Panoramic apartment

Edouard Albert architecte
1960
Paris 13e

HISTORIC MONUMENT

€960,000

82 m² LC
1 bedroom + 1 office (or second bedroom)
1 shower room
Cellar
Panoramic view
Exclusive listing

Description

A bright apartment in a Parisian icon 

Built by architect Édouard Albert in 1960, the Tour Albert is the first residential “skyscraper” in Paris. Renowned for its aesthetic appeal and innovative structural design, this landmark of modern architecture in France is listed as a Historic Monument.

Located on the 15th floor of the tower, this apartment offers a living area of 82 sqm (Carrez law).

The entrance opens onto a spacious open-plan living area with a lounge, dining space, and a fully equipped open kitchen. The property also features a bedroom with a dressing room, a second bedroom or office, a shower room, and a separate toilet.

Flooded with natural light thanks to its transparency, the apartment boasts exceptional panoramic views of Paris’s landmarks: the Eiffel Tower, Les Invalides, Sacré-Cœur, Notre-Dame Cathedral, the Panthéon, and more.

Its west-facing orientation offers stunning sunsets.

The layout is fully flexible thanks to a structural system with load-bearing pillars, allowing for an open, uncluttered floor plan.

The property is completed by a cellar.

The Tour Albert is located in a शांत and residential area of the 13th arrondissement, on the edge of the 5th arrondissement, facing Square René Le Gall. Between Les Gobelins and Place d’Italie, it benefits from all nearby amenities and numerous schools.

Gare Montparnasse and Gare de Lyon are approximately 15 and 25 minutes away, respectively, by public transport.

An innovate construction method

The steel structure of the Tour Albert forms a regular grid that contributes to the architectural expression of the façade. Composed of steel tube columns filled with concrete, supporting a reinforced concrete slab, and braced with Saint Andrew’s cross-shaped reinforcements, this structure combines lightness and transparency.

On the 6th floor, a terrace designed for residents’ enjoyment features a 600 sqm ceiling painted by the artist Jacques Lagrange.

For this first residential “skyscraper,” the architect sought to integrate a high-rise building into the Parisian landscape and to place structural ingenuity at the service of a flexible layout. High-rise buildings, which emerged in the United States at the end of the 19th century with metal structures, appeared only later in France, where urban planning regulations long restricted their construction.

The Tour Albert was widely featured in architectural publications, which highlighted both its innovative construction approach and its forward-thinking aesthetic.

Edouard Albert

Édouard Albert (1910–1968) graduated in architecture from the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris in 1937. His career was marked by his research on materials, which enabled him to develop steel tubular structures. These structures, notable for their lightness, reflected a pursuit of harmony between technology, economy, and aesthetics. From 1959 to 1968, Édouard Albert served as a studio professor at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, was a member of the committees of the Scientific and Technical Center for Building, and contributed to the editorial board of the journal L’Architecture d’Aujourd’hui.

In 1955, he built in Paris’s 17th arrondissement the first building with a tubular structure. He was also the architect of the Air France administrative building at Orly. In 1962, André Malraux entrusted him with taking over the project for the Faculty of Sciences at Jussieu, where he once again used tubular metal architecture and collaborated with artists to integrate contemporary art into the campus design.

In the 1960s, alongside Édouard Albert, architects such as Jean Prouvé and Claude Parent conducted research into innovative metal structures. Claude Parent notably designed the Maison de l’Iran at the Cité Internationale Universitaire de Paris in 1969, a building suspended from a steel framework.

Technical information

Asking price : €960,000
Agency fees are payable by the seller.

Property tax : Not disclosed

Condominium : 136 units
Average quarterly share of current charges : approximately €3,330

Heating : collective gas system

Information on the risks to which this property is exposed is available on the Géorisques website : www.georisques.gouv.fr

© Texts & photos Architecture de Collection

Energy rating : E – Greenhouse gas emissions rating : E

Estimated annual energy costs (based on 2021, 2022, and 2023 indices, including subscriptions, in accordance with the decree of March 31, 2021, applicable at the time the EPC was issued) : between €1,310 and €1,810 per year.

Additional information

Architecte

Edouard Albert

Géolocalisation

Paris 13ème

Location

Paris & Ile-de-France

Price

500 000 € – 1 000 000 €

Prix de vente

960 000 €

Type of property

Apartment

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