Publication Magazine Volume 2 Wood Architecture | страница 19

“This site is so special because you are up in the mountain, you feel isolated from everything” Baobab is an all-wood skyscraper project proposed for Paris. (Photo: Michael Green Architecture) BAOBAB IN PARIS From the “tall wood” wizards at Vancouver-headquartered Michael Green Architecture (completed North American projects T3 and the Wood Innovation and Design Centre also appear on our list), Baobab — presumably named after the fabled tree found across Madagascar and the African savanna — is an all-wood skyscraper project proposed for Paris. Submitted in 2015 to the Reinventer Paris design competition seeking innovative infill ideas for a couple dozen different redevelopment sites spread across the city, Baobab, all potentially record-breaking 35 stories of it, would be a truly mixed-use development that (luxury and affordable housing, retail, community gardens and a bus depot) spans Boulevard Périphérique, a perpetually gridlocked ring road encircling central Paris. If built, Baobab would sequester an impressive 3,700 metric tons of carbon dioxide — the equivalent of removing 2,207 cars from French highways for a year or heating a single home for 982 years. “Our goal is that through innovation, youthful social contact and overall community building, we have created a design that becomes uniquely important to Paris,” says Green of the proposal which was conceived for the competition in collaboration with French real estate developer REI and Parisian design studio DVDD. “Just as Gustave Eiffel shattered our conception of what was possible a century and a half ago, this project can push the envelope of wood innovation with France in the forefront.” 14 . wood architecture