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The Link (building)

2025 establishments in France21st-century architecture in FranceBuildings and structures completed in 2025Mixed-use developmentsOffice buildings completed in 2025
Skyscraper office buildings in La Défense
The Link Juin 2025
The Link Juin 2025

The Link is a mixed-use skyscraper building development under construction in Puteaux, France. It will be part of the La Défense business district. Upon completion in 2025, the tallest tower will stand at 242 m (794 ft) tall with 52 floors, making it the tallest skyscraper in the Paris metropolitan area and in France, and the second tallest structure overall, after the Eiffel Tower. The tower will house the new headquarters of French energy company TotalEnergies, which is currently located in Tour Total.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article The Link (building) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

The Link (building)
Cours Michelet, Arrondissement of Nanterre

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 48.88772 ° E 2.24798 °
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Address

Duke

Cours Michelet 35
92800 Arrondissement of Nanterre
Ile-de-France, France
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Phone number

call+33140810612

Website
dukeburgerhouse.com

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The Link Juin 2025
The Link Juin 2025
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Tour Generali

Tour Generali (English: Generali Tower) was a skyscraper planned for construction in the business quarter of La Défense in Courbevoie (Hauts-de-Seine, France). (Note that Generali also owns another prominent high-rise building on Avenue Louise in Brussels, which is also known locally as the "Tour Generali".) The project was officially initiated on 18 October 2006 and is being built for Italian insurance company Assicurazioni Generali. Part of the modernisation of La Défense, the project is being constructed by Vinci on the old site of the Iris building, which was completed in 1983. Tour Generali would have an estimated height of 319 meters (1100 feet) from ground level, at a total cost estimate of 500 million euros. The building would have had 400m² of PV cells, 800m² of solar panels and 18 axial wind turbines on site to produce energy. Other environmental initiatives being taken in the project include mixed-mode ventilation with night purging, use of thermal mass, district heating/cooling and multi-service chilled beams (e.g. ventilation, cooling heating and lighting). This building was to be constructed as a "green" building, and would have include a wind turbines in its spire, solar panels, and other environmentally friendly elements. The main entrance of the tower would have been at the 6th level of the tower along the elevated esplanade/promenade, which rises 18 metres above ground level. The Tour Generali had undergone a redesign and was shortened to 265m, which meant it would have longer held the title of the tallest building in the European Union. The project was cancelled in 2011.