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Every year the Cité Internationale accommodates 12,000 students, researchers and artists in its 40 houses.
We owe the construction of this house to Morocco’s King Mohammed V; his government agreed to construct the building in the Cité internationale and financed the first part of the edifice. The second wing was financed by a private donor, Jean Walter, who had made his fortune from the mining company he owned in the Moroccan town of Zellidja. The house opened its doors to students in October 1953.
Albert Laprade, Jean Vernon and Bruno Philippe designed Morocco House to comprise two wings, one with 161 rooms and the other with 48; it is a classic example of 1950s architecture. Some of the building’s aspects, such as the glazed tile roof are inspired by traditional Moroccan architecture.
Morocco House was renovated in 1982 by André Paccard, head of the technical bureau for Morocco’s royal palace and a specialist in traditional Islamic architecture. During renovations, he added a patio to the building. More work was undertaken in 1992, in 2002, and again in 2008. These later renovations were overseen by a Moroccan architect, Mohammed Fikri Benabdallah, and intended to make the buildings more comfortable and easily accessible.