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Roland Simounet

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Nationality
  
Died
  
1996, Paris, France

Role
  
Name
  
Roland Simounet

Occupation
  
Architect


Roland Simounet Student Residence Complex Antananarivo Madagascar 1963


Born
  
1927
Guyotville, Algeria

Awards
  
Grand Prix National d'architecture 1977

Practice
  
Roland Simounet Architect

Buildings
  
Musee Picasso, Paris, FranceLaM, Villeneuve d'Ascq, FranceDjenan el-Hassan, Algeria

Books
  
Roland Simounet: d'une architecture juste

Michel Charmont et Richard Klein - "Roland Simounet, dialogue sur l'invention"


Roland Simounet (born in Guyotville, Algeria, 31 Aug 1927 - died in Paris, 1996) was a French architect known primarily for his design of the Musée Picasso in Paris and the LaM in Villeneuve d'Ascq.

Contents

Roland Simounet Ballet National Marseille par Simounet PFRunner

Biography

Roland Simounet HISTOIRE DU MUSE Muse national PicassoParis

Simounet studied architecture in Paris and then returned to his native Algeria where he opened an office in 1952. His first major work, the emergency cité de transit Djenan el-Hassan (1956-8), reflected his concern with the eradication of slum housing; its cellular construction, with individual vaulted roofs, echoed local vernacular architectural forms. In 1958 he was appointed to plan the new city of Thamugadi, which borders the famous Roman ruins of Timgad. After the War of Independence, Simounet moved to Paris (1963), but many of his works continued to address the problems of design for warm climates through the suitable expression of materials, massing and openings; examples include the student housing (1962–70) for the University of Tananarive, Madagascar, and a series of holiday homes in Corsica.

Roland Simounet Roland Simounet ARCHIGUIDE

Simounet became one of the most prolific museum builders in France in the 1970s and 1980s. His new buildings for the Musee de la Prehistoire de l'Ile-de-France (1975-9), Nemours, and the Musee d'Art Moderne du Nord (1978–83), Villeneuve d'Ascq, reveal a careful orchestration of natural lighting and details to enhance the individual display of works of art. He also won the limited competition for the conversion of the 17th-century Hôtel Salé in the Marais district of Paris into the Musée Picasso (1976–85); the austere and luminous quality of the white-washed walls and pristine volumes was generally acknowledged to be the perfect showcase for Picasso's personal collection. In Saint-Denis he designed some low-cost housing (1983) in the shadow of the abbey; arranged around small courtyards, it alluded to the historic fortifications. The same parti was used in the les Fongéres residential complex (1987–91) facing the Parc Citroén in Paris.

Roland Simounet Ballet National Marseille par Simounet PFRunner

Simounet was awarded the Grand Prix National d'Architecture in 1977. Simounet died in Paris in 1996.


Roland Simounet archivesseineetmarnefrlibrary5e9cfdcccf664

Roland Simounet Roland Simounet les missions qui parlent de lui TeleScoop

References

Roland Simounet Wikipedia