Tour First
Tour First is an office skyscraper in the La Défense business district of the metropolitan area of Paris. Built in 1974, the tower stands at tall with 52 floors and is the current second tallest building in France.
History
The tower was built in 1974 by Bouygues for the insurance company. The building was at that time. Its ground shape was in the form of a three-pointed star whose branches were separated each by a 120° angle. This particular shape was chosen to symbolize the merger of the three French insurance companies that were at the origin of UAP. The tower was renamed Tour Axa when UAP was bought by the Axa insurance company in 1996.Large-scale renovation of the tower began in 2007 and was completed in 2011. The exterior appearance of the building was completely changed, with extra height added to the tower. The renovated tower, now known as Tour First, is at roof height, and including its spire, with a total floor space of. It is currently the tallest skyscraper in France, only surpassed in height by the Eiffel Tower.
Another Axa tower exists in New York City, US, which is 228.6 m tall; Tour AXA in Montreal, Quebec, Canada was completed in 1974 and is.
Usage
The audit and consulting firm Ernst & Young installed 3,400 people in the tower at the end of 2011, which occupies a total of spread over 36 floors.The credit insurance company Euler Hermes installed a thousand people on at the end of April 2012, occupying the 32nd to 45th floors as well as two floors at the podium of the tower, that is to say at its foot.
In April 2017, the 240 employees of the head office of Laboratoires Expanscience have moved into the 8th and 9th floors, covering almost. The tower indicates the next day's weather by lighting up in different colors.
The Kwerk coworking space has been a tennant over two floors of the building since June 2017. It offers 390 spaces divided into open and closed offices, and contains a giant trompe-l'oeil library 11 meters high on the 11th floor. These spaces were entirely designed by the designer and co-founder of Kwerk Albert Angel.