131 Wagram features a terrace, an interior garden, nine floors of offices and five underground levels. It offers light-filled floor plates of around 800 sq.m. each, with flexible layouts, and a lobby that was refurbished in 2019..
Haussmann Saint-Augustin
In 2007, four adjoining buildings on boulevard Haussmann were transformed into a luxury office complex. Designed around a vast central patio naturally lit from a glass roof, it features an 82-metre long freestone façade and a total surface area of more than 13,000 sq.m. on seven floors
Cézanne Saint-Honoré
This exceptional property complex comprises two standalone buildings that straddle a 100-metre long private street.
The property features a tenant amenities centre. Inspired by hospitality industry design codes, the interior has been completely rethought by Studio Putman, with a food court, 100-seat auditorium, meeting rooms and VIP lounge.
#cloud.paris
#cloud.paris, a latest generation business centre in the very heart of Paris, offers beautiful, innovative, flexible offices designed to offer environmental excellence. Delivered in November 2015 and home to such prestigious companies as Facebook, BlaBlaCar and Exane, its outstanding features earned it the French SIIC industry’s 2015 “Ville et Avenir” Award and the 2016 MIPIM Award for Best Office & Business Development.
Washington Plaza
Located just off the Champs-Élysées on an 8,000 sq.m. site, Washington Plaza is one of the capital’s finest office complexes. An ambitious refurbishment programme was undertaken to radically transform its operation, identity and image. The business centre features a suite of high-quality tenant amenities, including concierge services, a fitness centre, flexible meeting rooms and break rooms.
Louvre Saint-Honoré
Completed in 1852, this attractive building has evolved in step with the Paris economy. In 1855, the year of France’s Exposition Universelle, shopkeepers Alfred Chauchard and Auguste Hériot opened the capital’s first department store on the premises, with the financial backing of the Péreire brothers. Known as “Grands Magasins du Louvre”, it served as a shopping arcade for the guests of the Hôtel du Louvre, which also occupied the building at the time. A century later, large companies began renting offices there. In 1975, the British Post and Telegraph Employee Pension Fund acquired the building, which had become vacant, and set out to convert it into a modern business centre with Louvre des Antiquaires on the ground floor.
Acquired by SFL in 1995, Louvre Saint-Honoré offers vast, highly functional 5,400 sq.m. floor plates in an exceptional location looking onto the Louvre museum. 20,000 sq.m. of retail space on the first underground level, ground floor and first floor were redeveloped and delivered in 2023 to provide a new home for the Cartier Foundation for Contemporary Art.
Edouard VII
Built on a 1.5-hectare plot, the Haussmann-style Édouard VII complex is located in the heart of one of Paris’s liveliest neighbourhoods. The property’s surroundings and distinguished architectural style – the result of extensive remodelling – make it an outstanding showcase.
Following on from the installation of colourful rue Édouard VII store façades, which instilled a modern, attractive feel to the entire complex, a programme to replant the interior courtyards and upgrade the passages was conducted to support the business centre’s move upmarket.