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Odeon Tower

Coordinates: 43°44′52.77″N 7°25′50.35″E / 43.7479917°N 7.4306528°E / 43.7479917; 7.4306528
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Odeon Tower
Tour Odéon
Map
General information
StatusCompleted
TypeOffices, residential (private and State-owned), commercial
LocationLa Rousse/Saint Roman, Monaco
Coordinates43°44′52.77″N 7°25′50.35″E / 43.7479917°N 7.4306528°E / 43.7479917; 7.4306528
Construction started2009
Opening2015
OwnerSCI Odeon, subsidiary of Groupe Marzocco
Height
Roof558 ft (170 m)
Top floor49
Technical details
Floor count49
Design and construction
Architect(s)Alexandre Giraldi
DeveloperGroupe Marzocco [fr]
Structural engineerSNC Lavalin, Coyne et Bellier, Van Santen & Associé, MZA Structural Engineering
Other designersAlberto Pinto (interior)
Main contractorVinci Construction France

The Odeon Tower (French: Tour Odéon; Monégasque: Turre Odeu̍n) is a double-skyscraper in the Principality of Monaco. It was the first high-rise in the city-state to be built since the 1980s (high constructions had been abandoned due to aesthetic concerns and criticism of overdevelopment).[1] At 170 metres high, Tour Odeon on its completion was the second tallest building on Europe's Mediterranean coast, after Gran Hotel Bali (186m) in Benidorm, Spain. Had Tour Odeon been built in neighboring France, it would have been among that country's 10 highest buildings.

This project from Groupe Marzocco was considered by some to be an important renewal of economic development for the second-smallest country in the world.[2] Its construction was launched in the middle of the economic crisis, in 2009. The building was inaugurated in April 2015.

Background

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At the end of the 1980s, Prince Rainier III decided to stop building high rises in Monaco, following the construction of some controversial architectural choices. In 2008 his son, Prince Albert II, decided to abandon a polder project (judged as too expensive and too dangerous for surrounding sealife) and build a new high-rise and reformed polder project instead. Both the complex's design and construction was subject to validation by the Urbanism Department of the Principality, and the Prince of Monaco himself.[3]

The construction of the main high-rise was finally voted by the Monegasque Parliament, the National Council, on February 12, 2009.[4]

Features

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  • height: 170 metres, 49 floors.
  • 259 residences, including 62 for-sale private luxury residences (including 2 Sky Duplex apartments of 1,200 m2 each and 1 Sky Penthouse of 3,500 m2 over 5 floors). 157 lower floor apartments, entered via a separate entrance, are for social housing.
  • 10 subterranean levels with 543 parking spaces.
  • restaurant and offices.
  • wellness center including spa, a fitness center and a swimming pool.

The common entrance hall is decorated with wall sculptures of the French artist Mateo Mornar.[5] The private lobby and all the private communal spaces of the tower have been designed by Alberto Pinto.

The building received the High Quality Environmental standard label.[6]

Milestones

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  • July–August 2009: Preparation works - In order to create the necessary space, a neighbouring secondary school, the Collège Charles III de Monaco, was modified. One of the playgrounds, situated behind the building and partly on the construction site, was moved onto the roof. The existing seven storey building was therefore raised by an additional floor.
  • 4 November 2009 - A priest blesses the building site, thus marking the official start of the construction works. This was a symbolic step in a Principality, strongly steeped in the Catholic faith (in accordance with its Constitution).
  • October 2011 - Start of the structural works, completion of the support works.
  • January 2012 - Completion of the ground floor.
  • December 2012 - Completion of the 25th floor.
  • July 2013 - Completion of the structural works.
  • March 2014 - Completion of the coating of the building facades.
  • October 2014 - Completion of the finishing touches.
  • April 2015 - Delivery.

Criticism

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Both the buildings' architecture and the shadows it casts on the cityscape have been criticized since the beginning of the project. In particular, residents of the adjacent French city of Beausoleil have criticized the building for blocking the views and above all diminishing real estate values. An association was created,[7] and the mayor called for discussions between French and Monegasque authorities.[8][9][10] The project continued as planned.[11]

References

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  1. ^ "Monaco : La tour odéon un chantier malheureux | Vanity Fair". Archived from the original on 2017-08-13. Retrieved 2016-08-07.
  2. ^ "Monaco érige deux tours pour soutenir l'activité économique", BatiActu, 25 February 2009, (in French)
  3. ^ Monaco.maville.com Monaco - Grands travaux : le Monaco du futur est sur les rails, (in French)
  4. ^ Conseil National - Official website[permanent dead link], (in French)
  5. ^ (in French) Article Metropole Mag "The wall sculptures of Mateo Mornar" Archived 2016-10-06 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ What $335 Million Buys You: Inside Monaco’s Most Expensive Penthouse, Luxuryes, March the 27th, 2013.
  7. ^ Beausoleil-Odéon Riverains : une assoc pour monter au créneau, (in French)
  8. ^ Beausoleil Gérard Spinelli et la Tour Odéon : "Les riverains sont traumatisés", (in French)
  9. ^ Fair, Vanity. "La tour Odéon, l'histoire d'un chantier dont les malheurs ont atteint des sommets". Archived from the original on 2017-08-13. Retrieved 2016-08-07.
  10. ^ "News - Monaco Life". Monaco Life.
  11. ^ Oliver Wainwright (30 September 2014). "Strictly for the super-rich: the world's most expensive penthouse". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 October 2014.
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