9 Percier - Paris
Renovation
- Building Type : Office building < 28m
- Construction Year : 1928
- Delivery year : 2022
- Address 1 - street : 9 avenue Percier, 1er étage 75008 PARIS, France
- Climate zone : [Cfb] Marine Mild Winter, warm summer, no dry season.
- Net Floor Area : 750 m2
- Construction/refurbishment cost : 280 000 €
- Number of Work station : 100 Work station
- Cost/m2 : 373.33 €/m2
Certifications :
-
Primary energy need
162.84 kWhep/m2.an
(Calculation method : Other )
Our project is a responsible and biophilic showcase at the service of employees, which responds to the challenges of circular economy, reuse, quality of life, transversality and conviviality.
Several elements have led us to reorganize our workspaces:
1. Changes in our working methods, due to:
- Developing an internal hybrid working methods and with our customers and partners, post-COVID accelerating and developing teleworking.
- The ever-increasing added value of the transversality of our businesses in terms of business interest for ARP Astrance employees and in the context of carrying out our missions.
Our actions have made it possible to find a balance between spaces that is promoting the operational cross-functionality of ARP Astrance's businesses, collective intelligence, exchanges and which make it possible to accentuate synergies, while respecting everyone's needs.
2. Our desire for a redevelopment with the smallest possible carbon and material footprint, and exemplary in terms of the circular economy, within a controlled budget
This resulted in the reuse of a maximum of existing elements in situ and the choice of materials resulting from reuse
Our actions have reduced the carbon footprint of our refurbishments by 80%.
3. Our desire to strengthen the quality of life at work through workspaces: social ties, biophilia, sanitary quality of spaces
This resulted in:
- Spaces that promoting social ties;
- A nap area equipped with a rest bench associated with relaxation software;
- Choice of materials with low health impact such as the new carpet used with the Declare label and low VOC emissions (MILLIKEN Partner).
Our pilot project reflects our know-how and business expertise. It allows us to highlight our skills and our vision in order to replicate this project for and with our customers.
See more details about this project
https://arp-astrance.com/references.html?view=project&id=109:arp-astrance-design-circulaire-et-space-planning-paris&catid=119:amenagement-designhttps://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7029461178376409089
Photo credit
Olivier Martin Gambier
Contractor
Construction Manager
Stakeholders
Company
Bouygues Energie Services
Alain CASULE - a.casule[a]bouygues-es.com
https://www.bouygues-es.fr/General contractor for the interior refurbishment of our offices
Manufacturer
KATABA
Florent SEDENO - f.sedeno[a]kataba.fr
https://kataba.fr/pages/notre-histoireContracting method
Other methods
Type of market
Not applicable
Other type of market
Private
Allocation of works contracts
Build and sell construction
Energy consumption
- 162,84 kWhep/m2.an
- 162,84 kWhep/m2.an
Real final energy consumption
70,80 kWhef/m2.an
Systems
- Urban network
- Fan coil
- Urban network
- Fan coil
- Double flow heat exchanger
- No renewable energy systems
Risks
- Urban heat island
Urban environment
- buses: 22, 28, 32, 80, 84, 93
- metro: 9, 13
- bike
- scooter
- cityscoot
- car sharing
- etc
- 100,00 %
Product
ARP Astrance

Julie VINAY
https://arp-astrance.com/Autres / Autres
Circular interior designer
KATABA
f.sedeno[a]kataba.fr
https://kataba.fr/Second œuvre / Équipements intérieurs
MILLIKEN
sabrina.beauvois[a]milliken.com
https://www.milliken.com/fr-fr/businesses/floor-coveringSecond œuvre / Revêtements de sol
Carpet / resilient flooring
BOUYGUES Energy
a.casule[a]bouygues-es.com
https://www.bouygues-es.fr/General contractor 2nd work
CultureIn
emma.derbre[a]culturein.eu
https://varian.culturein.eu/Varian acoustics
Algo
jacquy.binnet[a]algopaint.com
https://www.peinture-algo.fr/?gclid=EAIaIQobChMI6tn0uN7O_QIVzhAGAB06PgAlEAAYASAAEgLbE_D_BwESecond œuvre / Peinture, revêtements muraux
Biobased paint. Recycled and recyclable container.
Construction and exploitation costs
- 60 000 €
- 280 000 €
Circular economy strategy
- Maximization of the number of impacted batches
- Maximization of quantities on targeted products
- Maximization of the carbon gain
- Maximization of the mass of waste avoided
Reuse : same function or different function
- Locksmithing-Metalwork
- Indoor joineries
- Floorings
- Partitions
- Suspended ceilings
- Raised floors
- Electricity
- Heating ventilation air conditioning
- Plumbing
- Reception desk: 1 U
- Lamp - Led strip: 2 U
- Metal cabinet: 6 U
- Office: 19 U
- Bookcase / wooden shelf: 1 U
- Chairs: 136 U
- Worktop: 1 U
- Coffee tables: 4 U
- Stools: 40 U
- Removable partition - glazed door block: 2 lm
- Removable partition - full filling: 24 ml
- Removable partition - glazed: 12 ml
- Carpet: 21m²
- Office (locker, non-existent category): 125 U
- 65% of furniture in situ (mainly tables and seats) reused
- For non-reused furniture: 15% recovered by employees, 15% given to firefighters, 5% sent to a recycling/reuse channel
- Retention of 80% of the existing carpet
- Reuse of a carpet removed from another site (ORAK Partner)
- The new carpet is made from recycled nylon; it is Declare labeled and has low VOC emissions (MILLIKEN Partner)
- Reception desk: pine ribbon designed with the wood of the old platform
- Employee lockers: reuse of the old library, change of doors only
- Kitchen and bar: oak and bakelite + “LE PAVE” worktop (made from plastic waste)
- Library / Material library: only the white tops are new, the rest is reused, door made with floor elements from the Grand Palais
- Acoustic elements made of natural fibers and biosourced materials (Partners: CultureIn and PierrePlume)
- Colored paint: 84% biosourced (ALGO partner), packaging 75% recycled and 100% recyclable
- Traverse: old parquet
- Cleat: old beam
- Chipboard: old desk top
- 2.8 m3 chipboard --> 100% reuse
- Chipboard: old desk top
- 0.2 m3 plywood (door) --> 0% reuse
- 0.2 m3 chipboard + solid undersheet (door) --> 100% reuse
- 0.2 m3 chipboard --> 0% reuse
- 0.1m3 black compact strat panel --> 100% reuse
- 0.2 m3 solid wood --> 70% reuse
- 0.4 m3 medium --> 0% reuse
- 0.7 m3 chipboard --> 20% reuse
- 0.15 m3 3ply spruce --> 50% reuse
- Solid wood: 2.5 m3 including 2 m3 reused (i.e. 80%)
- Agglomerated: 5.95 m3 --> including 4.28 m3 reused (i.e. 70%)
- Plywood: 0.2 m3 --> new
- Compact laminate: 0.1 m3 --> 100% reuse
- Medium: 0.4 m3 --> new
- 3 ply spruce: 0.15 m3 --> of which 0.7 m3 is reused (i.e. 50%)
- Origin: carpet reused from BNP offices for the management office and green curtain space. It was provided to us by Milliken who works with ORAK to recondition the carpets.
- Mode of transformation: no transformation, carpet reused, but reconditioning with the partner ORAK.
- Installation: identical to new carpet, installation carried out by Bouygues.
- Difference compared to a classic material: no difference, identical use, but the LCA is improved as well as the carbon footprint.
- Critical analysis: easily achievable for small surfaces, very high environmental gain, but if we had to deploy the reused carpet on larger volumes, question of supply depending on the deposits available to have a unit on the whole.
- Provenance: parquet floor of the Grand Palais for the library, doors for the fronts of the lockers, up cycling of our former platform.
- Cooked worktop - recycled materials: paver made from agglomerated plastic particles
- Mode of transformation: carpentry - work in the workshop and assembly on site.
- Installation: Kataba via their partner who employs people in integration - workshop 1920.
- Difference from classic material: search for deposit, final rendering according to the deposit found.
- Analysis: difficulty of working on large volumes with a company that is not used to it, sector in structuring, takes a lot of time to search for the deposit and support for design and production, but gratifying to have furniture arranged in up cycling because the carbon footprint is greatly improved, no extraction of raw materials, participation in the ESS (social and solidarity economy).
- Installation: logistics on site to disassemble, store on site then reassemble in the right place
- Analysis: very advantageous in terms of cost and carbon footprint, no transport, no extraction of raw materials.
Logistics
- On site, on a dedicated area in a covered location
- On site, on a dedicated area in a covered location
Insurance
Environmental assessment
- 65% of furniture preserved
- 95% of partitioning re-used in situ
- 80% of carpet preserved
- 95% of technical equipment retained / overhauled
- 84% biobased paint
- Biosourced acoustics and reuse
- Reuse reception desk from the former "workcafé" platform.
- Employee lockers reused from the old library, only the doors changed.
- Kitchen and bar: reused oak and bakelite + “LE PAVÉ” worktop (made from plastic waste).
- Library / Material library: mostly reused, door made with floor elements from the Grand Palais.
- Reuse of the existing for shelves, cabinets, coat racks, etc.
- 80%: reuse of existing carpet.
- 7%: reuse of carpet from another site (16 m²).
- 13%: brand new carpet, with low VOC emissions and low carbon impact.
- 40%: Reuse of the existing false floor
- 60%: Out of scope because kept in the reference scenario
- Reuse of the majority of office chairs, existing workstations and meeting tables.
- Some new chairs and tables.
- Tertiary optimization: we can have a circularity of materials and fittings, but the first resource on which we must ask questions is that of the use of m², the optimization of uses, reversibility.
- The circular layout is also part of responding to the fair use of m² and ways of doing things. The reversibility of the developments is anticipated from the design stage.
- Thinking about the use of the m² goes hand in hand with responsible development.
- Following the observation of the climate emergency, it seems essential to us to engage in a paradigm shift and to bring a new vision for the design of interior design projects.
- Interior fittings have a significant impact on a building's carbon footprint.
- At ARP Astrance, we are committed to the protection of living things, with the Gondwana division which works in its own right on biodiversity issues.
- Making circular arrangements also means getting closer to the company's CSR challenges, giving meaning for employees, and a value of commitment.
- The circular economy is driven by SSE actors (reconditioning platforms, carpentry, materials handling, etc.), and generates job creation at the local level. The whole economy is being challenged by a new way of approaching the project and construction. Today, large companies must also take up the subject to structure the sector, this is the case of Bouygues Energies & Services who have done everything possible for the success of our project.
- Do with existing buildings. The future of real estate will develop in the rehabilitation and transformation of use of assets.
- Making circular layouts means optimizing existing resources, but it also means preparing for the redevelopments of the next few years by thinking about the reversibility of the project and the dismantling of the materials.
- Reused materials : floor and wall coverings, partitions, doors, raised floors
- Integration of healthy, biosourced or geosourced materials
- Materials easily separable for recycling or removable for reuse -> Ex Milliken with its Traction Back 2.0 carpet (tack-free installation)
- Cradle to Cradle label
- Reused or second-hand furniture (Bluedigo, Tricycle, etc.): chairs, desks, sofas, tables
- Definition of the scope, objectives and lifespan of the project
- Realization of the list of materials, products and equipment
- Search for emission factors
- Identification of the most emitting stations and proposal of variants
- Rule for taking reuse into account
- Comparison to the reference scenario and valuation
- Valuation as part of the company's scope 3 carbon footprint for the current year
- Reduction axis by the ACT method
- Respond to public procurement obligations on reuse
- Promote environmental commitment and a sense of belonging among employees
- Make its premises or projects a showcase of its commitment
- Valuation within the framework of a certification or a label (Zero Carbon Certification, the BBCA Exploitation label, the Circolab label)
- External communication on the % reduction in the carbon footprint of the interior design operation
- Extra-financial report and external communication
reception desk | Furniture | |
Lighting - Led strip / light throat | Lightings | 2 |
Metal cabinet | Furniture | 6 |
Desk | Furniture | 19 |
Bookcase / wooden shelf | Furniture | 1 |
Chairs | Furniture | 136 |
Workplan | Furniture | 1 |
Coffee tables | Furniture | 4 |
Stools | Furniture | |
Removable partition - glazed door block | Partitions | 2 |
Removable partition - full filling | Partitions | 24 |
Removable partition - glazed | Partitions | 12 |
Carpet | floor coverings | 21 |
Desk | Furniture | 125 |
How do we act?
Upstream phase of the project – framing, programming:
Environmental issues :
Operational phase of the project: design, drafting DCE, AO
Materials ; sourcing of reuse materials – working with reuse platforms.
Societal issues:
Economic issues :
Today, the sector is in the process of being structured, and there are already financial advantages to working in a circular development approach: selective cleaning for resale of materials to reuse platforms (Tricycle) VS the cost of a classic demolition, In situ reuse which is both virtuous for the carbon footprint and the financial balance sheet.
=> The design is not however set aside in a circular layout, on the contrary, it will allow the project to be supported – how to create beauty and with meaning.
We are working on an internal material library that makes sense and that we are developing according to criteria that we have defined (origin of materials, % of recycled materials, dismantling, reflection on the treatment of end-of-life materials, etc.)
Methodology implemented by ARP Astrance
This voluntary approach is enhanced by:
Economic assessment
- 200 000 €
- Purchase by the contracting authority from a reuse platform
- Purchase by the company from a reuse platform
Communication
Social economy
- Kataba
- Tricycle
Circular design
- Choice to reorganize our spaces rather than move.
- Use of in situ resources
- Maximization of construction waste: use of what we had at home.
- Biosourced materials: paint, acoustics.
Comfort
- Addition of wall and suspended acoustic panels in meeting spaces;
- Carpet with acoustic underlay;
- Enveloping office furniture with acoustic material.
- Eye-soothing biophilic design and reminder of nature: disconnect;
- The finish of the new desk tops has been chosen to limit reflection.
Quality of life and services
Desire to strengthen the quality of life at work through workspaces: social ties, biophilia, sanitary quality of spaces
This resulted in the presence of biophilic elements:
- A natural green wall
- Natural materials present on the entire board: cork, wood
- Naturally inspired lights
- The color palette of the wall coverings has been selected to recall natural materials or presents patterns of natural inspiration (wallpaper, window sticker, cork panel)
- “Refuge” alcoves in the silence space
- In addition, the plateau that we occupy has important qualities in terms of natural light thanks to large glazed surfaces and a double exposure in a large part of the spaces.
General infos
ARP Astrance has developed a specific carbon footprint methodology for interior fittings operations (scope of intervention currently very little covered by existing tools and methods on the market).
GHG emissions
- 31,00 KgCO2/m2/an
Life Cycle Analysis
- Definition of the scope, objectives and lifespan of the project
- Realization of the list of materials, products and equipment
- Search for emission factors
- Identification of the most emitting stations and proposal of variants
- Rule for taking reuse into account
- Comparison to the reference scenario and valuation
- Valuation as part of the company's scope 3 carbon footprint for the current year
- Reduction axis by the ACT method
- Respond to public procurement obligations on reuse
- Promote environmental commitment and a sense of belonging among employees
- Make its premises or projects a showcase of its commitment
- Valuation within the framework of a certification or a label (Zero Carbon Certification, the BBCA Exploitation label, the Circolab label)
- External communication on the % reduction in the carbon footprint of the interior design operation
- Extra-financial report and external communication
Reasons for participating in the competition(s)
We want this project to demonstrate the technical and economic feasibility of interior design with low environmental impact and high reuse rate, while maintaining aesthetic and quality of life objectives.
Obtaining a Trophy would add weight to our communications on the project to engage as many people as possible.
Our actions in summary:
- The implementation of resource-efficient solutions developed by companies that share our values and issues for some of the SSE
- A maximum reuse of all the elements of 2nd work and the fittings present before the refitting.
- A strong objective of the lowest possible carbon footprint for the operation, validated on delivery.
- The choice of solutions favorable to the health and well-being of employees: biophilic design, choice of low-emission materials, colors, varied postures, etc.
- A collaborative approach to meet the real needs of users and to facilitate the handling of new spaces.
- The design of an ecosystem of spaces conducive to transversality and collaboration and allowing the optimization of surfaces.
Our project is a response to hybrid working methods and environmental challenges, and the need to combine spaces and corporate values: our new workspaces offer inspiring spaces because they are guided by the living, respectful of everyone, and low carbon footprint.
Project possible through the involvement of all: management, employees, partners. A double success: the reduction of the negative impact of the project and the positive impacts for us and our ecosystem.
Building candidate in the category
