Cyrus Ardalan renovates Modernist apartment in Paris

 

On a high floor of a 1966 residential building in Paris’ 11th arrondissement, Cyrus Ardalan reworks a 65-square-meter through-apartment. The architect reframes a standard postwar layout through a contemporary lens.

 

From the entrance, the two-bedroom home opens directly onto a generous, south-facing living area that brings together lounge, dining, and workspace in a single volume. Transitions are marked with precision, most notably through a glass-paste frame that references modern architectural traditions but is treated here less as an ornament than as a functional device. Used on the kitchen island, dining table, and within the shower, the material helps articulate surfaces and edges.

glass paste details tie together 1966 paris apartment renovation by cyrus ardalan
a modernist-inspired renovation by Cyrus Ardalan |  all images © Ludovic Balay

 

 

Built-in systems shape everyday use

 

A hallway leads away from the main living area toward two quieter bedrooms overlooking the courtyard. Along this axis, the plan regains a more conventional calm, with access to a shower room and a separate toilet. Storage is absorbed into the architecture throughout, embedded within bespoke furniture elements rather than added as afterthoughts.

 

Material choice functions as the project’s primary organizing principle. Plywood plays a central role, a recurring element in Ardalan’s work, and here it establishes both visual coherence and spatial hierarchy. Its tone is drawn from the existing window frames, allowing the new interventions to converse with the original fabric of the apartment. The material runs continuously from the living room into the hallway and bedrooms, structuring volumes without relying on excess partitioning. Through careful cutting and alignment, drawer fronts and storage elements are integrated almost invisibly, producing homogeneous volumes that read as continuous planes.

 

One of the most defining pieces of the property, exclusively listed by Architecture de Collection, whose practice centers on identifying and safeguarding significant examples of 20th- and 21st-century architecture, is the plywood bookshelf in the living area, which extends into a sideboard and a workspace. A 180-degree pivoting door allows the office to open fully toward the living room or disappear when not in use, reinforcing the adaptability of the apartment. 

glass paste details tie together 1966 paris apartment renovation by cyrus ardalan
Cyrus Ardalan reworks a 65-square-meter through-apartment ιn Paris

 

 

Working within the limits of the existing building

 

Completed with a cellar in the basement and supported by a building caretaker, the apartment sits within a dense, lived-in neighborhood known for its markets, restaurants, cultural venues, and proximity to green spaces. Original single-glazed window frames and collective gas heating remain in place, anchoring the renovation within the realities of the existing building rather than erasing them. Some of the custom furniture is included in the sale, reinforcing the idea that the project is conceived as a complete, inhabitable system. At 65 square meters, the apartment functions as an experimental ground for exploring how material logic and spatial economy can reshape daily life. 

glass paste details tie together 1966 paris apartment renovation by cyrus ardalan
a glass-paste frame references modern architectural traditions

glass paste details tie together 1966 paris apartment renovation by cyrus ardalan
the architect reframes a standard postwar layout through a contemporary lens

glass paste details tie together 1966 paris apartment renovation by cyrus ardalan
a generous, south-facing living area that brings together lounge, dining, and workspace

glass paste details tie together 1966 paris apartment renovation by cyrus ardalan
a hallway leads away from the main living area toward two quieter bedrooms

glass paste details tie together 1966 paris apartment renovation by cyrus ardalan
plywood plays a central role

glass paste details tie together 1966 paris apartment renovation by cyrus ardalan
exploring how material logic and spatial economy can reshape daily life

 

 

project info:

 

name: Modernist-inspired apartment renovation in Paris

renovation architect: Cyrus Ardalan | @cyrus_ardalan

building architects: Christian de Galéa & Saczewski

location: Paris 11th arrondissement, France

area: 65 square meters

 

original building year: 1966

photographer: Ludovic Balay | @ludovicbalay