← Projects

Fondation Perceval

Construction follow-up for La Maison du Jardin over two years, with ground footage, drone and timelapse produced with Polygraphic.

Documenting a long construction to turn it into a clear story.

Aerial view of the Fondation Perceval construction site.

Showing what takes time.

A construction moves in stages. Some are spectacular, others less visible, but all of them build the project. The follow-up keeps a regular record of this progression.

For La Maison du Jardin, the project unfolded over approximately two years, with ground images, drone views and a timelapse produced with Polygraphic.

Construction follow-up film.

Changing scale.

The drone gives the overall read of the construction: layout, volumes, relationship to the site. Ground-level shots bring back the human element, the details, the materials and the real state of progress.

The two perspectives complement each other. One explains where the project stands, the other makes it tangible.

Fondation Perceval — aerial view of the construction.Fondation Perceval — construction progress.

A useful archive.

A construction follow-up serves communication during the build, but also after. It documents the stages, helps present the project and keeps a clean visual memory for the institution, partners and teams.

The value is documentary as much as aesthetic.

Do you need to document a construction project?

Let's talk
Fondation Perceval — construction panorama.Fondation Perceval — panoramic drone view.