Media Archive Building by Antonini + Darmon, Paris

Brown building with grey clouds in background
The Media Archive Building is a new addition to the the Paris suburb of Saint-Denis. Photography: Luc Boegly 
(Image credit: Luc Boegly)

Designed by Paris-based architecture practice Antonini + Darmon, this striking new Media Archive Building is located in the Paris suburb of Saint-Denis. 

The project was conceived as a contemporary home for the local municipality of Plaine Commune's media library, a place that while not open to the public, would provide a safe home for the digital archive and at the same time offer an exciting architectural addition for the area. The structure, which sits next to a leafy park, was designed to include modern facilities and offer a high quality work environment for its employees. 

The architect's response was to create a functional building that doesn't compromise on aesthetics, and fits comfortably into the vibrant neighbourhood that includes the famous circus arts school Academie Fratellini. 'Our goal was for this to be an icon, a signal in the city,' say the architects. 

A natural larch and black rain screen fabric façade protects an interior that spreads across three levels. The façade's timber plank arrangement creates large openings in selected areas that allow plenty of sunlight in and also offer glimpses of the leafy surroundings. 

On the ground floor, a reception area directs the visitor to the various parts of the building through a vertical circulation core. Most of the building's services are also housed on this level, including a spacious garage for the archive's mobile libraries. 

The light-filled first floor hosts the bulk of the collection areas, while management and administration offices are situated on the top level, around a central patio that encourages social interaction as well as providing space for relaxation. A green roof at the top and a planted terrace on the first floor may not be accessible to the employees but are beautifully in keeping with the area's green character and the park across the street.

Brown structured exterior of building

A natural larch and black rain screen fabric façade protects an interior that spreads across three levels. Photography: Luc Boegly

(Image credit: Luc Boegly)

Brown structure on exterior of building

On the ground floor, the entrance leads to a reception area that directs the visitor to the various parts of the building through a vertical circulation core. Photography: Luc Boegly 

(Image credit: TBC)

Walk way of building's corridor with sun shining through the bars

Large openings bring plenty of natural light into the building; an airy and comfortable work environment was a requirement within the project brief. Photography: Luc Boegly

(Image credit: Luc Boegly)

Ground floor view of raised round-a-bout

The ground floor includes a spacious garage for the city's mobile media libraries. Photography: Luc Boegly

(Image credit: Luc Boegly)

Courtyard view of building

A central patio on the top level encourages social interaction and also provides space for relaxation for its employees. Photography: Luc Boegly

(Image credit: Luc Boegly)

Interior library with many shelves

The archive's collection is located on the first floor, while the top floor hosts the management and administrative offices. Photography: Luc Boegly

(Image credit: Luc Boegly)

Corner glassed windows looking out through wooden bars

The Media Archive building offers uninterupted views towards the nearby leafy park. Photography: Luc Boegly

(Image credit: Luc Boegly)

Ellie Stathaki is the Architecture & Environment Director at Wallpaper*. She trained as an architect at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki in Greece and studied architectural history at the Bartlett in London. Now an established journalist, she has been a member of the Wallpaper* team since 2006, visiting buildings across the globe and interviewing leading architects such as Tadao Ando and Rem Koolhaas. Ellie has also taken part in judging panels, moderated events, curated shows and contributed in books, such as The Contemporary House (Thames & Hudson, 2018), Glenn Sestig Architecture Diary (2020) and House London (2022).