Paris Haussmann

Curated by Umberto Napolitano, Benoît Jallon and Franck Boutté, “Paris Haussmann” reveals the potential of today’s Parisian urban model in relation to tomorrow’s cities.

Haussmann, prefect for the departement of the Seine from 1853 until 1870, extensively transformed Paris, above and below ground, from the city center to the outskirts. By extension, his name personifies a century of public works that still defines the urban organization of the city and the identity of the capital.

But who would think of the Second Empire mapping as an exemplary network for mobility? Or the 19th century city block as an effective tool for a sustainable city? Or the Haussmann-style building as an archetype of flexibility? The “Paris Haussmann” show analyzes and reveals the potential of today’s Parisian urban model in relation to the stakes and challenges of tomorrow’s cities.

Paris Haussmann. Variations de l’identité © Photo Cyrille Weiner, October 2016
Paris Haussmann. Variations de l’identité © Photo Cyrille Weiner, October 2016
Paris Haussmann. Variations de l’identité © Photo Cyrille Weiner, October 2016
Paris Haussmann. Variations de l’identité © Photo Cyrille Weiner, October 2016
Paris Haussmann, technical drawings
Paris Haussmann, technical drawings

  Intended as a demonstration, the exhibition starts with a line drawn to review history. Over 100 drawings, plans, archives, photographs by Cyrille Weiner, as well as many mock-ups, give visitors an opportunity to rediscover this heritage at various scales. The exhibition redesigns, categorizes and compares the urban axes, distinguishes the public spaces, organizes the city blocks and buildings according to their current geometry.

Photo © Cyrille Weiner

By analyzing shape in order to understand meaning, this exhibit and the accompanying book – devised as a contemporary retro-atlas of Haussmannian territory – gives a new interpretation of the city, in its volumes, its time-frames and its usages. From the information acquired through drawing and development in conjunction with technologies and calculations made by the architects Umberto Napolitano, Benoît Jallon and the architectural engineer Franck Boutté, a new urban arborescence emerges, based on contemporary criteria. What is the “walkability” of the Haussmannian urban fabric, compared to other international metropolises? Why is the incredible density of the Haussmannian model so comfortable? What is the energy efficiency of the city blocks and buildings in relation to current standards?

View of the exhibition “Paris Haussmann” at the Pavillon de l'Arsenal, Paris. Photo © Antoine Espinasseau
View of the exhibition “Paris Haussmann” at the Pavillon de l'Arsenal, Paris. Photo © Antoine Espinasseau
View of the exhibition “Paris Haussmann” at the Pavillon de l'Arsenal, Paris. Photo © Antoine Espinasseau
View of the exhibition “Paris Haussmann” at the Pavillon de l'Arsenal, Paris. Photo © Antoine Espinasseau
View of the exhibition “Paris Haussmann” at the Pavillon de l'Arsenal, Paris. Photo © Antoine Espinasseau
View of the exhibition “Paris Haussmann” at the Pavillon de l'Arsenal, Paris. Photo © Antoine Espinasseau
View of the exhibition “Paris Haussmann” at the Pavillon de l'Arsenal, Paris. Photo © Antoine Espinasseau
View of the exhibition “Paris Haussmann” at the Pavillon de l'Arsenal, Paris. Photo © Antoine Espinasseau
View of the exhibition “Paris Haussmann” at the Pavillon de l'Arsenal, Paris. Photo © Antoine Espinasseau
View of the exhibition “Paris Haussmann” at the Pavillon de l'Arsenal, Paris. Photo © Antoine Espinasseau

  Contiguity, changeability, density, materiality, compactness, full space/empty space equilibrium, diversity of activities and capacities, as revealed in the “Paris Haussmann” exhibition, invite visitors to reexamine the criteria of contemporary urban design within a system in which performance requirements converse with the enjoyment of living in a place, where resilience would be architecture.


until 7 May 2017
Paris Haussmann
Curators: Umberto Napolitano, Benoît Jallon (LAN) and Franck Boutté (FBC)
Pavillon de l’Arsenal
21 Bld Morland, Paris