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The Tour Sans Fins (“Endless Tower”) was a tower planned in La Défense that has since been cancelled. The spelling Tour Sans Fins may, to a native French-speaker, sound like a grammatical mistake as it would normally be written Tour Sans Fin without the ‘s’ at the end of fins. However, the idea was that this tower had no ends, even if one looked up or down at it, hence “ends” and not “end”.
"Tower Without Ends" | |
---|---|
Tour Sans Fins | |
General information | |
Status | Vision |
Type | Office |
Location | Courbevoie (Hauts-de-Seine), France |
Height | |
Roof | 425.6 m (1,396 ft) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 103 |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Jean Nouvel |
History
editThe history of the Tour Sans Fins is linked to the early projects for La Défense. The Grande Arche was built in an area that was not yet developed. As a testimony to the lack of completed construction in La Défense, the winning design was selected next to an outdoor parking lot of the RER The winner of this contest was Jean Nouvel, and his Tour Sans Fins was meant to be 425m tall and would have been the tallest skyscraper in Europe. Technical reasons in addition to the economic crisis of the early 1990s resulted in the project being cancelled despite 20 million French francs being already spent.
Design
editThe tower was meant to have a very original design. Having the shape of a cylinder, the base of the tower was to be very dark, becoming more clear as it approached the sky, thus giving the sensation of the tower disappearing. At its base the tower would have gone several levels down below the earth, like a crater, and would have ended with a tuned mass damper absorbing vibrations on its top. Elevators were to be located on the sides, allowing for panoramic views during ascent, and allowing the offices to occupy the centre.
To achieve the impression of the tower just disappearing into the sky, a wide range of material were to be used in its construction: unpolished black granite, anthracite granite, polished mica, polished aluminium, polished stainless-steel, reflective glass, tinted glass, silk-screened glass and finally clear glass. As Jean Nouvel said:
You don't quite know where the cylinder begins and ends because it rises from an excavation and dissipates into the sky.
References
edit- “Skyscraper design of the recent past and for the near future” by Eric Höweler editions “Thames & Hudson”