Hexagone Balard
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| Hexagone Balard | |
|---|---|
Hexagone Balard in 2016 | |
![]() Interactive map of the Hexagone Balard area | |
| General information | |
| Status | Completed |
| Location | Paris |
| Coordinates | 48°50′08″N 2°16′34″E / 48.83556°N 2.27611°E |
| Current tenants | Ministry of the Armed Forces |
| Construction started | 2012 |
| Completed | 5 November 2015 |
| Cost | €4.2 billion |
| Owner | French Republic |
| Dimensions | |
| Other dimensions | 420 000 m² |
| Technical details | |
| Floor area | 13.5 ha |
Hexagone Balard (French pronunciation: [ɛɡzaɡon balaʁ, -ɡɔn -]) is the headquarters of the French Armed Forces and the Ministry of the Armed Forces. Inaugurated in 2015, more than 9,300 personnel from the French Army, French Navy, French Air and Space Force and Delegate General of Armaments (DGA) have moved into this 165,000 m2 (1,780,000 sq ft)[1] white opaque glass-fronted building,[2] on 41 acres (17 ha),[3] from previously separate headquarters for each service branch. It reportedly cost around 4 billion euros to build.[4]
In 2011, the French Government awarded the Opale-Défense consortium a contract, for financing, designing, constructing, operating, and maintaining the complex for thirty years.[5] Agence Nicolas Michelin & Associés[6] designed the seven-story command and control center, on a former army air base near the Balard (Paris Métro) in the 15th arrondissement.[7][8]
As a military base, the command of the site is handed over to the Major General of the Defence Staff, deputy to the Chief of the Defence Staff.
Personnel transferred from historic buildings in central Paris to this site in the south of the city, excepting the Defence Minister who remains in central Paris.[9] Half of the complex is renovation,[2] including an old navy building, designed in 1934 by Gustave and Auguste Perret.[6] The complex boasts a real drawbridge, interior gardens,[10] missile-strike-resistant walls and an underground operational room.[11]
Appearance
Images of the complex (as well as all military-related and sensitive government buildings in France) can't be seen on Bing Maps, Google Maps, Google Earth, and Google Street View for national security reasons, yet Here WeGo, and Yandex Maps do not censor the satellite image.[12][13]
Only the faceted roof is visible from the elevated ring road.[14] It has the largest solar panel roof in Paris.[citation needed]
