La Ballade Promenade: Redefining La Grande-Motte’s Iconic Port
La Ballade Promenade in La Grande-Motte revitalizes docks with sustainable design, pedestrian-friendly spaces, greenery, hybrid housing, and Balladur-inspired modern coastal architecture.
Designed by Leclercq Associés, La Ballade Promenade in La Grande-Motte, France represents a transformative urban renewal, celebrating the 50th anniversary of this pioneering seaside city. Covering 30,000 m², the project reimagines the Pompidou and Tabarly docks, blending modern urbanism, sustainable design, and cultural heritage while paying tribute to Jean Balladur, the visionary behind La Grande-Motte’s unique pyramidal architecture.


Honoring Balladur’s Vision: From Futuristic Resort to Sustainable City
La Grande-Motte, often associated with massive concrete coastal developments and popular tourism clichés, has always been a model of environmental urbanism. Jean Balladur’s 1963 masterplan harmonized modern geometry with natural landscapes, integrating pyramidal forms inspired by Mayan pyramids of Teotihuacan and the white concrete curves of Brasilia, set against coastal dunes and the Cévennes mountains.
With La Ballade Promenade, Leclercq Associés revives this progressive spirit, prioritizing pedestrian life, the rhythm of the sun, and sustainable living. The promenade reconnects the Levant and Couchant neighborhoods, forming a seamless public space network that encourages strolling, cycling, sports, and social interaction.

A Green and Blue Urban Oasis
Landscape architect Pierre Pillet established a forest network of over 30,000 trees, including umbrella pines, plane trees, and white poplars, creating natural protection from wind and salt while enhancing biodiversity. The promenade exemplifies a resilient, nature-oriented urban design, offering shaded summer spaces, sunlit winter areas, and microclimates that address modern heatwave challenges.
The redevelopment also integrates bioclimatic considerations, harmonizing mineral surfaces with lush vegetation, enabling the public space to adapt to seasonal variations. Planting 245 deciduous trees and transplanting fifty palm trees ensures a balance of sun, shade, and comfort for daily activities, festivals, and the annual boating fair.


Innovative Urban Living and Public Spaces
The 1.5-kilometer promenade features a 7-meter wide quay with tree-lined overwidths, linking beaches and circling the port. The urban furniture, colorful geometric shade structures, plazas, and market areas are thoughtfully designed to support social interaction, commerce, and leisure activities.
Leclercq Associés also restored visibility to the iconic seaside architecture through glass extensions for ground-floor shops, expanded terraces, and continuous paving that connects seamlessly to the port basins. The project blends functionality with aesthetics, emphasizing architectural patterns, plant shadows, and night-time illumination, creating an immersive public urban stage.
Housing units within the Ville Port project introduce hybrid living-work spaces, fostering new ways of urban life. This approach honors Balladur’s ethos of integrating nature, culture, and modern living, positioning La Grande-Motte as a city that lives year-round, in harmony with its surrounding Pays de l’Or territories.


A Modern Tribute to Seaside Urbanism
La Ballade Promenade exemplifies the future of coastal urban design, merging heritage, sustainability, and community-oriented public spaces. By combining visionary architecture, innovative landscaping, and adaptable infrastructure, the project creates a model for resilient, liveable coastal cities worldwide.


All photographs are works of
Permitin Andrey, Pierre Louis Leclercq