The project to redevelop the Halluin wasteland into a health care facility is located in the Saint Vincent de Paul Hospital in Lille (59), a remarkable site that presents a series of opportunities, but also constraints.
The project, strongly influenced by the existing Halles Freyssinet on site, introduces a new levitating hall, and juxtaposes new contemporary volumes to the existing red brick facades, thus proposing a measured rehabilitation project, as an evolution benefiting from the reclamation of an industrial site in the center of the city of Lille.
The choices and architectural provisions of the project are intended to provide answers to a wide range of issues: the preservation of a heritage, its urban insertion, its human scale, the clarity and legibility of its functional organization, its user-friendliness, the scalability and flexibility of its spaces and its strong environmental involvement.
It is a project punctuated with vegetation and light, forming a flexible medical complex, which offers the inhabitants of Lille an accessible "medical home", focused on their well-being, benevolence and urban identity.