Architecture Portfolio / Eulalie Vidé / 2024 / ENSAV / english

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portfolio eulalie vidé

20 rue de Sèvres, Boulogne Billancourt, 92100

eulalievide@hotmail.fr

+33 7 82 86 84 45

Curriculum Vitae

Rotterdam, the port city facing floods

Living to the rhythm of the seasons

Productive villa

Walk along the banks of the Seine in Argenteuil

Blow-up Utopia

Kaleidoscope

75 prefabricated homes and 2 shops in Lyon

2 buildings of 59 and 46 homes in Fontenay Pastels

Model 1 100, photo : Pierre Louis Mabire

Eulalie VIDÉ

11 September 2000, Paris

20 rue de Sèvres, Boulogne Billancourt, 92100

eulalievide@hotmail.fr

+33 7 82 86 84 45

Diploma in Architecture from the National School of Architecture of Versailles, First class honours

Inter-school exchange at UBA FADU, Buenos Aires, 9 months

Bachelor’s degree in Architecture from the National School of Architecture of Versailles

Baccalaureate in Economics and Social Studies, Latin and Plastic Arts option, with Honors, Lycée Notre Dame des Oiseaux, Paris

Compétences

French (native), English (C1), Spanish (B2)

Autocad, Rhinoceros, Blender, Adobe Suite, Revit, Grasshopper, QGIS, Modelling

Drawing with pastels and coloured pencils, Photography, Climbing, Cycling

Experiences

Internship at HofmanDujardin, Amsterdam, 3 months

Model and mood board studio

Design of a shopping centre in Dammam

Design of a head office in Dammam

Design of a house in Amsterdam

Internship at Itar Architecture, Paris, 6 months

Competition for two housing buildings in Fontenay-aux-Roses

Competition prefabricated housing in Saint Cyr l’Ecole (winner)

Housing competition in the Duchère district of Lyon

Housing competition for the Olympic Village in Paris

Housing competition in Sartrouville

Housing competition for Paris La Défense (winner)

Construction site for an intergenerational residence in Ferrières

Techo, Buenos Aires, 1 week

Building a modular wooden house in teams of six

Che Pibe, Buenos Aires, 4 months

Designing a rainwater harvesting system and vegetable garden for a school

Internship at Archibat studio, Versailles, 2 months

Renovation of a garage into two lofts and design of two houses in Châteaufort

Conversion of a farmhouse into seven lofts in the Paris region

Drawing the garden of a villa in Andé

Internship at Piazza Batiment, Versailles, 2 weeks

Work experience on a residential building site

Internship at Hamonic + Masson & Associés, Paris, 1 week

Model studio

Rotterdam, the city-port facing the floods

PFE First class honours

The Netherlands are finally protected from marine flooding thanks to the Delta Works dams. However, they now face the growing threat of river flooding due to climate change. These floods can occur within two days of heavy rainfall in Central Europe and may last up to two months.

At the same time, the European Union, aware of environmental challenges, is moving away from fossil fuels, significantly impacting Dutch ports, which are over 50% occupied by the oil industry. These ports, vital economic hubs of the country, are the only areas in the Randstad built at higher elevations, above flood levels. How can this opportunity be leveraged to envision new strategies for living with floods?

On the lands freed by this transition, emergency housing emerges in the form of a dense 24-story city. Its lightweight structure remains bright and is designed to function in two phases. During floods, the city compacts to accommodate as many people as possible. Once the waters recede, the spaces connect via walkways to create large lofts and workshops. This solution proposes a way to live with flooding, embodying a message of hope.

Carte de la Ranstad actuellement, après le plan «Room for the river», lors d’une crue et inondée par la mer
Atelierdesign
Coiffeur
Patisserie Bricolage
Fleuriste
Truffaut Couturier Restaurant
Potier
Lidl
IKEA
Cordonier
IKEA
Aldi La poste Association
Reparateur
Boulangerie
Primeur de velo
Boucherie
La poste
Magasinage
Magasinage

During dry conditions During a flood

Living with the seasons

Licence 3

The project is located on the distinctive site of Butte Rouge, an iconic 20th-century garden city that is now under threat of destruction. The building thus replaces one of the blocks overlooking the city, situated at the edge of the forest. It addresses the challenges of the post-prosperity era with its climatic approach, incorporating a system for heat recovery and solar energy capture through three key features.

Firstly, all the apartments, which are duplexes, overlook a winter garden that serves as a thermal buffer in the winter and transforms into a large terrace in the summer. The building’s primal shape ensures that all the apartments are oriented toward the South. Finally, the sports activity room, located at the center of the building, not only serves as a functional space but also acts as a heat source for the apartments through the treatment of its floor and ceiling.

Apartments in winter
Apartments in summer

RÉALISÉ À L'AIDE D'UN PRODUIT AUTODESK VERSION ÉTUDIANT

RÉALISÉ À L'AIDE D'UN PRODUIT AUTODESK VERSION ÉTUDIANT

RÉALISÉ À L'AIDE D'UN PRODUIT AUTODESK VERSION ÉTUDIANT

RÉALISÉ À L'AIDE D'UN PRODUIT AUTODESK VERSION ÉTUDIANT

Plan of the first and second floors of the duplexes

Villa productive

Master 1

In the context of Veneto and inspired by Italian country villas, a new type of utopian collective housing is born.

The building’s shape, which frees the ground, allows it to adapt to both forests and suburban areas, thanks to its lightweight structure. The residences are arranged on suspended platforms, with rooms alternating according to their degree of privacy.

These platforms communicate visually, as the levels are fluid, and the views pass through the building’s entire length, though they can be interrupted by curtains. Ramps and stairs lead to the living rooms, dining areas, and kitchens, which form the communal spaces, while stairs on the platforms provide access to one’s own bathroom or bedroom. Thus, each room is surrounded on both sides by the new environments created within this greenhouse-like structure.

Walk along the banks of the Seine in Argenteuil

Licence 2

In Argenteuil, the banks of the Seine are bordered by a fast road to the west, which then rises onto a footbridge to the east. On a very large scale, it represents the only break in the Seine riverside promenade between Conflans-Sainte-Honorine and Paris. On the scale of the site, it is a new factor of isolation for the neighborhood located between the highway and the railway, which is very enclosed and lacks dynamism. Yet, it is surrounded by other vibrant neighborhoods, with the city center of Argenteuil to the west and the Orgemont district to the east.

The urban project proposes to extend the existing soft mobility path that runs along the banks of the Seine from Paris, by redeveloping the departmental road into mixed-use lanes to connect the enclosed area to other neighborhoods in Argenteuil. The departmental road becomes a mixed-use lane with a landscaped border, shared by cars, bicycles, and pedestrians. This new dynamic path is designed in three phases.

In the first part, the departmental road is at ground level, in the area of the train station’s business park. A warehouse is transformed into a public space with a café-restaurant and a rooftop terrace offering views of the Seine. A square is developed in front of this building.

At the level of the elevated departmental road, balconies serve as vantage points over the Seine, encouraging pauses. A ramp allows pedestrians and cyclists to easily descend to the foot of the road and access a new nautical base.

It is built at the foot of the departmental road to take advantage of the Seine. In addition to being crossed by the soft mobility path, it is connected to the city by two access points, making it an important hub. The positioning of the buildings at the base helps mitigate the visual dominance of the departmental road when one is at the nautical base.

Kaleidoscope

Licence 2

Supervised by

This youth hostel/nightclub features a 25-meter-long V-shaped sloping roof and is located in the middle of a highway, on a 40m by 40m plot randomly chosen in the city of Hong Kong. Its interior walls and floor are mirrored, creating a kaleidoscope effect. Colored glass partitions divide the space into different rooms (reception, bedroom, bathroom, kitchen, and dining area), and the furniture is also made of colored glass. The building is illuminated by the headlights of passing cars, with the light taking on the color of the objects it passes through, reminiscent of the beams of light in nightclubs. The furniture can be flattened and attached to the walls to create a large dance floor. The location in the middle of the highway allows for music to be played without disturbing others.

Blow-up Utopia

Licence 1

Supervised by Martial Marquet

This inflatable structure is a workshop designed to adapt to the needs of its users. On a surface of 70m², it can either form one large open space with a height of up to 6 meters, or be divided into two separate areas, each accessible through two separate doors. This partitioning is made possible by a system of straps that constrain and fold the inflatables, allowing the central section to expand.

With Margaux Abautret, Dory Soulage, Amina Slaoui, Axel Jacob, Élodie Détré, Théodore Demirdache and Ambre Raviaud. Pictures: Salem Mostefaoui

75 housing units and 2 shops prefabricated in Lyon

At Itar Architecture with Juan Moreno

Competition phase

Lyon, La Duchère

2 buildings with 59 and 46 housing units in Fontenay

At Itar Architecture with Tom Catteau and Thomas Breton

Competition phase (project not selected)

Fontenay, Paradis

Verger 1 - 59 Logements - 3969 m² SP

Lesterrainsdesports

RuedesParadis

Perrin 2 - 46 Logements - 3175 m² SP

Pastels

20 rue de Sèvres, Boulogne Billancourt, 92100

eulalievide@hotmail.fr

+33 7 82 86 84 45

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