Front de Seine

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The Front de Seine district by night.
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The Front de Seine district by night.
The Pont Mirabeau in front of the Front de Seine district with the Eiffel Tower in the back.
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The Pont Mirabeau in front of the Front de Seine district with the Eiffel Tower in the back.

Front de Seine (also known as Beaugrenelle) is a district in Paris, France, located along the river Seine in the 15th arrondissement right at the South of the Eiffel Tower. It is with the 13th arrondissement and La Défense, one of the districts hosting the most highrise buildings in the Paris area.

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[edit] Description

The Front de Seine district is the result of an urbanism project from the 1970s. It includes about twenty towers reaching nearly 100 meters of height built all around an elevated espalanade. That esplanade is paved with frescos that can only be perceived from the elevated floors of the towers. At the opposite of Italie 13, the design of the towers is a lot more varied with for instance the hôtel Novotel Paris-Tour Eiffel (formerly known as hôtel Nikkō) with its red-encircled windows or the Tour Totem, which consists in a stack of several glassed-blocks.

Furthermore, when 13th arr. towers are predominantly residential and La Défense towers are predominantly commercial, the towers from the Front de Seine are of mixed commercial and residential use.

[edit] Highrise buildings

Among the tallest towers in the district, we can find culminating at 98 meters :

  • Tour Avant-Seine (1975) : 98 m, 32 floors.
  • Tour Mars (1974) : 98 m, 32 floors.
  • Tour Paris Côté Seine (1977) : 98 m, 32 floors.
  • Tour Seine (1970) : 98 m, 32 floors
  • Tour Espace 2000 (1976) : 98 m, 31 floors.
  • Tour Évasion 2000 (1971) : 98 m, 31 floors.
  • Hôtel Novotel Paris-Tour Eiffel (1976) : 98 m, 31 floors.
  • Tour Totem (1979) : 98 m, 31 floors.
  • Tour Beaugrenelle ( 1979) : 98 m, 30 floors.
  • Tour Panorama (1974) : 98 m, 30 floors.
  • Tour Perspective 1 (1973) : 98 m, 30 floors.
  • Tour Perspective 2 (1975) : 98 m, 30 floors.
  • Tour Reflets (1976) : 98 m, 30 floors.
  • Tour Rive Gauche (1975) : 98 m, 30 floors.
  • Tour Keller (1970) : 98 m, 29 floors.
  • Tour Cristal (1990) : 98 m, 27 floors.
  • 79 quai André Citroën : 24 floors.
  • Tour Mirabeau (1972) : 18 floors.
  • Immeuble le Village (1973) : 17 floors.
  • Bureaux Hachette Livre (1969) : 12 floors.
  • Tour Mercure (1973) : 12 floors.

[edit] See also

[edit] Liens externes

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