The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search


A screen of wave-shaped louvers shades the building’s south elevation, creating dappled shadows on the lobby walls behind.

The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

Above: photograph by Emile Dubuisson

Corridors lead from here into the three swimming pools, which include a lap pool, a play pool and a children’s pool.

The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

Chunky columns between the pools support the curved roof, while a wall of north-facing windows lets swimmers look out towards the river.

The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

Above: photograph by Emile Dubuisson

A blanket of sedum covers the surface of the roof, echoing the profile of the hills beyond.

The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

Other swimming pools we’ve published include .

The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

Above: photograph by Emile Dubuisson


The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

Above: photograph by Emile Dubuisson

The following text was provided by Agence Search:


The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre

Between landscape and urbanity

The new water sports center Mantes-la-Jolie is emblematic of urban renewal in the Val-Fourré public housing projets. Located in the neighbourhood “Quartier des Peintres”, known for its problematic social and urban environment, the new buildings are the latest in a series of programs dating back over a decade.

Beyond being major sports facilities, they are an important neighbourhood gathering space, as well as a destination intended to open up the projects to the outside community.

The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

The Val-Fourré projects are located on the banks of the Seine. In addition to social integration, the new complex is tasked with the joining together of cityscape and landscape.

Conscious of the stakes, Agence SEARCH seized the occasion to create bold high-quality architecture. To make the beautiful banal, an everyday figure in a neighbourhood that is often stigmatised, to make it accessible and normal conveys a message of optimism and opportunity.

The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

There are three major ways to interpret the Mantes-la-Jolie water sports center: as a part the greater landscape, as a filter, and through the theme of water:

1. The greater landscape. The exceptional site offers beautiful views of the Vexin hillsides. The undulating morphology of the buildings’ green roofs responds to the hills on the other side of the Seine. The architecture was conceived as a landscape, with the intention being to heighten the connection between the users and the surrounding natural environment, be they inside or outside the buildings.

2. As a filter. A unifying force between the city and nature, the Mantes-la-Jolie water sports center is structured by the interplay of transparencies, beginning with the mashrabiya on the city-side façade and extending inside the building through a series of porous spaces. Porosity, gradation, progressive dilation of limits and boundaries between exterior and interior – such processes bring the Vexin hillsides and the Val-Fourré housing project together, all the while opening up the facility to the neighbourhood. The successive filters create a nuanced atmosphere of calm and serenity.

3. Water. The unifying element of the project. The reproduction of undulating form, at different scales, and with different subjects, is an explicit reference to the aquatic element. From this point of view, it expresses the essence of the activity. It marks its identity.

The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

Above: photograph by Emile Dubuisson

A New Facility For The Val-Fourré

A symbol of urban renewal

Sunday, July 2nd, 2006, in ten seconds, three high-rise buildings fall to the ground. They were the Degas apartments in the Painters’ Neighbourhood in the Val-Fourré housing project.

In their place, the decision is made to build the first swimming pool of the CAMY (Communauté d’Agglomération de Mantes en Yvelines). Baptised Aqualude, it will become a crucial asset in the improvement of quality of life and the image of the Val-Fourré.

Aqualude is a leisure facility intended for family fun. It is also a learning center for school groups. With six lap lines and an exercise room it is a place for cutting edge sports activities. Much more than a simple swimming pool it is a neighbourhood gathering space.

The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

The neighbouring building, baptised Aquanaute, is a boat house consecrated to nautical sports including crew and canoe-kayaking. It is connected to a public garden and playground.

The esplanade that joins the two buildings is also a place for community interaction. It frames the landscape and affirms the opening up of the city to the Seine and the Vexin hillsides.

Beyond its various functions, the facility, with its quality architecture, symbolises neighbourhood renewal.

The Mantes-la-Jolie water sports center has a federating vocation, as a place of exchange, open to the neighbourhood, to the natural environment, and to the greater community. Welcoming and convivial, it is a space for sports and for fun, and a nice place to stroll. It sends a good impression of the neighbourhood beyond its borders.

The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

Late 2005, Agence Search Wins It’s First Competition, The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Center

At the end of the year 2005, Agence Search is the unanimous winner of the restricted competition for the Mantes-la-Jolie water sports center.

Agence Search, founded by Caroline Barat and Thomas Dubuisson, is at that point only one year old. It is the first time the firm participates in a public competition.

The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

Their success is all the more remarkable in that the three other teams are all of international caliber: Behnisch and Partners (Stuttgart), RPM Architekten (Munich) and Dominique Perrault Architecte (Paris).

The project thus marks the very beginning of Agence SEARCH. It is a tremendous springboard for the young firm, distinguished one year later in 2006 by the Nouveaux Albums des Jeunes Architectes (NAJA), a prize awarded by the Ministry of Culture and Communication to the best young architects in France.

The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

The Greater Landscape

The project is situated at the junction of cityscape and landscape. On the banks of the Seine, it constitutes an exceptional opportunity to reinvigorate the dialogue between the Val-Fourrée housing projects and the Vexin hillsides.

The architecture is conceived as landscape.

The design of the public garden reprises the Vexin hills with an abstract undulating form that is extended and accentuated with the building – the landscape thus becomes architecture and the building takes on the scale of the surrounding countryside.

From this point of view, the green roof resonates with the Vexin hillsides and embodies the symbolism of the project.

The desire to be one with nature, to be in direct connection with the landscape is also felt from within the building.

In the swimming pools, the public is visually connected to the outside through a glass façade that is generous both in its size and in its sophisticated details. No obstacle blocks the continuity of the swimming pools, the landscaped garden, and in the background the Vexin hillsides and the sky.

The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

Above: photograph by Emile Dubuisson

A Filter

On the South façade, city side, the site has a single entrance, through an esplanade that overlooks the Vexin hillsides. Approaching the building from this direction, from the perspective of the Val-Fourré neighborhood, reveals the second structuring theme of the project, that of gradation. A unifier of urban life and nature, the facility is structured by the interplay of transparencies, beginning with the mashrabiya on the south façade and extending inside the building through a series of porous spaces. Views of the Vexin hillsides are carefully composed, filtered through a succession of frameworks.

The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

Above: photograph by Emile Dubuisson

The porosity and progressive gradation between urbanity, interiority, and the landscape beyond, express a desire to open up the facility to its environment. Particularly attractive, this singular and novel building introduces the landscape to the urban fabric. Its playful character is a dynamic element for the community, and its transparencies enable the public to make out its internal activities, and thus act as an invitation to enter the building.

Nevertheless, the different filters also ensure the intimacy of the users, who though not being entirely hidden, are not exposed to the eyes of the street. Moreover, from the inside, the views of the Val Fourré housing projects are observed through filters to singular effect, renewing the perception of an architecture that is often discredited. The extreme urbanity of the neighborhood is softened, contributing to the creation of a serene atmosphere within the building.

The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

The Aquatic Methaphor

Water is the unifying element of the entire project. Above the swimming pools the underside of the roof follows the curvature of the building’s structure.

Treated in a homogenous fashion, ceiling unifies the ensemble, while the volumetric interplay distinguishes the three zones (lap-pool, play-pool, kiddie-pool).

The aquatic element, which appears at times as a mirror, at times in movement, is in dialogue with light, further enriching the users’ spatial experience.

The Mantes-la-Jolie Water Sports Centre by Agence Search

On an allegorical level, the design of the mashrabiya, with its undulating lines, is a metaphor of the aquatic element. It thus expresses the essence of the activity within.

The curved forms, with their apparent simplicity and repetitive motif, constitute a powerful identifying factor for the water sports center. From this point of view they embody the graphic identity of the building.