Place de la Concorde is one of the most symbolic spaces in Paris, located at the intersection of major urban axes, between the Tuileries Garden, the Champs-Élysées, and the Seine. It embodies both republican monumentality and the complexity of a structuring urban space.
Designed by the architect Jacques-Ange Gabriel at the end of the eighteenth century and later redesigned by Jacques Hittorf, Place de la Concorde expresses both the centrality of monarchical power and an openness to the world. The square has endured through the centuries, although not without undergoing successive transformations, such as the infilling of the moats, which paved the way for the dominance of the automobile in the twentieth century. Today, the square’s original architectural language has almost entirely disappeared, its symbolic dimensions having been diminished to make way for a purely functional role: that of a major central Parisian crossroads.
In 2024, the City of Paris initiated a redevelopment process for the square, with the ambition of restoring the richness of its historic composition, adapting its uses to contemporary mobility patterns, and fully integrating environmental, urban, and heritage-related challenges.
Chatillon Architectes, alongside Snøhetta, Louis Benech, TN+, In Situ, Grue, Franck Boutté Consultants, Saguez & Partners, Quadrim, Inddigo, Egis, and Elioth, proposed a project aimed at restoring the harmony of the square in all its dimensions.




