Faire Urban Design — Paris 2018
In Paris, sitting down is never a trivial gesture. One doesn't settle in merely to rest, but to wait, observe, let time pass — or hold it back for a moment. Public benches, like fountains, columns and kiosks, silently accompany these moments. They welcome hesitant encounters, shared silences, departures and returns. They are there, motionless, but charged with all that has played out upon them.
These everyday objects carry a memory that no one sees. Lives have crossed paths there, overlapped, been erased. As Georges Brassens suggested, they welcome budding loves. But they also welcome what remains after — the invisible traces, the fragments of stories, the suspended instants. The city preserves everything, but it tells nothing.
Today, we pass through these places without paying attention to them. The present dominates, the past fades away, and the future remains abstract. Urban furniture, designed for another era, continues to organize space efficiently, but it no longer dialogues with contemporary sensibility nor with our relationship to time.
The project proposes to reveal this invisible depth without ever altering the city's image. The intervention is minimal, almost imperceptible. From afar, nothing changes. Up close, another reading becomes possible. The furniture retains its form, its materiality, its familiar presence. But it becomes a point of access, a discreet interface between what is visible and what is not.
By sitting down, the user doesn't change gesture, but enters into another dimension of the place. Through a subtle experience, they can perceive fragments of the past, hear voices, sense presences. The bench ceases to be merely a physical support; it becomes a threshold. A space where time overlaps, where eras dialogue.
As in Midnight in Paris, reality cracks slightly. Time is no longer linear, it becomes porous. The passerby no longer merely traverses the city; they experience it differently, with a heightened awareness of what came before.
Some will sit there in pairs, others alone. But all will have access to the same sensation: that of being part of a continuity. Of understanding that these places were inhabited before them, and will be after. Urban furniture doesn't change in nature, it simply reveals what it already contained.
Thus, without transforming Paris's appearance, the project profoundly modifies the experience of it. It's no longer only about arranging space, but about making perceptible the time that constitutes it.
Paris street furniture in numbers:
270,000 anti-parking bollards
8,500 bike racks
8,500 public benches
380 public toilets
1,750 bus shelters
30,000 litter bins
2,400 information panels
700 Morris columns