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STAR strategies + architecture - START-Ivry - Form Follows Life - Ivry-sur-Seine - France

2025-09-09    
   

START-Ivry sets out to redefine housing culture. It rejects the prevailing standardisation of housing production and responds to the growing diversity of contemporary lifestyles. It rethinks housing from the inside — starting from the resident — restoring the central role of the floor plan, and boldly reversing the conventional process by starting with architecture: the architect is selected first, and developers are then invited to compete. START embodies a genuine paradigm shift.

START stands for Social, Transformable, Affordable and Resilient Typologies — housing solutions that respond to contemporary life. Located in Ivry-sur-Seine, a city historically linked to architectural innovation, START paves the way for a new cycle of experimentation in housing. START is both a manifesto and a demonstration: it proves that much better housing can be achieved without increasing surface areas and within very constrained budgets. A pilot project. A vanguard.

At the confluence of the Seine and Marne rivers, in Ivry-sur-Seine, within Greater Paris, the five START buildings enjoy an exceptional site, comprise 288 dwellings – including social, intermediate and market-rate housing – and shape a new urban skyline for the city.

 

** START-Ivry has received numerous awards, both national and international, including the 2024 French National Women Architects Prize (ARVHA) in the "Original Work" category, and more recently, two prizes at the 2025 AZ Awards organised by Canadian magazine AZURE.**

 

Reconciling households and housing: a plural society faced with standardised plans 

Households and housing have evolved along entirely different logics, creating a paradoxical mismatch between spaces and the people who live in them.

 

  • Households have become extremely diverse: single-parent families, blended families, unemployed young people, elderly requiring assistance, non-family cohabitations, remote workers, "boomerang" children...
  • Housing, meanwhile, has followed a different trajectory: standardised by numbers and regulations, it serves developer logic far more than the realities of how people live. Behind attractive façades, it often hides the poverty of ambition on the inside.

Contemporary society, with all its contradictions and diversity, cannot be captured in the uniformity of a standardised plan. START builds on this richness: a project conceived from the inhabitants and their ways of living, creating housing tailored to their circumstances and able to adapt to life’s changes. Dwellings are enlarged in anticipation of a child; a kitchen is relocated to create an extra bedroom; children’s rooms are transformed into a rental studio; a neighbouring unit is purchased to extend the current one… In this project, it is the housing that adapts to its inhabitants, not the other way around.

START Founding principles 

The project offers a wide range of typologies and solutions, from studios to five-bedroom units, including many intermediate configurations called "bonus" and "plus". It is structured around three complementary sets of principles:

 

- The 10 Adaptability Principles ensure flexibility and resilience in the dwellings over time. Examples include divisible large units, “plus” alcove rooms serving especially single parents or those working from home, modular living rooms, and super-adaptable two-bedroom units designed to accommodate all kinds of cohabitation.

 

- The 8 Quality Principles, such as naturally lit kitchens and bathrooms, maximisation of storage space, or the minimisation or activation of corridors.

 

- The 10 Principles for a Good Tower set out the conditions for a positive, desirable density that integrates well into its context — including quality circulation spaces, shared spaces and terraces, and rich encounters with both the ground and the sky.

A narrative architecture: when the inside defines the building 

The geometry of the volumes, the rhythm of the windows, and the colour accents — all central to START’s identity — originate from its internal world. Here, the richness within shapes the exterior, not the reverse. The result is a vibrant architecture in which form, use, and meaning are inseparable — an architecture that transforms the ordinary into the extraordinary.

 

Geometry is in the service of dwellings: housing quality determines the depth of the volumes. Exceptionally slender — just 14 metres deep for buildings rising up to 56 metres — they maximise typological variety, natural light, ventilation, and views. Ninety percent of homes enjoy double or triple orientations, and most benefit from views of the Seine or the Marne. Each tower is structured into three distinct parts, offering three different readings: street, city, and sky, while a turquoise “band” of shared spaces at the seventh floor introduces a horizontal rhythm into the verticality.

 

The façades follow no rigid grid: windows, balconies, ‘plugs’, and loggias are placed to serve domestic use, from storage to adaptability. What might appear as “disorder” becomes the architectural expression of life, mirroring that of its inhabitants — at times controlled, at times unpredictable.

 

Colour accents act as an architectural code, with a palette revealing interior functions: from typology-coded doors to window jambs coloured according to the function behind them. The main façade treatments — raw concrete and red paint — echo the architectural history of Ivry, particularly its emblematic concrete and brick buildings.

Programme: surfaces and social mix 

With a surface area of 22,863 m², including 19,700 m² of housing, START-Ivry spans five towers ranging from 13 to 19 storeys (including the ground floor) and incorporates a commercial plinth with 14 adaptable retail units, creating an active hub at the interface of several key facilities in the urban redevelopment zone. Restaurants, gyms, bakeries, pharmacies, supermarkets and hair salons are planned to serve both residents and the wider neighbourhood.

 

The programme includes 288 dwellings — up to 350 in case of future subdivisions — of which half are for homeownership, 34% are social housing, and the remainder are intermediate housing. Two of the five towers are mixed, combining different housing regimes, even on the same corridor — a configuration rarely seen in France, which START has chosen to explore.

 

All START dwellings – private, social and intermediate – share the use of communal spaces on the upper floors, including multi-purpose rooms and guest rooms, as well as more than 2,000 m² of shared terraces distributed at different heights.

 

START creates 2,600 m² of new public spaces at ground level: a central square facing the Seine, and two pedestrian alleys that cross the commercial plinth, link the square to the main avenue, and frame views of the iconic cable bridge over the Seine.

 

Sustainability: what is the point of climate-adapted housing if it isn’t adapted to the people who live in it? 

START achieves a 20% reduction in energy consumption compared to current standards and uses 20% low-carbon concrete for both structure and façades, reducing materials and embodied carbon. Heating is provided by geothermal energy.

But START goes far beyond environmental performance. Today, a building can collect “green” certifications while failing to respond to the realities of contemporary life. START reintroduces a dimension often forgotten in sustainability debates: the inhabitant and their evolving spatial needs.

 

The current obsession with labelling makes unmeasurable issues secondary: an adult child moving back in, a live-in carer, empty bedrooms after children leave, the difficulties of a single parent, a divorce, a blended family, remote work… Housing must adapt to these real-life situations to be truly sustainable.

 

START places the inhabitant at the heart of design, integrating the social and economic dimensions into sustainability. Divisible dwellings, super-adaptable homes, and “plus” or “bonus” typologies are proof. For example, a divisible dwelling (≥ 3 bedrooms) embodies all three pillars:

 

  • Social: adapts to changing spatial household needs.
  • Environmental: creates a new dwelling without consuming extra resources.
  • Economic: generates additional income through renting or selling the new unit.

Inverse Method: challenging the status quo 

Defying convention, START-Ivry began thanks to a pioneering process — the Inverse Method — devised by the municipal land developer and refined with the architect. Contrary to standard practice, the architect was selected first — based on a methodological proposal, not simply visual renderings — and the developers were then invited to compete based on the architect’s project. The brief was therefore not written by the developer, but by the architect.

 

For eight months, monthly design workshops brought together all stakeholders — the land manager, the architect, the municipality, urban planners, future developers (with their contractors and consultants) — around a shared project. All aspects were addressed collectively: design, construction, management, lifestyles...

 

The winning developer was selected for their ability to align with the architect’s project. The architect’s contract was transferred to them, while the land manager retained an active role to ensure continuity, embedding the design principles into the sale agreement and safeguarding the architect’s central role. Without the Inverse Method, START simply could not have come into being.

Ivry-sur-Seine: a pioneer in housing 

START, in Ivry-sur-Seine, is part of a legacy of urban experimentation that has long championed ambitious public architecture as a tool for social transformation. This context produced visionary housing projects — notably those of Jean Renaudie and Renée Gailhoustet — and led to the ambition of hosting a START, a pilot project which, through a fundamental rethink of the design process and meticulous attention to the housing plans, would propose new housing solutions

 

Governed almost continuously by the French Communist Party since 1925, Ivry applies a “controlled prices” policy, enabling a wide range of households to access high-quality housing in an otherwise inaccessible market.

STAR strategies + architecture cChic Magazin Schweiz
About STAR strategies + architecture

STAR is a practice dealing with architecture in all its forms.

 

Founded in Rotterdam in 2006 by Spanish architect Beatriz Ramo (1979), STAR strategies + architecture works on projects and research of any scale in the fields of architecture and urbanism, taking responsibility for all phases of the process — from concept to completion.

 

The practice has won awards in international competitions for housing, public buildings, and urban planning in France, the Netherlands, China, Iceland, Lebanon, Norway, and Spain, as well as several distinctions — including awards granted by Architizer, Archello, FRAME, Azure Awards, Architectenweb, and MIX Interiors — and the ARVHA National French Prize for Female Architects in 2024.

 

Its portfolio covers a wide range of projects, from The Cabanon — a 7 m² fully equipped mini-apartment with a spa in Rotterdam — to a Ferris wheel–railway station hybrid in Elche. Over the last decade, STAR has developed a strong focus on adaptable and evolutive housing, culminating in START-Ivry, a 288-dwelling experimental collective housing project in Ivry-sur-Seine, Greater Paris.

 

STAR’s work has been widely published in major international media, including The New York Times, El País, and leading architecture magazines such as Arquitectura Viva, Casabella, AA Files, Arch+, Le Moniteur, Domus, Abitare, and Deutsche Bauzeitung.

Beatriz Ramo is managing contributing editor of MONU – Magazine on Urbanism and served on the Scientific Committee of the Atelier International du Grand Paris (2012–2016), advising the French government on housing solutions.

Beatriz is a recognised critical voice in collective housing. She challenges the ongoing standardisation of housing production. Her research and built work advocate for adaptable designs that respond to the diversity and evolving needs of contemporary households — a position that has contributed meaningfully to the debate on housing quality.

 

START-Ivry is the materialisation of STAR strategies + architecture’s housing theories, developed over nearly a decade of research into housing conditions in Greater Paris. The project challenges outdated dogmas, resists the dominant trend towards standardisation, and offers concrete responses for creating resilient social structures. 

As an extension of this work, STAR is currently preparing a book on its housing research and theories, in which START-Ivry is presented as a case study of a new way to conceive and produce housing.

Photo credit: STAR strategies + architecture - Nicolas Trouillard - Vladimir Partalo - Kamel Khalfi - Nicolas Grosmond