is just a choice
@alexandraandritoi643
@alexandraandritoi643 Жыл бұрын
Same here
@LaLeoRonroneo
@LaLeoRonroneo 10 ай бұрын
“Beauty and dignity go hand in hand” wow! Thank you. It is abundantly clear. ❤
@SharpiesAreGreat
@SharpiesAreGreat Жыл бұрын
Great video! I'm an architect and I'm constantly fighting misconceptions amongst both the public and other people in the industry who think that good cities can't be built anymore. Please bring us more videos - I need fodder to convince them!
@javierpacheco8234
@javierpacheco8234 Жыл бұрын
Hi I'm also a student of architecture, and I support you, yes in our academia, they tend to dismiss anything related to the past is considered innovative according to them, being inspired and copying some of the past is not wrong , it's just loud opinion that wants to control the future and only want to see modern architecture be the winner, it's like a cult that exists but for modern or contemporary architecture. That's the biggest problem in architecture. The ignorance of modernists to accept styles and traditional methods.
@wandelgartking5446
@wandelgartking5446 Жыл бұрын
​@@javierpacheco8234 I see this "opinion" expressed all the time online by architecture studends, who have this arrogance and condescending attitude towards people who think differently. Glad you're not the same.
@marithusby8204
@marithusby8204 Жыл бұрын
Rooting for you!
@fspight28
@fspight28 Жыл бұрын
As an attorney, policy director and community development minded individual i say keep going. I pray in the future I can work with architects who think like you and want to create something
@Simon-je6ck
@Simon-je6ck Жыл бұрын
@@javierpacheco8234 You’ll be shocked how much modern architect were influenced by neo-classical architecture people tend to confuse modern architecture and real estate developper/social housing contractors buildings and many when given the ressources modern architects have made truly magnificent construction
@LorenzoLamarche
@LorenzoLamarche Жыл бұрын
Very refreshing to see these kind of projects being still made. Having studied at ETH Zurich, I never encountered during my 5 years of study any professor or lecturer talking about these kind of projects, or any classic style project in general. The point is that our universities are focusing only on modernist and post-modernist theories, where aesthetics are in oblivion. Old theories got lost, and architects now only talk about the political and technological side of architecture. Aesthetics and human psychology should be integrated into the debate, in order to promote humanscale architecture and improve the wellbeing of humans in the built environment.
@anaalves3658
@anaalves3658 Жыл бұрын
👏👏👏 what our homes and neighbourhoods look like has a huge impact on our quality of life, you don't need a massive amount of space, but you need good light, green spaces and a walkable city. I live in an apartment from 1979, but I love the huge windows it has a lot the natural light, we also have a private garden and across the road is a small but well kept public garden.
@rutgerkerpel306
@rutgerkerpel306 Жыл бұрын
I was interested in studying architecture, but indeed as you mention, those courses have been going on a route only caring about "efficiency" and destroying the old world (Which is why I lost interest), because we have "evolved" according to them. Nothing could be further from the truth, we as a people, have devolved!! Every time I read or hear things that were uttered by folks from hundreds of years ago, I marvel at their sincere , yet humble wisdom. The so called wise people of today cannot compare to them in the slightest!
@mikaelritvos9910
@mikaelritvos9910 Жыл бұрын
You are 100% right. Having the same problem in Sweden. Something needs to be done about that problem. It seems prevalent in most arch schools however.
@kora4185
@kora4185 Жыл бұрын
I go as far as say that ‘pragmatic’ mentalities like these are quite dangerous. It treats people as cattle, like all that we need to survive is just the necessary, so we either start dreaming about leaving our home, constantly romanticizing about the past, or even blaming the emptiness we feel on those who have more. It’s a recipe for social conflicts I think.
@OnlyOnePlaylist
@OnlyOnePlaylist Жыл бұрын
Having also studied at ETH, I must say that Swiss modern architecture is rather "dull", a bit too minimalistic an soulless at times
@Fee581
@Fee581 Жыл бұрын
Some of the buildings look a bit kitsch, but many of them are nice. Overall, a great improvement. This is a step to reach the cultural revolution we need to bring back traditional architecture and beauty. I'm sure future projects will be even better.
@the_aesthetic_city
@the_aesthetic_city Жыл бұрын
Indeed - it is a bit kitschy, not going to deny that. But the whole experience feels right, and that is already a great improvement. Also, it proves the point that traditional architecture works. Just imagine what happens if the level goes up even further!
@Fee581
@Fee581 Жыл бұрын
@@the_aesthetic_city What do you think is the best way to get a beautiful building without spending too much? A concrete skeleton with an artificial/cast stone facade? Or maybe cast stone would still look a bit fake? Would a brick facade be better? Or idk: a full concrete building with just some decoration on like some stucco/some brick or even some stone?
@Fee581
@Fee581 Жыл бұрын
@@tomassakalauskas2856thank you for the comment I somehow agree :) but a beautiful traditional building can be built in a few time, especially something quite simple (like a simple traditional home). There is a beautiful eclectic/romanesque church near to my home which was built from 1927 to 1930.
@dresdenkiller
@dresdenkiller Жыл бұрын
I would have this kitsch a hundred times over a Bauhaus abomination
@MrReedling
@MrReedling Жыл бұрын
@@Fee581 Traditionalist buildings are actually not that expensive as most of people believes. That traditionalist architecture is too expensive to build is the most common counter argument modernists use, but it does not explain how historically medieval peasants were able to afford to live in more aesthetically beutiful buildings than those we have today, even though we live in the most technically proggressive and wealthy time in humanitys history. One might argue that the materials and the techniques are too expensive but materials actually only make up a small fraction of a buildings value nowadays. The cost of buildings in our day is artificially inflated by the extremely unethical housing market, and almost the entire cost of buying apartments and such are a consequence of inflation and not the actual cost of the materials. Furthermore we have more modern techniques than what the people of the past could even dream of. Obviosly it would be easier for us, with our advanced machinery and digitalisation to construct craftmanship than what the people from the past had to do with manual labour and simple tools. Furthermore traditionalist architecture is way more sustainable than modern architecture. Concrete ages like milk and needs constant renovations and repaintings to look fresh and to hold, but stone ages like fine wine. The production of concrete is also very enviorment demanding, and concrete production is one of the highest contributors to greenhouse gas emissions in the world. Stone is much more enviormentally friendly to use, and as I mentioned does not need to be replaced every 30 years like concrete. That traditionalist architecture is expensive is nothing but an EXCUSE that was constructed by the general population to explain why our cities have become so ugly and to cover up a problem that is actually philosphical, yes that’s right. The problem with traditionalist architecture is not the costs, but the philosophies engrained deep in our society that started to take shape in the early 20th century. I believe what we need to change right now is not costs or economically related questions, but philosophical ones.
@ks_ig2728
@ks_ig2728 Жыл бұрын
I hope America and other nations who made the mistake of going for grey slab buildings follow suit. There are so many historic sights in cities like Houston, Los Angeles, and even St. Louis that were demolished to make way for parking lots and strip malls. I wish to see these city centers be rebuilt with mixed use buildings soon.
@mindyourbusinessxoxo
@mindyourbusinessxoxo Жыл бұрын
Keep dreaming. They won't even pass bills for infrastructure, despite having a rating of D+ And this type of development isn't profitable so that's another roadblock there
@marcobelli6856
@marcobelli6856 11 ай бұрын
A dream Brother😍😍
@James_Original
@James_Original 11 ай бұрын
Only small
@BebeDaull
@BebeDaull 9 ай бұрын
It happened in our city, too. They've destroyed so much of the character and warmth.
@spinflux
@spinflux 5 ай бұрын
Oh but it’s not just grey. Think about the beautiful ubiquity of the burnt orange, muted pale army green, and school bus yellow! Sometimes all on one new building’s metal siding!
@alexvt6733
@alexvt6733 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic video - so encouraging to see. What Pemezec did by adding beautiful ornamental plants was also done all over Singapore to boost morale, under an extremely pragmatic prime minister. Not only did this help Singapore; it also inspired other Asian cities to do the same, even competitively. Even if beauty is a goal in its own right, it pays off!
@the_aesthetic_city
@the_aesthetic_city Жыл бұрын
Thank you Alex!!
@the_aesthetic_city
@the_aesthetic_city Жыл бұрын
And indeed, Singapore is an interesting example in that regard
@ruta8591
@ruta8591 Жыл бұрын
Pemezec is one of the most corrupted mayor in the Haut de Seine
@matthewvp8507
@matthewvp8507 Жыл бұрын
Yeah I’m always amazed at how beautiful Singapore is! Not just the historical city centre but also the new constructions further out. The emphasis on greenery, along with lovely parks and waterways, really contrasts nicely to the apartment buildings. All the convenience of a city with its excellent public transport but it doesn’t feel crowded and claustrophobic
@jhey5639
@jhey5639 Жыл бұрын
I noticed this about Singapore and LOVE it! ❤
@Olivia-bh7vs
@Olivia-bh7vs Жыл бұрын
“Beauty and human dignity go hand in hand” that’s so good! You have skilfully clarified my abstract feelings and inspired me to make something today 🕊️✨
@bretagnejean2410
@bretagnejean2410 Жыл бұрын
Not sure. Rich buy beauty so this city ll begin for rich people.
@juliamacdonald3767
@juliamacdonald3767 Жыл бұрын
You are right. Making people live in an ugly place is the ultimate and most insidious injustice.
@the_aesthetic_city
@the_aesthetic_city Жыл бұрын
Amen!
@secrets.295
@secrets.295 Жыл бұрын
A lot of European homes, their exterior is so beautiful. The interior is ridiculously ugly. I would much rather live in a home where the exterior is ugly but interior is beautiful.
@pelezadossantos1309
@pelezadossantos1309 Жыл бұрын
@itstaynaabreu communist moment
@supaman6713
@supaman6713 Жыл бұрын
​@@secrets.295no, both need to be good, otherwise it's no deal. If the outside is ugly, noone will go outside, at least noone will be happy to go outside
@t60-flying95
@t60-flying95 Жыл бұрын
@@the_aesthetic_city honestly I dont like it... its not worth it if the people get displaced... word from a socialist/keynesian capitalist. actually I hate what they did, they turned a popular town into a capitalist decadent hipster paradise... the paradise being mostly due to the greenery... but well now we can sleep happily knowing we destroyed the lively hoods of the noble proletariat by kicking them out by thus making space for the bourgeoisie
@johnl7443
@johnl7443 Жыл бұрын
Urban planners and the public can learn so much from visiting charming villages in France. Tourists flock to these picturesque villages because the aesthetics makes them happy. The scale and shapes of the buildings, and the pathways in between, along with the materials, details, and landscaping create a mood that people love and encourages walking and interacting with people. Contrary to this is the horrible grid pattern for streets that are prevalent throughout the United States where people drive for miles to visit look-alike malls.
@lucifertheharpist
@lucifertheharpist 10 ай бұрын
And, at those malls, you get treated like an absolute criminal if you linger around and try to enjoy your inalienable God-given right to free expression and commerce in any form that doesn't directly and immediately profit them financially.
@ankelohmann9714
@ankelohmann9714 9 ай бұрын
There are charming villages outside France too. 🙂
@lucifertheharpist
@lucifertheharpist 9 ай бұрын
@@pcsullog Yes, and evidently all that "European Architecture" was built by Muslims, before the Christians and Jews took over and won the war and erased history and rewrote the history books to favor Christians and Jews, denying the truth of #Tartaria.
@amelieroger5453
@amelieroger5453 Жыл бұрын
OMG I've been living in le Plessis Robinson since 2018 ! Thank you for the shoutout! What a brilliant quality video ! I've learnt so much. So funny to recognize the spots you filmed. It IS a lovely town to live in. You should see at Christmas time the magic of the parades, market and fireworks. Loads of families and children. And the gerdening team is so clever. Every season it's like a painting of flowers and colors and gorgeous floral smells.
@MrDeicide1
@MrDeicide1 Жыл бұрын
The World is wonderful, when you kick out the poor...
@dm4859
@dm4859 Жыл бұрын
I can imagine Christmas there!
@backintimealwyn5736
@backintimealwyn5736 Жыл бұрын
@@MrDeicide1 you have'nt listened to the video , they have'nt kicked out anyone, it's all about making beautifule things for the poor andit's the proof that when this happens, they just don't stay poor much longer.
@MrDeicide1
@MrDeicide1 Жыл бұрын
@@backintimealwyn5736 No, you haven't listened
@oasean
@oasean Жыл бұрын
@@MrDeicide1: The video indicated that, already a shrinking group, those in "social housing" were offered to buy homes at low costs, subsided by profits on pricey homes, and that some 80% accepted the offers.
@rolloxra670
@rolloxra670 Жыл бұрын
Having trees everywhere is very important to embellish our cities
@ACEsParkJunheeWreckedMeHard
@ACEsParkJunheeWreckedMeHard Жыл бұрын
Yeah thats why I love living in Europe. I talked about something like this to Americans and they said they mostly only get green in the cities if its a tiny town or if there is a park close to their home, but barly any trees in the streets of big cities and I was shooked, cause in Germany you find at least 1 tree in each street and some streets have a tree like all 5m away or there are trees between buildings etc.
@and__lam1152
@and__lam1152 Жыл бұрын
And moving the Muslims out?
@littleantukins4415
@littleantukins4415 11 ай бұрын
Vines and trees
@daydays12
@daydays12 11 ай бұрын
So true...peoole love mature trees...which attract wildlife
@sometf2player752
@sometf2player752 10 ай бұрын
@@ACEsParkJunheeWreckedMeHard I live in canada and theres definatly a decent amout of trees here espeically in suburban areas some areas almost look like a mini forest and im still pretty close to the city
@null_grim
@null_grim Жыл бұрын
It brings me so much hope in these seemingly hopeless times of modernist monstrosities. Amazing work.
@tripanzo
@tripanzo Жыл бұрын
It also brings me hope that politicians actually care for us
@carkawalakhatulistiwa
@carkawalakhatulistiwa Жыл бұрын
@@tripanzo You think the person living in the building you said is ugly. can buy a house in the new build. who stood over the house you destroyed
@tripanzo
@tripanzo Жыл бұрын
@@carkawalakhatulistiwa Your comment doesn't make any sense? You increase the living standards by building better and proper houses for people in poverty. People in Norway who still live relatively poor doesn't live in in crappy houses for example.
@carkawalakhatulistiwa
@carkawalakhatulistiwa Жыл бұрын
@@tripanzo not all countries have oil money like norway. and more people live in slum housing with an area of ​​under 5 square meters per capital
@carkawalakhatulistiwa
@carkawalakhatulistiwa Жыл бұрын
@@tripanzo you can still build a new home elsewhere. and increase the number of paskon houses. but don't destroy 10.000 poor people's houses to build 1.000 rich people's houses. and let 8.000 people live rent houses. and 1.000 homeless people. you morons . only to increase the value of your own property
@monicaconsigliereLavieenfleur
@monicaconsigliereLavieenfleur Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this video. I always wonder why in the last 60 years beautiful cities have been ruined by awful new buildings. This is really inspiring.
@markuss3735
@markuss3735 Жыл бұрын
I am an architect and have been of the same opinion for a long time. I am glad you made this video. It will help people to understand this better and hopefully implement it more often.
@furTron
@furTron Жыл бұрын
but what does this video bring? Most houses are built up by bloodthirsty investors, who care only and only about profit. Houses are a part of human's infrastructure, and infrastructure should not be profit oriented. It's valid for any kind of infrastructure - starting with water/electricity supply, through street, healthcare, up to public transit. Sell you infrastructure to a private oversee investor - he will abuse the fact, that you are addict to the infrastructure and will squeeze the last penny out of it. Because what else will you do? become homeless? Go to a different hospital during heart attract because "if you don't like out price, go to someone else"? Here capitalism cannot work. We need to start to build houses to live in, not to make money.
@lemontleeyh5823
@lemontleeyh5823 Жыл бұрын
they shouldnt, they ruined the lives of so many families they "rehoused" into 1 room flats
@Quotenwagnerianer
@Quotenwagnerianer Жыл бұрын
@@furTron That sounds good in theory. But in practice prices for housing have gone up so much, mostly due to necessity to make buildings more energy efficient to help reduce the carbon footprint, that building them purely with tax money, without the money of private investors who look to make a profit, has become impossible.
@furTron
@furTron Жыл бұрын
@@Quotenwagnerianer I cannot agree at all. I can give you examples of landlords, who did literally nothing to their building, but still increased rent about 50% Same with speculators, who buy apartment, leave their empty and sell after few years, without even changing anything. and then check, how things work in Vienna, where around 60% building belong to non-profit organisation, who offer beauty well quality affordable apartments. Ride of greedy investors - things will work better
@Quotenwagnerianer
@Quotenwagnerianer Жыл бұрын
@@furTron" I can give you examples of landlords, who did literally nothing to their building, but still increased rent about 50%" What has that to do with the cost to build houses? Nothing.
@steveau2
@steveau2 Жыл бұрын
Hi Rueben not only was it great to meet you at IMCL in Le Plessis-Robinson last year, but you have saved me a ton of work by producing such a wonderful and informative video. Instead of a post-conference report, I will just show your video to my team! One point though, "gentrification" is not in itself a problem. After all, how can making a place nicer be a problem? The correct answer is that gentrification often leads to "displacement" and it is displacement that is the problem. As you explain in the video, Mayor (now Senator) Philippe Pemezec and his council, minimized displacement by supporting existing social housing tenants to purchase the rebuilt (or in some cases renovated) apartments. 80% took up the offer (and then re-elected him - why wouldn't they!). So, these families have now moved from working class to middle class AND live in a wonderful place AND have an appreciating asset that their children can inherit. (BTW, I saw plenty of teenagers around the place, but never any indication of anti-social behavior.) Urban planning is not about laying out roads and utilities and managing construction, it is about building happy and healthy communities. The rest is just a means to an end.
@the_aesthetic_city
@the_aesthetic_city Жыл бұрын
Thank you Steve! And indeed, that is a very good observation you make. I will take it with me for future videos. And it was great to meet you there!
@willmako5009
@willmako5009 Жыл бұрын
As far as i know, gentrification induces replacement either way, because the land value rises (so you get a higher land tax, which they have to pay because they now own their apartment) and the price of things does too. I'm an urban planning student and it really sucks to know that any improvement of conditions leads to higher prices.
@SupGaillac
@SupGaillac Жыл бұрын
@@willmako5009 It feels like it's because such example is still so rare. I'd bet if this trend become more widespread, there would be less displacement, while everybody would be happier (or at least feel better in the very place they live)
@mdhazeldine
@mdhazeldine Жыл бұрын
@@willmako5009 On the flip side, regeneration of a town can (or should) lead to more, new and better paying jobs for those on low incomes, that then gives them the means to keep living there.
@Enden31
@Enden31 Жыл бұрын
Gentrification is not the fact that a city becomes more beautiful but the phenomenon of displacement of former inhabitants. Though I do agree that the key takeaway is that it is possible to make a place significantly more attractive while limiting gentrification
@armorbearer9702
@armorbearer9702 Жыл бұрын
I am glad you mentioned the weakness in the tower in the park design(8:33). People have no incentive to take care of a place that others can easily vandalize and face no repercussions.
@sgrace6813
@sgrace6813 6 күн бұрын
Although it is modern/newishly built, it looks so beautifully old fashioned. I am in love with hearing the narrator's voice.
@Ecto25
@Ecto25 Жыл бұрын
I live in here. This morning I wake up, open KZbin, see a thumbnail clearly showing one of the many houses I see everyday. This video is amazing and really well made, thank you for giving that tiny city attention, you really made my day!
@cocolasticot9027
@cocolasticot9027 Жыл бұрын
I grew up near that town and went through it regularly as the whole city center was built. I found it so weird and ugly during its development, as you could see columns and pediments made out of grey concrete. It looked faked, like a Disneyland park under construction. But I ended up liking the final result as I got used to it. And if there still are some kitsch or over the top designs here and there, the whole city looks quite good and indeed feels very pleasant, especially on foot. Like shopping there from store to store feels like living in a village, very cosy. I realized after your video that during the development I could still see the old ugly blocks next to it, and if I didn't find them nice by any means, I wasn't as shocked by it as thIs new project. It made me realize how much accustomed we can get even to the ugliest things, to the point it's difficult to imagine something else.
@HickoryDickory86
@HickoryDickory86 Жыл бұрын
It seems to be a rule that you begin to be drawn to that to which you are accustomed. If you've grown accustomed to drab ugliness, you tend to find beauty garish. Like how if we've become accustomed to darkness, even a simple lamp can be blindingly bright if turned on suddenly.
@williamk.3814
@williamk.3814 Жыл бұрын
I especially liked the conclusion that beautiful places can be planned and created purposefully. France really shows us here how it works. It does not always have to be empty modernism. I hope that this way of thinking about architecture will spread further in Europe. I myself come from East Germany. Besides a lot of traditional and historical architecture, we also have a lot of blocks from the socialist era. They are really nice and cheap apartments! But the environment, the feeling of living and the social togetherness is often much worse than in other parts of the city. I hope that in the future we will plan our living environment more lovingly. Architecture and human dignity really go hand in hand.
@newtonia-uo4889
@newtonia-uo4889 Жыл бұрын
I mean, Paris itself was planned and planned with aesthetics, traditions, view lines, recreation, and public services in mind and the city was incredibly beautiful.
@varoonnone7159
@varoonnone7159 Жыл бұрын
​@@newtonia-uo4889 Exactly "was". The new buildings in Paris aren't exactly very beautiful be it the New Opera or the Tour Montparnasse
@YehudaLion
@YehudaLion Жыл бұрын
Amen
@brb4903
@brb4903 Жыл бұрын
there really aren't many new buildings in Paris@@varoonnone7159
@warthoggoulags1679
@warthoggoulags1679 10 ай бұрын
@@varoonnone7159 he's talking about late 19th century Paris
@iamsovereign1369
@iamsovereign1369 Жыл бұрын
Too often we don’t even realise (or we ignore) what is wrong, until we experience something that feels right. I think many people (including my self) have not only enjoyed these videos demonstrating positive and beautiful change, but we have also been surprisingly moved by them. I think for too long we have been taught that doing things the right way, the good way, is naive and unprofitable, or only for the wealthy. Doing things right has its own rewards that are much longer lasting and and have a deeper impact than we realise. I think that perhaps humanity is beginning to realise what it has been missing and also recognising what is actually possible. Thank you for these videos. I look forward to seeing many many more, knowing that at least in these places people are getting it right and will hopefully be examples that will spread far and wide! 🖖🏼❤️
@annoguz4770
@annoguz4770 9 ай бұрын
Well said 👍💜
@GKCanton
@GKCanton Жыл бұрын
Similar development happened on the satellite towns outside Montpellier in France. Lattes, Port Arianne and Port Marianne, exactly the same ideology and it really does make a difference. I would move bak there to retire in a heartbeat.
@the_aesthetic_city
@the_aesthetic_city Жыл бұрын
Yes, a lot is happening in that area. More municipalities have seen the opportunity. A lot of other countries, hopefully, follow at some point. It felt really peaceful in Le Plessis-Robinson. How big a difference architecture and green can make!
@rznkiller7723
@rznkiller7723 Жыл бұрын
Hello, are these projects all neo classical ? Because it would be a shame to not keep the regional architecture
@jakubzov
@jakubzov Жыл бұрын
​@@rznkiller7723 they are keeping the regional architecture trend from my understanding.
@redwithblackstripes
@redwithblackstripes Жыл бұрын
The Montpellier area is a mixed bag, Lattes/port Arianne and Antigone despite their faults are genuine attempts at hinting at some sort of regional or beautiful architecture but others like Ovalie/Saint-Jean de Vedas are really cash grab feeling poor quality buildings that are just colorful block towers, and port Marianne despite its "natural" vast areas is a kind of a neo post modern thing not really rooted in anything although it looks decently built.
@drac124
@drac124 Жыл бұрын
So its gentrification done by government. Interesting
@Vinnie92350
@Vinnie92350 Жыл бұрын
My hometown. I am born there in 1995 and lived there all my life until some years ago when, as a broke student, I had, to follow my parents who moved out of the city as my father retired. We previously lived in a staff housing unit which was probably one of the first buildings built according to this plan. You are rigth when you say that it is an amazing city to grow up and live in. But gentrification is a real thing in Le Plessis-Robinson. Literally all the friends I grew up with have left the town because they could not afford to decently live there exept in their parent's housing. Of course, people who bought their housing years ago are doing just fine, but many people who were tenants of their housing had to go into exile in other cities because of the prices. Low and Middle-classes who didn't succeed to have access to social housing (or don't want to) are the most impacted. Today, buying or renting a housing in Le Plessis-robinson is extremely expensive. Of course, this phenomenon affects the entire Paris region, but few places have seen their prices rise as much and as quickly as Le Plessis-Robinson. It's very cool to see what the city has become, but me and my friends have to admit that it's frustrating not being able to live in the town where we grew up and consider as our home. By the way, although the modern buildings built in the last decades are beyond magnificent and make a big part of the city's charm , I have always thought that some of the buildings built from the 30's to the 80's also had their place in the city, and I miss some of them which no longer exist. I even think that you judge a little too harshly the "white blocks" you show and criticize in your video. Sure, they are from another time, but, If I remember correctly, these are totally decent privately owned housings. And they are even pretty expensive now given the price of real estate in Le Plessis-Robinson. A friend of mine and my doctor's office were in those, and the inside is in fact quite nice. And I always thought that the outside was calm and pleasant. By the way, the buildings that were destroyed to create the new garden city had very nice private vegetable gardens. And even some of my friends who lived in the poorest part of the city (just after the market and the cultural center), which is almost 100% social housing, found the place they where living in pretty calm and pleasant (even thought I have to admit that security has greatly improved there since the end of the 2000's). Overall, the newer parts of the city aren't the only nice places to live in, even if I understand why people find blocks ugly, after all, my parents hated Le Plessis-Robinson when they moved in in the 80's. Now that I think about it, in pair with the architecture, what has always made Le Plessis-robinson stand out to me and my friends compared to it's neighboring towns is how calm it is. The layout of the buildings (even the blocks), the green spaces, the parks, the trees. I never felt it was as crowded and busy as other cities of the area. It seemed more aerated. Finally, I will say that all the changes made are not necessarily perfect. Some new buildings are much larger and imposing than those they replace, and sometimes replace spaces that used to be more open and aerated. But, surely, I miss my city and is very nostalgic about it. PS : It seems to me that the first social housing in France was built at Le Plessis-Robinson. Also, concerning the architecture of the city during its communist era. I'm not sure that the communists are the only ones to blame. It was what was globally built in France at the time.
@longiusaescius2537
@longiusaescius2537 Жыл бұрын
Huh
@newtonia-uo4889
@newtonia-uo4889 Жыл бұрын
the goal is to make all living spaces like this. and tbh, its not just communist, its any materialists ideology which ignores the aesthetical and spiritual dimension of a person's life, both communism and capitalism are to blame for the utilitarian ugliness that separates the person from his home and breeds poor morals into people.
@humanbeing1675
@humanbeing1675 Жыл бұрын
I recommend to visit the former socialist countries of central and eastern Europe. Huge areas with "white blocks" and they all have the same problems...
@upnorth2421
@upnorth2421 Жыл бұрын
​@@humanbeing1675 those blocks of flats where built everywhere in Europe in the 60s and 70s. Had to do with urbanisation and incredibly naive believe of new materials and techniques.
@D.Appeltofft
@D.Appeltofft Жыл бұрын
This is interesting. Ideals do indeed change. My mom told me we were offered an apartment in Stockholm Old Town when I was born and we needed more space. Apartments in the city were very worn down and unmodern. Mom turned that offer down " hot and cold water separated, two stairs, etc.." Today it's worth millions, of course... We moved to a newly built block, typical of the '60's. If I have anything bad to say about this Paris project, it would be that it's planned to appear as it has developed naturally. A city centre doesn't evolve that way. It is nice. But there is something... clinical about it. Just an example - cities tend to spread along shores and waterways - not the other way around. It's a bit like "The Truman Show"
@NicolasProix
@NicolasProix Жыл бұрын
This is REALLY interesting. As a suburbian Parisian, I lived in some neighbouring communes of Le Plessis-Robinson during many years, but rather at the very begininng of this huge work. At this time, the common feeling in the surrounding communes was that it was ridiculous or useless, just a plaster on the commune's image, which was from “bizarre” to “unpleasant”. Moreover, it wasn't considered as a “real” commune, due especially to the elevation difference and the absence of real link between the different parts. We didn't think it could change so dramatically from this awful reputation to anything else. What is relevant, too, is that many other communes in the same part of the suburbs of Paris have similar architectural programs, including a reflexion on urban planning and design (Châtillon, Antony, Montrouge, and of course Issy-les-Moulineaux), although maybe not so comprehensive. But they seemed to be more able to realize such programs, due to their position, their financial health, their size. I'm really impressed by what have been done ; this isn't only a example, but it will become a model in the current paradigm in Île-de-France's planning, due to many factors : the extension of the metro is the most known, but the great work done about the tram counts, too ; and of course the radical change of cycling infrastructure. And many changes about the regulation in building. Thank you and keep producing such contents !
@elephantintheroom5678
@elephantintheroom5678 Жыл бұрын
Cycling and tree shaded paths make towns and cities so much better!
@asiersanz8941
@asiersanz8941 Жыл бұрын
Isn't there in Brazilian municipalities a Master Plan that must be aproved and complied with even if the council members change every four years? My city, Bilbao in the Basque Country, has gone during decades through big changes following a Master Plan, and every mayor and councillor has to follow it.
@gigiatlas2364
@gigiatlas2364 Жыл бұрын
Quand tu sais pas le dire en anglais, dis le en français avec l'accent anglais, ça passe. Commune 🙄🙄
@spudspuddy
@spudspuddy Жыл бұрын
communism is toxic, no difference to fascism you only have to look at china to see how disgusting it is
@puccaland
@puccaland Жыл бұрын
@@kachi9293 pile of fakenews and conspiracy theories. Take your racist narrative somewhere else.
@saimalishahid1406
@saimalishahid1406 Ай бұрын
So glad this channel exists that appreciates beauty in architecture and it's great self evident importance
@JohnnyFD
@JohnnyFD Жыл бұрын
This was awesome. I hope more cities do this.
@homuchoghoma6789
@homuchoghoma6789 10 ай бұрын
Так пойдет ? kzbin.info/www/bejne/m4aucnSoj9t5edUsi=AYr8Zk9uNaRyBLCq
@abdamit
@abdamit Жыл бұрын
All of Europe should take a look at this and replicate this in as many cities as possible!
@carkawalakhatulistiwa
@carkawalakhatulistiwa Жыл бұрын
This home Not for poor people
@akina3742
@akina3742 Жыл бұрын
most cities in europe does look like this though?? the concrete commie block looking cities only exist in russia or in former ussr countries.. few exceptions for sure, but this type of architectire literally been the thing in europe for like over 2000 years or something...
@abdamit
@abdamit Жыл бұрын
@@akina3742 the second world war destroyed a whole bunch of buildings like that. they were mostly replaced by "modern" buildings that don't resemble this design at all. I know what I'm talking about, I am german.
@abdamit
@abdamit Жыл бұрын
@@carkawalakhatulistiwa yea, you might be right with that...
@carkawalakhatulistiwa
@carkawalakhatulistiwa Жыл бұрын
@@abdamit a public housing area with 40,000 low-cost apartments torn down replaced with 5,000 luxury apartments complete with a new shopping center + anti-homeless design installed in the gardens surrounding the apartment
@Mishupafmaf
@Mishupafmaf Жыл бұрын
This brings great joy to my heart! Humans definitely deserve to live in the most beautiful and nourishing environments, and anything less than is exactly as you say; unethical. This project represents a great step in the direction of rehabilitating so much of the ugliness we have around us today!
@catinthehat906
@catinthehat906 Жыл бұрын
As recognised by the late British philosopher Roger Scruton. "There is a deep human need for beauty and if you ignore that need in architecture, your buildings will not last."
@shazzshank6393
@shazzshank6393 Жыл бұрын
say thanks to USSR. They are terrible designers..
@alexandrewalle4841
@alexandrewalle4841 Жыл бұрын
no worries those monstruosity still rises, in fact, not far far way from this city of Plessis-Robinson which i often cross, they built a "scientific hub" called "the Greater Paris" in wich they builds ten of building of whom no soul or anything close could be percieved. you can check for yourself. So it only take the will power from one man to go from horrible to beautiful
@jelly.212
@jelly.212 Жыл бұрын
@@shazzshank6393 no
@Cyrus_T_Laserpunch
@Cyrus_T_Laserpunch 10 ай бұрын
This was nice to see, so often everyone is so focused on the efficiency of human housing and keeping it as cost-effective as possible that we forget the human element.
@Raphael-2
@Raphael-2 Жыл бұрын
This is AMAZING !! Especially as a French, I hope this kind of project expands everywhere. Even, not necessarily this beautiful but , a fair amount. Because what you said about beauty at the end is very true.
@gontrandjojo9747
@gontrandjojo9747 Жыл бұрын
Faudrait que les gens arrêtent de voter pour des maires communistes (ou mélenchonistes) qui transforment tout ce qu'ils touchent en poubelles à ciel ouvert...
@christianterraes8334
@christianterraes8334 Жыл бұрын
Absolument. Les gens ont besoin de beauté peut-être que dans certaines banlieues cela contribuera à avoir un petit peu moins de problèmes. Encore faut une justice implacable.
@thunderbird1921
@thunderbird1921 Жыл бұрын
It's time to take back our cities all across the western world. No more dreary "commie blocks", give us something beautiful and human, or at least more styled and lively! Greetings from the US.
@viviennedunbar3374
@viviennedunbar3374 Жыл бұрын
I live in the USA in a suburb of Seattle. In 2000 I lived a little bit closer in, about 5 miles away in a community that was on the shores of Lake Washington (the largest Lake in the Seattle area). While living there an amazing opportunity came available where a large piece of land next to the Lake and a big public beach park became available for redevelopment. I had 3 very small children at the time so wasn’t paying attention to how the city made choices about this area. They decided on an “urban village” and there was a lot of talk about New Urbanism. Unfortunately what got built to me was a completely wasted opportunity and a scandal really compared to into potential. For a start, one of the largest parcels right near the lake had a big retail pharmacy with car park built on it. A “big box” style building typical of America, ugly, one story and featureless. This would have been the perfect location for restaurants, cafes and small businesses with outside seating so the community could enjoy the park and lake views. Then the actual mixed-use buildings of apartments and retail were all the same height, about six stories with flat roofs and flat facades with nothing to break up the monotony. They also didn’t have what would seem so obvious, which was good sized balconies for the residents to enjoy the lake view. The result was dull, prison block aesthetics with a wind tunnel effect as there was nothing to break up the tall flat blocks. I was frankly shocked and disappointed and couldn’t believe how short sighted this was. Instead of spurring a beautiful redevelopment (as large numbers of people move into the area and we need more housing) it was really uninspiring. People like ourselves who may have been open to living in the area now had no interest. Why the huge pharmacy got to front the development instead of be further back (if it had to be built) summed up the entire lack of will by the city and developers for a vision and commitment to beauty and livability.
@carlosruiz184
@carlosruiz184 Жыл бұрын
The problem is that usually politicians are the ones that make this type of decisions, and politicians do not seem to have any other prospect in mind than their own careers and bank accounts. So sadly the best plots end up in the hands of the best bet…
@gingermonette7455
@gingermonette7455 Жыл бұрын
Unless the local politicians have vision, the developer will push his/her agenda which is completely financially driven. They build, make their money and move on. What do they care if it is attractive or not? And perhaps a little money under the table to local politicians can buy them more leeway to increase their profit...
@tryangle-by-steve
@tryangle-by-steve Жыл бұрын
@@gingermonette7455but what I don’t understand, with better development and housing - the investment is much more stable and can generate on more profit in the long term. So why do developers not invest in better designs? It’s the mentality of fast ROI instead of stable and consistent Income
@georgesotiroff5080
@georgesotiroff5080 Жыл бұрын
I am reminded of an acquaintance who declared that should he ever have his way both banks and pharmacies would be forbidden to occupy corner lots.
@luminitasaviuc4243
@luminitasaviuc4243 Жыл бұрын
I got goosebumps. I have been thinking and feeling this way for years, knowing that a human being is a noble being that deserves to be dignified and live in conditions that are worthy of him. And that beauty is not a luxury but the truth of who we are, the nature of our being. Thus, to have that beauty be reflected in our thinking, being, and the world around us, that is only natural... And now, seeing this and hearing your commentary at the end... I am in awe. I knew I wasn't just imagining things... And I am so happy that this is already a reality in this world. Because I know I will see it manifested in my own home town and country and other places in the world. People deserve to see beauty reflected outwards because this beauty has always been housed within us and it's not a luxury, only the truth of who we all are. Thank you!
@bruhbruh-us6gl
@bruhbruh-us6gl Жыл бұрын
I know that feeling. To know something is right on a internal, instinctive level, but not having the empirical reasoning behind this knowledge, only to then find it. It’s like finding a treasure.
@meongau8838
@meongau8838 9 ай бұрын
Though I’m not doing anything related to architecture, I found this video extremely informative and helpful to remind us of the importance of beauty, which has been faded recently. Please have more videos like this in the future.
@francoisvillette8973
@francoisvillette8973 Жыл бұрын
I enjoy living in Le Plessis Robinson. The best city environment I have ever been. Thanks for sharing this video 👍
@hibasobh
@hibasobh Жыл бұрын
I hope that more cities adopt traditional architecture, it really has a warm charm to it.
@AnthonyBerthier-i5s
@AnthonyBerthier-i5s Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this very informative video. I have been living in Le Plessis-Robinson for 4 years and I can assure you that the quality of life is incomparable. We have the feeling of living in a small village. We have the advantages of a big city without the inconveniences. The city also focuses on a very important family policy, with quality schools, nurseries, and activities that make you want to stay. Obviously, this tranquility comes at a price and real estate prices are skyrocketing. But it is a real pleasure to live here.
@haaxeu6501
@haaxeu6501 Жыл бұрын
Real estate prices are skyrocketing because this city is sadly not the norm. If only most of the country was built like this.
@paavoilves5416
@paavoilves5416 Жыл бұрын
That's very understandable. It seems like a really nice place to live so people are willing to pay higher prices. Nice places will always become expensive as soon as people realize how nice they are.
@shadowrock
@shadowrock Ай бұрын
Here in Romania we have a port city called Constanța. In the last 5 years the mayor kept renovating the historical buildings and built brand new buildings in neoclassical style and they look amazing! He is planning to build more. Other european countries are doing the same thing! This is amazing.
@certinho76
@certinho76 Жыл бұрын
Bonjour, as an American, I can say that I wish our cities were planned/redeveloped so beautifully. I can say that with envy because having lived in NYC I know that the whole "Concrete Jungle" thing is real. Also, now that I reside in Western Massachusetts(rural area) about 2 hours from Boston I can say that Boston is generally prettier than NYC because it has emulated Europe to higher degree. First English building then French!
@azulaquaza4916
@azulaquaza4916 Жыл бұрын
No, don’t copy Europeans, we must build our own style. We aren’t Canada, and didn’t breakaway from Europeans just to live like them. Let them have their own styles.
@RedHanded1969
@RedHanded1969 Жыл бұрын
To someone fr 3rd world, many American cities are quite exquisite: many parts of SF, Boston & N Chicago, so does some parts of NYC.. The problem however has to do w bigotry & fossil fuel lobby. It create culture now thats difficult to chg..
@rishavkumar1250
@rishavkumar1250 Жыл бұрын
@@azulaquaza4916 most of you guys are European descendants, you aren't that different from your counterparts in Europe
@azulaquaza4916
@azulaquaza4916 Жыл бұрын
@@rishavkumar1250 Only the white portion of Americans are European descendants. The Latinos, Blacks, and Asians that make up the rest are not.
@KyrilPG
@KyrilPG Жыл бұрын
​@@azulaquaza4916Sadly, the "let's have our own style" is more than often used in America to perpetuate low density / single family detached home and endless low density car centric urban sprawl. It's a very bad situation that bankrupts cities and ruins the environment and climate, on top of all the social problems that the isolation of single family homes creates. And if you think that in Canada they live like Europeans, you certainly never set foot in Europe or Canada. Canada is very much car centric with typical North American urban sprawl, with only very tiny pockets of *slightly* European lifestyle. The only real difference in Canada is that they are more advanced on public transportation issues compared to the US. But it's still miles away from the level of transit development in Europe. As for urbanism, Canadian cities build high-rise condos and single family housing, quite different from European style multi-family mid-rise mixed-use denser neighborhoods. The mere mention of "15 minute city" principles creates a panic and unleashes wild conspiracy theories amongst many on both sides of the border (admittedly it's way worse in the US than in Canada). So, let's improve cities whatever the style. If we need to wait for a "US style" or "Canada style" architecture to be defined before making any changes, things will never improve. And frankly I don't see what's wrong with European style cities ; the US, Canada and every city can develop their own architectural styles while still following the European urbanism that works really well. No one's expecting a copy and paste of Paris' Haussmann or Barcelona's Eixample *architectures* in North America... But North American architectural variants of these cities' *urbanism* would be great. I'm really wondering what you meant by "to live like them", where and how do Canadians live like Europeans? Any European, even in the most European-like pockets in Canada will feel very much in North America...
@moalabi-
@moalabi- Жыл бұрын
Beauty and human dignity absolutely go hand in hand. Thank you for this-so glad I found your channel!
@carolina.helena
@carolina.helena Жыл бұрын
Great video! A tangible example that give us hope that, with will and planning, many more successful cases might bloom.
@the_aesthetic_city
@the_aesthetic_city Жыл бұрын
Thank you! There is a real path forward, I hope more planners start to see that
@mulogicbv6644
@mulogicbv6644 11 ай бұрын
Inspired by your video I visited le Plessis-robinson a few weeks ago. I had to be in the neighbourhood for business and took the opportunity to stay there for a few days. It was even nicer than I expected. Even in late November. Now the buildings are getting a bit older, they look less "Disney" and more real life. I had my car with me but walking around was a pleasure, for it enabled us to take the walkways and paths between the buildings. The project of le Plessis-robinson has inspired many other locations in that area, to build new projects in this "Néo-Traditionnel" style as you can clearly see when driving from le Plessis-robinson towards the centre of Paris.
@chelin7023
@chelin7023 Жыл бұрын
The vision of the Mayor and architects plus the tenacity over the years, makes this town a labor of love … many would benefit with the ultimate place to live, following suit to this amazing project.
@GregBallotepitech
@GregBallotepitech Жыл бұрын
I hope this happens to many other cities, but unfortunately, this town is very close to Paris in a very high value area (on the axis between Versailles and Paris). It was a viable candidate for high urbanism investment, thanks to a mostly unexploited potential. Many cities that would need that kind of refurbishment don't have that much concealed potential.
@xpsxps1339
@xpsxps1339 Жыл бұрын
I agree, though; it's evident we can create/build towns that would be interesting to live in and even visited by tourists if we plan it and think from a long-term viewpoint about such concepts.
@Brave_Sir_Robin
@Brave_Sir_Robin Жыл бұрын
Doesn’t make this any less awesome
@alicequayle4625
@alicequayle4625 Жыл бұрын
I'd say there are a lot of areas round Paris could also work.
@BaleinesVolantes
@BaleinesVolantes Жыл бұрын
They start to build more of this type of building in my city and cities around and there are not rich neighborhoods. Banlieues sud de Paris
@aldozilli1293
@aldozilli1293 Жыл бұрын
It must have cost a lot of money I was wondering why they spent so much on this and you have answered that.
@BevMattocks
@BevMattocks Жыл бұрын
My late grandfather would have loved this! He was a prominent town planner in the UK and former President of the UK Town Planning Institute. He had a vision for post-war urban regeneration which picked up on many of the points you talk about yet before the erection & failure of the social housing concrete tower blocks of the 60s and 70s as he sadly died in 1949. But I get the feeling he would have loved your video.
@spudspuddy
@spudspuddy Жыл бұрын
only works if you rigorously keep out immigration hoards, they can destroy a town instantly turning it into a single mans drug dealing den...keep them out
@Flying-spaghetto
@Flying-spaghetto Жыл бұрын
I'm pleased to see a video about Le Plessis Robinson, where I lived for 2 years. Other cities next to it, like Clamart, are following quite the same strategy. Thank you for your video!
@OOlympus
@OOlympus Жыл бұрын
This is refreshing! A beam of hope that I ought to share in my country.
@mysteriousstranger6857
@mysteriousstranger6857 Жыл бұрын
Definitely an inspirational message of hope! More architects and public officials need to see this video and apply it to their own professions.
@BayouBoy2443
@BayouBoy2443 3 ай бұрын
This is honestly amazing. Showing that simple concrete blocks can be transformed into works of art. A perfect example that humans need more than just a place to eat, sleep and live. We’re more than just physical creatures. Our minds and souls need satiation too. This gives them identity and amplifies their imagination
@krzysztofcukier4565
@krzysztofcukier4565 Жыл бұрын
That’s absolutely stunning. I really thought that things like that are not possible, that they belong to the past. That it’s not possible to build new cities that would be beautiful. But, man, it’s real!! Just think of all the transformation we can do if we only want to
@antoinecadalen8355
@antoinecadalen8355 Жыл бұрын
As he said, some other cities in Paris region did the same. I actually thought the video was about Val d'Europe when I saw the caption. The problem is that even though a significant part of this housing is social housing, most of it is most expensive than the original one (Because it is more beautiful and pleasant). Of course, I wish we could do this all over the world. But actually, I feel that we are taking the right way when I see the new housing that is being built here and there.
@kennethainsworth4327
@kennethainsworth4327 Жыл бұрын
I m surprised you don t mention an architect named Christopher Alexander and his pupil Nicos Salingaros ,he pioneered this sort of approach largely in the last century but he was ignored and ridiculed by the modernists.Pattern Language and the Timeless Way of Building were some of his books, I recommend you look into him, otherwise you re doing a great job , so many cities have been destroyed by the beauty hating modernists especially after World War 2.
@javierpacheco8234
@javierpacheco8234 Жыл бұрын
Nikolas salingaros continues to fight, we must continue to send the message because there are many people out there who like traditional or classical architecture, even architecture students but they are indoctrinated by the larger establishment and changes their mind to only believe in contemporary architecture, which I think is wrong and makes it biased. I really gotta thank nikos for continuing to promote traditional architecture because he is minority. So us the few should continue his support.
@zibbitybibbitybop
@zibbitybibbitybop Жыл бұрын
I live in Columbus, Ohio, and I can't really see being able to do this kind of redevelopment here without tearing out half of every neighborhood and rebuilding it from the ground up. Residential areas are so large and badly segregated from commercial ones that walking is totally impractical most of the time. It'd take a hell of a long time and a ton of money to try and affect this change, even if it would certainly be nice to do so.
@the_aesthetic_city
@the_aesthetic_city Жыл бұрын
I agree, in the United States the challenge is 10 or even 100 times as great. Sprawl has caused so much damage, but I feel many Americans are also attached to their standard, and way, of living - making change more difficult. I don’t want to prescribe one best way of living for everyone, but I feel some towns in the US could improve by redeveloping parts of the inner city and its surrounding neighborhoods with New Urbanism, or just more dense traditional urban fabric. It would require massive investments. With strong NIMBY movements, this becomes an even more difficult challenge. Strong Towns is more knowledgeable about this subject, I hope to do a podcast with them at some point
@victorkreig6089
@victorkreig6089 Жыл бұрын
It's not the scale or the time that is the problem in the US It's most definitely doable, the problem is the red tape Even when a few people can get together and agree to transform a place you then have to worry about the contractors coming in from not just out of the region but out of the state entirely to lowball others Add on top of that the prevalence of foreign owned buildings and investments demanding insane prices so they can extort as much money as they possibly can out of the project and it quickly falls apart. Local governments are the gatekeepers and it's rare for mayors of anything with a population over 500 to have any real power to speak of The corporatism that infests this country at every possible level is what makes it such a daunting task, don't get me wrong the same exists everywhere else but theirs is also usually nowhere near as concentrated at the top of each political tier like it is here, far more spread out so easier to navigate if you do it right
@jenstrudenau9134
@jenstrudenau9134 Жыл бұрын
The worst thing is globalist thinking leads to the destruction of every small shop. We in Germany never had a mall when I was a kid. Now they came up everywhere. Fucking americanisation. Fuck globalism.
@unconventionalideas5683
@unconventionalideas5683 Жыл бұрын
@@the_aesthetic_city Americans are less attached to it than you would think. I think also that elections post-COVID and several other movements show that Americans want a society that is different from the current one, and I think that the Urban Form is very much a part of that.
@Candolad
@Candolad Жыл бұрын
This would be very difficult to implement in the USA partly due the differences in political systems and partly because of infrastructure. In Europe we have centuries of evolutionary development, but the idea has just about 200 years of building new onto nothing that existed. America took paradise and put up a parking lot" with very little concern for aesthetics.
@gillesbueno1153
@gillesbueno1153 Жыл бұрын
I’ve been living 45 years close by and never heard of that project… Today it is a commercial success and nice place to live in. Thanks for posting.
@derosa1989
@derosa1989 Жыл бұрын
Glad you highlighted the issue of too much space dedicated to poorly defined semi-private land use. It does appear the clear distinction between pubic and private space is a key feature of successful places. People don't tend to venture into poorly defined places, and stick to the clear public space.
@annadaley3974
@annadaley3974 Жыл бұрын
I so so agree with you - if you make people live and work in places that look like the back of your garage, how can you expect them to be civilised? I have see this again and again in educational architecture and cannot help wondering who signed off on some of these projects - definitely someone who wasn't going to have to live, work, or study in them. Many thanks for posting this video.
@ifyourepeatalieoftenenough8500
@ifyourepeatalieoftenenough8500 Жыл бұрын
Also, I think environment has a huge impact on mental health. When the place you live in is pretty, you feel better. When you can see pretty places and live close to nature it lightens you mood and makes it less likely for you to become depressive. Also, ppl might treat their places with more respect (less vandalism, no trashing).
@gregorflopinski9016
@gregorflopinski9016 Жыл бұрын
Yaknow these "ugly" blocks tend to save green space for everyone, in comparison to traditional Europeans blocks. Russian winter is depressing no matter what kind of building you look at
@mikaelbillyartasusetia1999
@mikaelbillyartasusetia1999 Жыл бұрын
What a great content! As an urban planner student, I really like the idea of building a great city for people and the community. Please create more content like this where we can learn the example of successive urban renewal in any city in the world👍👍
@Seriph1
@Seriph1 2 ай бұрын
I have just finished watching this. My heart is full ... my mind is exploding ... my eyes are leaking. Thank you for such a moving call to me, to return to trusting myself to always be creating beauty - Steve. Kilmore, Australia
@cadciel
@cadciel Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video, I had no idea this town existed and I can't believe how amazing it looks and how much you can achieve if you have the right goals and determination.
@HighFlyingOwlOfMinerva
@HighFlyingOwlOfMinerva Жыл бұрын
Wait until you find out that towns like Poundbury, Brandevoort, Heulebrug and more exist... equally beautiful.
@danesovic7585
@danesovic7585 Жыл бұрын
This is something I have been thinking for a while about. Im so glad that somebody actually made into reality. I would like to see thousands more of developments like this. Thia is a perfect family-friendly town.
@stephanechauchard7159
@stephanechauchard7159 Жыл бұрын
I'm living near that city, and I can tell you that it is not well known in France, for some reason... I find it wonderful, and it proves that there is no fate that dictates the way the modern city should be built.
@olast
@olast Жыл бұрын
I'm french and I didn't knew anything about this city, thank you a lot, insane video, insane writing, insane channel, keep going!
@gengis737
@gengis737 Жыл бұрын
Great video. It reminds me of a debate in one of the poorest and most dangerous suburb pf Marseilles, Southern France. Inhabitants were asked about what to improve, and, knowing that full renovation was too expensive to be considered, they asked that the entrance doors of the buildings should be like the one in the city center, 19th century style. Because it would give respectability and pride of their otherwise crude construction.
@TramLe-bw5dl
@TramLe-bw5dl Жыл бұрын
The story behind this town is so inspiring. So fortunate to see people has pleasing ambient area to live in. Thanks for great video.
@jonrussell1690
@jonrussell1690 Жыл бұрын
I LOVE THIS!!! It really goes to show you can redesign a city into a more pleasant, walkable, and beautiful city!! I would love to live there compared to where I live now.
Жыл бұрын
I used to live close to this place, and young people from this city used to call all these buildings “Disney Land” when it was brand new, cuz it was so clean and unreal just like Disney Theme park
@daelra
@daelra Жыл бұрын
Totally agree. Too clean, too similar, wrong era.
@lemmypop1300
@lemmypop1300 Жыл бұрын
@@daelra I agree that buildings look a bit precious and twee, but it's still waaay better than living in an architecturally trendy housing that's ugly as hell. I realized long ago that things architects think are ingenious and cool most people regard as monstrous eyesores.
@rolands6900
@rolands6900 Жыл бұрын
Things look new and clean when they are new and clean. Patina will come with the years. It can make a beautifully warmly architected area even more beautiful, warm and romantic, whereas a hard modernist architected area will mostly just become ugly and depressive. That is how it seems to me.
@lmk10000
@lmk10000 Жыл бұрын
@@rolands6900 This is exactly what I think. This type of buildings only get character as time pass by. But with modernists buildings is the other way around: they look so shiny and modern when they're brand new, but as time pass, they only look uglier.
@denishrg9843
@denishrg9843 Жыл бұрын
@@daelra i agree clean buildings don't belong in an era of trash...
@user-BasedChad
@user-BasedChad Жыл бұрын
My Boy is back in action, good to see that you are still active. You deserve way more subs but with such quality videos I don't think that this will be a problem for long.😎
@the_aesthetic_city
@the_aesthetic_city Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! I will do my best - hopefully one of these videos will go really viral at some point. It is necessary because I hope to make this my 9-5 :)
@user-BasedChad
@user-BasedChad Жыл бұрын
@@the_aesthetic_city well it went viral, exactly how you wanted it
@Maria-pk7mr
@Maria-pk7mr Жыл бұрын
All of Europe should adopt this plan! So beautiful
@baharnero3229
@baharnero3229 Жыл бұрын
I am grateful that I find about this channel from Jeff Speck’s tweet because it gives me hope to see changes happen in cities, especially in my neighborhood area. When I go to my city centre, sometimes I create images in my head of what could be done to make the area more liveable and attractive, seeing more people walking and interacting at shops, and less dependent on cars to go around and travel within it. This channel gives me some insights on the realistical approach taken to financialize the development which gives me more hopes that this new urbanism is possible regardless of the country. Keep up the good work, cheers!
@homuchoghoma6789
@homuchoghoma6789 10 ай бұрын
Все возможно.Но для этого нужны финансы. kzbin.info/www/bejne/m4aucnSoj9t5edUsi=AYr8Zk9uNaRyBLCq
@carlose2150
@carlose2150 Жыл бұрын
I am a Venezuelan architecture student and although I personally do not think that the style of the modern movement is a bad thing (I think it can be something very beautiful if you know how to manage its simplicity) I super agree with you on something, a decent social housing can also be a beautiful housing. Something curious is that in my city Cumaná is that although the historic center is not at its best (due to corruption and the economic crisis of my country) is a much nicer and more walkable place than the downtown full of brutalist concrete buildings that you see is a much worse state. Anyway, I really liked your video:) (Translated with Deeply Translator, I hope it is understood)
@bigboy77dk
@bigboy77dk Жыл бұрын
You should watch the video on his channel, he recommends, about beauty... 😁😉
@mellie4174
@mellie4174 Жыл бұрын
As a human who lives in buildings i hate them. I hate living like a rat in a cement cage. I LOVE traditional architecture and when we bought our house we did NOT buy a modernist building.
@FrenchCountryLife
@FrenchCountryLife Жыл бұрын
This was incredibly interesting!! As an interior designer I love seeing how this village took "making homes beautiful" to a whole new level! "Beauty uplifts, inspires and gives hope", so well said and fully agree! Thanks for sharing!
@lyrebird9749
@lyrebird9749 Жыл бұрын
Sure, it looks nice. But where have the poor people who couldn't afford to buy their home gone? Poverty and homelessness are increasing in France, not decreasing.
@patrickmogensen3865
@patrickmogensen3865 Жыл бұрын
@@lyrebird9749 The more beautiful environments we build the more people will have access to beautiful environments. If we don't build more classically beautiful environments they'll end up being available to the richest only which is now sadly starting to happen in many major European cities.
@lyrebird9749
@lyrebird9749 Жыл бұрын
@@patrickmogensen3865 I'm not against nicer buildings, and definitely think the large, brutal-modernist-style apartments should have been replaced. They were never a good design. But they did at least house people and what the video glosses over is that 1,000's of people who'd lived in Le Plessis for much of their lives were forcibly moved out of the area. What happened to them or the places they moved to? Homelessness in France is increasing and simply moving the poor to another area is not a sustainable solution.
@brentdobson5264
@brentdobson5264 Жыл бұрын
@@lyrebird9749 It becomes thinkably doable now ....at this nearing point in time ....for rapidly emerging quantum Intelligence ...to thoroughly obsolete yesterday's vested monetary unit accounting encryption and disclose through analysis of all the global data exposed ....all the disconnects ....to non toxic / prosocial / energy unit accounting / engineering sense ....Real Economy* . Rehabilitation of yesterday's monetary assumptions ....to Real Wealth * sustainable / renewable / ecological / non toxic / energy unit analysis ....will disclose an orders of magnitude increase .... in global underwriting ....and expose yesterday's presumptions of " profit " ....and war " economy " ....obsolete ....even by their own monetary accounting methods . Egoless / logical ....and capable of a plethora of co-simultaneous calculations ....Quantum Singularity finally and abruptly out from under the thumb of yesterday's vested " special " Intelligence direction will be up to performing a task quite literally unthinkable for any of humanity . The results of the aforementioned transition make uncompromised prosocial creativity a lavishly affordable reality for human kind globally . * " Critical Path " / " Grunch Of Giants " / " Utopia Or Oblivion " / " Synergetics : The Geometry Of Thinking " ....Richard Buckminster Fuller ( Institute ) ...source .
@VictorECaplon
@VictorECaplon Жыл бұрын
Subscribed. I hope to see more about these beautiful places and projects from you. I really hope Europe and the world can move away from the brutalist and utilitarian architectures of the mid 1900s towards something truly spectacular even if we have to look back for inspiration. I have been many times to paris and some places like Montparnasse are really ugly. I hope this town inspires paris and its surrounding to truly transform and become the most beautiful city once more!
@justlottie
@justlottie Жыл бұрын
I hope other countries with heaps of nasty post-war architecture implement this approach! Awesome video.
@leosantesso1446
@leosantesso1446 Жыл бұрын
This is how it is in many cities on the outskirts of Paris, for example Marne la Vallée (Disneyland district) builds the new buildings in an old style (Haussmannian style), and these new buildings are visually new but so much more beautiful and detailed than traditional buildings, and with all modern comforts (air conditioning, central heating, insulation...).
@mint2574
@mint2574 Жыл бұрын
So glad to see you’re back and can’t wait to see more videos!
@joaomarques478
@joaomarques478 Жыл бұрын
Hey , I know absolutely nothing of arquiteture and stuff but I do believe firmly in the importance of beauty. Hope your videos spread so that the rest of the world can take something from these examples.
@SisterSunny
@SisterSunny Жыл бұрын
Loved the video! I've always been fascinated by Le Plessis-Robinson-impressive pronunciation, by the way!-but have rarely found any information about it online, even in French. This video was great for that!
@the_aesthetic_city
@the_aesthetic_city Жыл бұрын
Thank you! It is a fascinating example indeed, and yes, its pronunciation is hard. Probably still not doing it right, haha. I'm happy I was able to give you a bit more information on the place!
@dws49
@dws49 Жыл бұрын
ngl his pronunciation is not that good. A heavy dutch accent in French is not a pleasant thing to hear...
@lavillenouvelle
@lavillenouvelle Жыл бұрын
It's a fantastic project! We should have more projects like this in other régions of France too (especially in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes)! How can we help spread the word?
@lavillenouvelle
@lavillenouvelle Жыл бұрын
@@DrKub007 Probablement, dans quelques années les scandales seront oubliés, et on restera juste avec la beauté de ce projet. Personnellement, les prochaines fois que je vais à Paris, je pense quitter le centre ville et passer mon temps entre Le Plessis-Robinson et Clamart: il y a plein de projets intéressants, et la région est plus calme que le centre-ville.
@lavillenouvelle
@lavillenouvelle Жыл бұрын
@@DrKub007 si on regarde la plupart des monuments, ils ont tous derrière des histoires de guerres et de corruption. Le Colisée a été construit par des esclaves, les Arcs de Triomphe servaient à célébrer des guerres... Malgré cela, tout le monde fait la queue pour voir ces monuments, et personne ne regrette les grands ensembles tels que celui qui était au Plessis-Robinson avant la construction de ce quartier.
@lavillenouvelle
@lavillenouvelle Жыл бұрын
@@DrKub007 Même maintenant, c'est la même chose: pour construire des nouveaux immeubles sans consommer du sol agricole, il faut démolir des vieilles maisons, et forcement il y aura quelqu'un qui n'est pas content. Le résultat me convient très bien, au point que je commence à considérer le fait d'investir dans le coin, et de répliquer le modèle en Haute-Savoie. Comme ça, je vais apporter de la diversité ethnique dans le quartier, et vous serez content.
@lavillenouvelle
@lavillenouvelle Жыл бұрын
@@DrKub007 Merci pour le conseil. Je rajoute Sceaux, Chatenay-Malabry et Bourg la Reine à mon territoire de chasse immobilière.
@redwithblackstripes
@redwithblackstripes Жыл бұрын
Commençons par arrêter d'élire des communistes déjà.
@taravaligonzalez
@taravaligonzalez Жыл бұрын
What an insightful video! Thank you for sharing! I hope more cities and towns are able to implement at least some of the changes Le Plessis-Robinson was able to make. I truly believe housing and design like this, or at least the principles it holds, is the future. Can’t wait to see more changes like this, and your videos on them!
@DeanHarringtonimages
@DeanHarringtonimages Жыл бұрын
These transformations are a tremendous accomplishment that many urban cities in the West will follow! Make cities beautiful again!!!
@diamonddigs6206
@diamonddigs6206 Жыл бұрын
What has been done to that town is amazing and I truly hope other places learn from it and do it successfully as well.
@Kirsch-Mamsell
@Kirsch-Mamsell Жыл бұрын
Ich bin total begeistert. Diese Stadt wird Vorbild für viele Städte werde.
@Caesarius
@Caesarius Жыл бұрын
Great Video! I´m glad that the world is finally pushing back on concrete deserts and brutalism. Imagine how life could be if we would start living like actual humans and not like caged animals. I hope more design students get so hop on this trend.
@danmerillat
@danmerillat Жыл бұрын
Brutalist buildings can be great, but you can't just plop down a dozen identical concrete rectangles and call it a day. Buildings like the orlando library, habitat 67, the geisel library in san diego, or even the boston city hall are great examples of doing it right. But any design can look bad when repeated endlessly, like the relentlessly boring identical glass skyscrapers that infest any major city.
@Caesarius
@Caesarius Жыл бұрын
​@@danmerillat Brutalism certainly has its own "charm". I will give you that, but I would pick a (neo)-romantic or gothic building any time over brutalism. For some reason brutalism attracts/brings out the worst of people. The inhabitants are often violent, depressed and uninspired. Ironically, the people advocating for it, never lived in those kind of spaces.
@MikeAG333
@MikeAG333 Жыл бұрын
@@danmerillat I agree somewhat with your sentiment, but you're clearly American. Your generalisation about glass skyscrapers certainly does not apply in most of Europe, where sky scrapers are a rarity.
@jaykilbourne1110
@jaykilbourne1110 Жыл бұрын
@@MikeAG333 Still does not invalidate the objective truth of his point. All-glass Skyscrapers are fugly.
@MikeAG333
@MikeAG333 Жыл бұрын
@@jaykilbourne1110 "Objective"? I'm not sure you understand the meaning of the word. I agree with your SUBJECTIVE assessment.....but you're making a habit of generalising. They're not in every city, and you opinion doesn't make something a fact.
@Gloubi06
@Gloubi06 Жыл бұрын
What a surprise to see your video on my home town!!! I was born and raised in Le Plessis Robinson and experienced the shift from Comunism management when Philippe Pemzec got elected. He is a nice person with a vision and I was expecting him to become president (or at least run for presidency). I've left my home town around year 1996 to work abroad and only returned there to see my familly. The city really changed from an horible and dangerous neighboroud to a cartoon-like city. It's like living in Disney Land every day... Thanks so much for creating this video and all the emotional it generated!!
@mikeyfraile2402
@mikeyfraile2402 Жыл бұрын
this is the kind of content I wanted to watch. I read this kind of topic back in the 80's interior designers and houte couture invited to re-design the delapidated city of Manila and the result is outstanding. Keep up with more video of this kind I hope it will influence developers to build more beautiful cities
@joao_1986
@joao_1986 Жыл бұрын
You have a great channel going on here. Glad to see more people rising up to the defense of classic architecture
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