Seat of the European Parliament in Strasbourg

Louise Weiss building
Immeuble du Parlement Européen IV (IPE 4)

Plaque commemorating the inauguration of the Louise Weiss Building of the European Parliament in Strasbourg on 14 December 1999, by President of France, Jacques Chirac, and President of the European Parliament, Nicole Fontaine.
General information
Type Debating Chamber and MEP offices
Architectural style Contemporary
Location Strasbourg, France
Coordinates 48°35′51″N 7°46′08″E / 48.597401°N 7.768825°E / 48.597401; 7.768825 (Louise Weiss building)Coordinates: 48°35′51″N 7°46′08″E / 48.597401°N 7.768825°E / 48.597401; 7.768825 (Louise Weiss building)
Completed 14 December 1999[1]
Owner European Union
Height 60 m (tower)
Dimensions
Diameter 100 m (tower)
Other dimensions Hemicycle inside : 56×44×15 m (184×144×49 ft)
Technical details
Floor count 20 (17 above-ground levels, 3 sub-ground levels)
Floor area 220,000 m2 (2,400,000 sq ft)
Design and construction
Architect Architecture-Studio : Martin Robain, Rodo Tisnado, Jean-François Bonne, Alain Bretagnolle René-Henri Arnaud, Laurent-Marc Fischer and Gaston Valente[2]
Structural engineer Gpci
Other designers Sogelerg Ote Serue Etf
Main contractor S.E.R.S.[3]

The city of Strasbourg (France) is the official seat of the European Parliament. The institution is legally bound to meet there twelve sessions a year lasting about four days each. Other work takes place in Brussels and Luxembourg City (see Location of European Union institutions for more information).[4][5] Also all votes of the European Parliament must take place in Strasbourg. "Additional" sessions and committees take place in Brussels. Although de facto a majority of the Parliament's work is now geared to its Brussels site, it is legally bound to keep Strasbourg as its official home.

The Parliament's five buildings, all named after distinguished European politicians, are located in the Quartier Européen (European Quarter) of the city, which it shares with other European organisations which are separate from the European Union's.[6] Previously the Parliament used to share the same assembly room as the Council of Europe. Today, the principal building is the Louise Weiss building, inaugurated in 1999.

Principal building

European Parliament Building in Strasbourg, France, view from street.

The Louise Weiss building (IPE 4) (named after Louise Weiss, a French former member of the parliament, is located in the Wacken district of Strasbourg, south of Schiltigheim, between the 1920s workers' suburban colony (Cité ouvrière) Cité Ungemach and the 1950s buildings of the Strasbourg fair, some of which had to be torn down to make way for the Immeuble du Parlement européen 4, its formal name. Built at a cost of 3.1 billion French francs (470 million euros) at the intersection of the Ill and the Marne-Rhine Canal, it houses the hemicycle for plenary sessions, the largest of any European institution (750 seats – expanded to 785 – for MEPs and 680 for visitors),[7] 18 other assembly rooms as well as a total of 1,133 parliamentary offices. Through a covered footbridge over the Ill, the Louise Weiss communicates with the Winston Churchill and Salvador de Madariaga buildings.

With its surface of 220,000m² and its distinctive 60m tower,[8] it is one of the biggest and most visible buildings of Strasbourg. The Louise Weiss was designed by the Paris-based team of architects Architecture-Studio. The architects were inspired by Roman amphitheatres.[9] After the project was approved at an international contest in 1991, work, commissioned by the Société d'Aménagement et d'Équipement de la Région de Strasbourg on behalf of the Urban Community of Strasbourg, started in May 1995, with up to twelve tower cranes at the time on what was one of the biggest building sites of the decade in Europe. The inauguration of the building took place on 14 December 1999 by French President Jacques Chirac and Parliament President Nicole Fontaine.[10] In internal EP documents, the building is referred to as "LOW".[11]

Tower

The 60m high tower, intentionally left unfinished on one side, carries heavy symbolism, and is often said to have been oriented eastwards, i.e. towards eastern Europe, as by the time of the completion of the building no country from the former Soviet bloc had yet joined the EU. However, the open side of the tower actually faces west. In 2010 Glenn Beck suggested that the tower's design consciously mirrors the Vienna painting of the Tower of Babel by Pieter Bruegel the Elder.[12]

On 14 January 2009, the European Parliament decided to bestow the name of Bronisław Geremek, a recently deceased member from Poland, on the courtyard inside the tower,[13] calling it the "Bronisław Geremek Agora" (French: Agora Bronisław Geremek). This was officially inaugurated on 21 April 2009.[14]

Hemicycle

The hemicycle

Members sit in a hemicycle according to their political groups arranged mainly from left to right, although with the non-attached members towards the back and right of the chamber. All desks are equipped with microphones, headphones for interpretation and electronic voting equipment. The leaders of the groups sit on the front benches at the centre, and in the very centre is a podium for guest speakers. The remaining segment of the circular chamber is primarily composed of the raised area where the President and staff sit.[15] Behind them there is an EU flag attached to the wall with national flags in rows each side of it.

Interpretation booths are located behind them and along the sides of the chamber, while public galleries are located above the chamber around the entire perimeter. Further benches are provided between the sides of the raised area and the MEPs; these are taken up by the Council on the far left and the Commission on the far right.[15] The chamber as a whole is of a modern design, with the walls entirely composed of lights with large blue chairs for MEPs.

Ceiling collapse

On 7 August 2008, 10% of the ceiling of the plenary chamber collapsed. No one was injured, as Parliament was not meeting at the time (it was in summer recess), though a number of seats were damaged. A first part of the ceiling collapsed at 18.00 CET followed by a second part at 22.36 CET.[16] No extreme weather conditions were reported and the structure was new, so it was assumed that the false ceiling had a defect.[17] The President's office stated that a third of the ceiling had been affected and that "The preliminary results have revealed that the partial collapse of the ceiling resulted from the breakage of parts holding the suspended ceiling that connects it with the actual structure of the ceiling."[18]

Repair work began immediately, but it became apparent that it could not be repaired in time for the next sitting. Thus, the session starting on 1 September was moved to the Brussels hemicycle. Parliament was expected to move back to Strasbourg for the session starting on 22 September[18] but had to remain in Brussels for that session as well as safety inspections dragged on.[19] The event was greeted with joy by those who oppose the Parliament's presence in Strasbourg,[18] and mocked by eurosceptics who wore hard hats to the first plenary in Brussels after the incident (if Parliament had been sitting at the time, the collapsing ceiling would have hit members of the eurosceptic parties).[19]

In August 2012, the Paul-Henri Spaak building in Brussels which houses the hemicycle was found to be defective as well. Cracks in the beams that support the ceiling led to a security closure of at least six months, as announced by an estimate released on 9 October 2012 by the Parliament administration.[20] This in turn led to a reshuffle of the Parliament's timetable.[21] In early December 2012, it became known that the damage was more serious than previously thought, and that the closure of the hemicycle was expected to last "until November 2013". All "mini plenary" meetings in Brussels until this date were scrapped, a decision that was met with "fury" by some MEPs.[22][23] Since, as of December 2012, the European Parliament is "having trouble" finding a company to carry out the repair work, it is likely that the reopening of the Brussels hemicycle may take place only in 2014.[24]

Criticism

The Louise Weiss building has been subjected to criticism for its complex interior design : "It is apparently transparent but almost impossible to navigate; there are bridges between different levels, but you cannot quite work out where they lead".[25] When it was opened, it was condemned by some for being "shabby, dark, difficult to navigate" with telecommunications and lifts being plagued by technical difficulties; Parliament President Nicole Fontaine climbed nine flights of stairs to her office rather than risk being trapped in the notorious lifts.[26] In 2002, the building's water supply was hit by an outbreak of Legionnaires disease, due to the lack of use for much of the year (see "Secondary buildings" below)[27] and in 2008 the ceiling of the plenary chamber collapsed (see "Hemicycle" above).[26]

Secondary buildings

There are four secondary buildings across the river from the Louise Weiss. Like the Louise Weiss, most of them follow the numbering system of Immeuble du Parlement Européen (French for "Building of the European Parliament") 1, 2 and 3; the most recent building, (Immeuble Václav Havel), has not yet (July 2017) officially received the number 5. The buildings 1 and 2 form a single complex along the river. The buildings 3 and "5" are located more inland and connected by a glass footbridge. On the site on which the complex was built, there previously stood the swimming pool of the Société des nageurs strasbourgeois (SNS), built in 1952 and demolished in 1978 to make way.[28]

The Winston Churchill building (IPE 1)[29] is located on Avenue du Président Schuman, in the Orangerie district. It houses administration and support facilities. The Salvador de Madariaga building (IPE 2),[30] along Quai du Bassin de l'Ill, is located next to the Winston Churchill building. Both buildings, designed by the municipal architect François Sauer with the assistance of Jean-Paul Friedmann on behalf of the SERS actually form one single complex with a surface of 58,400m², built at a cost of 81 million euros,[31] inaugurated in 1980 (later modified in 1988 and 1991, in relation to the construction of the IPE 3) and designed in a post-modern style often characterised by convoluted, serpentine architecture, relative heights and glazed facades.,[32][33] The Salvador de Madariaga building also houses the other EU body of which Strasbourg is the official seat (since 1992): the European Ombudsman.

The buildings were at the centre of controversy regarding overpayment of rent.[34] They were eventually bought by the Parliament in 2006.[35]

In October 2007 it was discovered that the buildings contained a larger amount of asbestos than previously thought before they were purchased. However the amount is still not deemed to be a public health risk and is limited to certain areas. The previous owner of the building may be responsible for finding and removing the asbestos within the building. This was not the first such incident as bacteria causing Legionnaires has been discovered in the water system of the complex after a number of officials reported in ill. The bacteria had been allowed to develop due to the Strasbourg complex being used only four months of the year.[36]

The Pierre Pflimlin building (IPE 3), a heart-shaped, comparatively low building built on behalf of the SERS at the crossing of Avenue du Président Robert Schuman and Allée Spach,[37] inaugurated in 1991 as a press and media center (Centre de presse et d'information) at a cost of 38 million euros,[38] has been given the name of the former President of European Parliament on 6 July 2007.[39] The smallest of the buildings (21,000 m²), it is also the only one not to be next to the river or the canal. It now houses among other things the translation staff.

The Václav Havel building was inaugurated on 5 July 2017 by EP President Antonio Tajani, and French Minister for European Affairs, Nathalie Loiseau. The building, originally opened in 1954, belonged to the Council of Europe, which used it until 2007. In 2012, it was purchased by the European Parliament, which completely deconstructed and reconstructed it.[40][41][42]

Former buildings

From left to right: Louise Weiss, Winston Churchill, Pierre Pflimlin, Václav Havel (before the transformation, photo taken in 2008), and Council of Europe buildings.

The present buildings were constructed due to the enlargement of the European Union in 1995 (and the planned enlargement to the east in 2004). Due to the new members, the Parliament needed a larger hemicycle to hold debates, and more offices for MEPs. Prior to this, Parliament shared the facilities of the Council of Europe, who had built a hemicycle in their headquarters: the Palace of Europe. That hemicycle was inaugurated for the Parliament's use, and for the use of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, on 28 January 1977.

However, the sharing of this chamber could cause confusion for TV audiences unsure which institution was using it at the time. This was exacerbated by the EU and the Council of Europe both using the same flag, although the two did use their own emblems as well.

Before the Palace of Europe was built in 1977, the two institutions also shared the Maison de l'Europe ("House of Europe") from 1958.[43] The Maison was a provisory concrete building of purely functional architecture[44][45] and was inaugurated in 1950. It stood where there is now a lawn leading up to the Palace of Europe.[46][47]

See also

References

  1. "The European Parliament's Louise Weiss Building in Strasbourg". CVCE. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  2. Official press release Archived 6 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine.
  3. "S.E.R.S website". Sers.eu. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  4. "Protocol (No 8) on the location of the seats of the institutions and of certain bodies and departments of the European Communities and of Europol (1997)" (PDF). Europa (web portal). Retrieved 15 July 2007.
  5. "European Parliament calendar 2007" (PDF). Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  6. "Interactive map of the European district of Strasbourg". En.strasbourg-europe.eu. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  7. "Cost of the building and number of seats". Diplomatie.gouv.fr. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  8. Figures about the building
  9. "Official press release". Parlementeuropeen.net. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  10. Nicole Fontaine (14 December 1999). "Speech by Mrs Nicole FONTAINE, President of the European Parliament: Inauguration of the Louise WEISS Building, with M. Jacques CHIRAC, President of the French Republic". European Parliament. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  11. "Chercher sur Europarl". Europarl.europa.eu. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  12. "Glenn Beck: Lessons From the Tower of Babel" (transcript), foxnews.com, 17 November 2010
  13. "La cour Geremek", relatio-euope.eu, 14 January 2009 (in French)
  14. "Address of the President of the European Parliament, Hans-Gert Pöttering". Wyborcza.pl. 21 April 2009. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  15. 1 2 "Strasbourg seating plan" (PDF). European Parliament. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  16. Mahony, Honor (12 August 2008) European Parliament ceiling collapses, EUobserver
  17. Lasry, Benjamin (13 August 2008) European parliament roof in Strasbourg collapses, Cafe Babel
  18. 1 2 3 Mahony, Honor (22 August 2008) MEPs shift to Brussels after ceiling collapse, EUobserver
  19. 1 2 Runner, Phillipa (4 September 2008) MEPs shift to Brussels after ceiling collapse, EUobserver
  20. Dave Keating (9 October 2012). "Brussels hemicycle to remain closed for at least six months". EuropeanVoice.com. Retrieved 28 October 2012.
  21. Andrew Rettman (10 October 2012). "'Important' crack shuts MEPs' chamber for months". EUobserver.com. Retrieved 28 October 2012.
  22. Toby Vogel (4 December 2012). "No Brussels plenaries for a year". EuropeanVoice.com. Retrieved 8 December 2012.
  23. "EU parliament plenary set to be shut for most of 2013". theparliament.com. 7 December 2012. Retrieved 8 December 2012.
  24. Ophélie Spanneut (3 December 2012). "No session in Brussels in 2013, uncertainty about 2014". europolitics.info. Retrieved 9 December 2012.
  25. "Talking in circles", Tim Adams, The Observer, 25 November 2007
  26. 1 2 Banks, Martin (13 August 2008) Roof caves in on EU parliament building, The Parliament Magazine
  27. EU Parliament hit by Legionnaires disease, BBC News (8 June 2002)
  28. Piscine de la SNS, archi-strasbourg.org (in French)
  29. 48°35′44″N 7°46′12″E / 48.595507°N 7.769925°E
  30. 48°35′42″N 7°46′06″E / 48.595074°N 7.768294°E
  31. Arnaud Willer. "Parlement Européen (IPE 0, 1 et 2)". Sers.eu. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  32. "Salvador de Madariaga seen from the river". Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  33. "Winston Churchill seen from the river". Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  34. 2004 discharge: sharp criticism but support for purchase of Strasbourg buildings europarl.europa.eu
  35. "Pr_Dec_Ep" (PDF). Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  36. Kubosova, Lucia EU parliament buildings searched for asbestos, EUobserver 17 October 2007
  37. 48°35′42″N 7°46′13″E / 48.595031°N 7.770314°E
  38. Arnaud Willer. "Centre Européen de Presse et d’Information – SERS – Société d’Aménagement et d’Equipement de la Région de Strasbourg". Sers.eu. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  39. Press release Archived 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine.
  40. "Official opening of the Havel Building". European Parliament / The President. Retrieved 23 July 2017.
  41. "Václav Havel: Parliament dedicates building to former Czech president". News / European Parliament. Retrieved 23 July 2017.
  42. "Bâtiment Vaclav-Havel - Allée Spach". archi-wiki.org. Retrieved 23 July 2017.
  43. "50 years of the European Parliament – evolution, powers, policies, presidents and elections". Europarl.europa.eu. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  44. "Maison de l'Europe (Strasbourg, 1950–1977)". CVCE. 1950–1977. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  45. "Inside of the hemicycle". CVCE. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  46. "House of Europe and Palace of Europe in 1976". CVCE. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  47. "Aerial view of the House of Europe". CVCE. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
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