PONS + HUOT Office by Christian Pottgiesser
Christian Pottgiesser designed the combined headquarters for two companies Pons and Huot in Paris, France.

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PONS + HUOT Office by Christian Pottgiesser
The project accommodates the headquarters of two companies in Paris – PONS and HUOT – with totally fifteen executives. Consequently the unit has seven individual rooms for each director and one open-space-office for the remaining eight clerks. In addition there is one (divisible) meeting-room, a common recreational room, a kitchen, rest rooms, and, at the special request of the patron, lush vegetation all over the main space.
The base for the construction was a rotten industrial hall built in the late 19th century with a steel framework typical for the period. It is rumoured that Gustave Eiffel realized it.
To start with, the hall was completely restored. A new self-cleaning glass roof was fitted. The whole substance of the building was put back into the original state.
In fact the project consists of an insertion of a wooden unit in solid oak 1,7 m high, 22 m long and 14 m wide. The entire programme is embodied therein. Each individual workplace is incised into the wooden upper surface and covered by a “telephone’-dome in Plexiglas. The four lateral surfaces contain archives, cloakrooms and the kitchen. Completely embedded in the body are the meeting room, the recreational room and the restrooms. The remaining space is taken up by technical transmission systems (computer, electricity, air condition, heating and water) and also by 18,3 m3 of soil, the bed for eight Ficus Panda trees.
Neither entrance hall nor reception were implemented, since visitors are guided by a peripheral path-system leading to all pertinent rooms. The individual offices are situated on both galleries.
Visit Christian Pottgiesser’s website – here.
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alfie agunoy on 18 Feb 2011 at 7:11 pm #
i think imacs are the only applicable machines
Ken on 19 Feb 2011 at 5:57 pm #
Strange…very strange. Too artificial for my taste. Wouldn’t want to be one of the clerks working there. Too much like being in a fishbowl with the balconies looming overhead. Kind of surreal and inhospitable which, I’m sure, is the opposite of what the designers intended.
Nick Diamond on 19 Feb 2011 at 8:43 pm #
man this iss tooooo cool..
PD on 20 Feb 2011 at 9:31 pm #
What a wonderful working environment. Not artificial at all. All surfaces are wooden and warm. Love it
AnicaDeGuzman on 21 Feb 2011 at 2:10 am #
Oh my gawd! Genius!
PaPiPa on 21 Feb 2011 at 9:50 am #
It’s the cone of silence from get smart!
http://www.confabulicious.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/A-Get-Smart-Style-Cone-Of-Silence.jpg
César on 22 Feb 2011 at 7:25 am #
Very good, but I did not like those domes. Contrasts with an environment that inspires creative freedom.
Helio on 23 Feb 2011 at 9:50 pm #
I think domes helps people who need more silence to get focused on work. It’s a lot better then a cubicle, anyway.
Al on 24 Feb 2011 at 10:38 am #
This is not an original invention is actually the “cone of silence” invented by the Control for the Agent 86… LOL
Katharine on 26 Feb 2011 at 9:35 am #
Oh, it’s like Rivendell meets the Apple Store! It’s gorgeous!
Xander on 28 Feb 2011 at 12:21 am #
Please tell me that this is wheelchair accessible. Are those stairs an unavoidable requirement and are alternatively complemented with either ramps or a lift?
jinal on 12 Mar 2011 at 7:02 am #
lovely design.could be more interesting if the domes are flexible and can be off when wanted.
over all the design creates green atmosphere unlike most company cubicals