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Les chambres de bonne

This evening in French class we discussed a Parisian apartment type called the chambre de bonne. The direct translation is “maid’s room”, and it’s exactly what it sounds like. A small one-room apartment that is found on the top floor of bourgeoisie apartment buildings. Indeed, nearly one-third of Paris’ entire supply of chambres de bonne are in the wealthy 16th arrondissement.

Their original function was to house servants. The reason they were on the penthouse floor is because, when they emerged in Paris in the 1830s, the elevator hadn’t yet been invented. And so this was the least desirable floor. The people staying in these rooms typically worked for the people living on the lowest floors in the same building. That’s where you wanted to be. Fewer stairs.

Fast forward to today, and it is estimated that Paris has somewhere around 114,000 chambres be bonne (also known as chambres de service). They are also occupied by a broad cross section of different people:

But it means living small. The smallest allowable size for an apartment in Paris is 9 m2 (area) or 20 m3 (volume). Meaning, even if the surface area is under the 9 m2 threshold, it might still be able to pass as livable if the ceilings are tall enough. But under these figures, and the place can’t be rented. And supposedly, about half of Paris’ chambres de bonne do not meet these minimum thresholds.

These requirements are immediately interesting to me — not only because they’re much smaller than what we allow in Toronto — but because most people don’t think of real estate in terms of volumes. Ceiling heights, yes. But when have you ever seen or measured the volume of an apartment? It’s clearly appropriate in this instance given that many of these apartments sit under sloping rooflines.

But the most interesting question, I think, is whether this housing type is functionally obsolete. On the one hand, Paris is an expensive city, and these apartments represent what is likely the most affordable housing option. Go on YouTube and you’ll find lots of students giving tours of their compact room-apartments. On the other hand, census data shows that occupancy within his housing type has been steadily declining since at least the 1960s:

Based on these figures from 2011, only about 17,300 chambres de bonne are occupied as a principal residence. This doesn’t seem like a lot for a big city like Paris. (It’s around 1.25% of its entire housing supply based on my rough math.) The rest of these apartments appear to be vacant, ineligible for renting, or serving as a secondary space for owners in the same building.

This represents an ~85% vacancy rate, which begs the question: Is there something more productive that Paris could be doing with all of this under-utilized penthouse space? Though perhaps it’s helpful to start with: would you live in 9 square meters or 97 square feet? This is smaller than the minimum size of a parking space in Toronto.

Photo by Matt Boitor on Unsplash; Charts: Atelier Parisien d’Urbanisme

5 Comments

  1. Myron Nebozuk

    Measuring space in cubic metres is much more common in Europe. Albert Speer regularly measured his realized and proposed buildings this way.

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  2. AM

    My brother’s shared one when neither of them lived in Paris but needed to go regularly for work. I stayed in it once and while small and barebones, it was in a very desirable neighbourhood and generally quite comfortable. One has to be comfortable with sharing a toilet with other residents. The shower was inside the unit.

    It strikes me as the ideal typology for the budget solo traveler (perfect for AirBnb?). I do not know if they’re allowed as short term rentals. It’s roughly the equivalent of booking a private room in a hostel (which many offer these days).

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  3. Anna

    Thanks for this post! it is fascinating to learn that those spaces have such a high vacancy rate. You’d think the opposite, but yes, not many can live in 100sqft for more than a week. So sounds like a perfect Airbnb situation for me.

    This one is 366sqft, so a decent size area to play around with, but wondering how much the renos were, as it took them 6 months and everything was carried upstairs by hand.

    https://www.book-a-flat.com/magazine/en/before-after-renovation-work-high-end-furnished-apartment-in-paris-beneath-the-eaves

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