Born of a financial fiasco in the 1990s, the resort of Pirou-Plage in Normandy remained a half-built ghost town until its colorful houses were discovered by squatters and ravers. Since then the French village has taken on a new identity, becoming a hub for artists and filmmakers and blossoming into an art project open to all. Recently, though, local authorities made plans to bring in bulldozers and demolish the resort’s graffiti-covered structures.

The ruins of houses and other buildings.
The ruins of houses and other buildings.

“I am in such a hurry to see this eyesore disappear for good,” says Gabriel Lallemand, Deputy Mayor of Pirou, a Normandy seaside resort. Lallemand has been following the village’s fantastic twists and turns since 1990. Back then, an unscrupulous property developer bought a 17-acre piece of land from the local authorities in Pirou-Plage. The plot was a couple of hundred yards from the beach, behind a lovely natural dune.

Ruins of the hotel-club in Pirou-Plage.
Ruins of the hotel-club in Pirou-Plage.

The site was called “Aquatour,” and the plans to turn it into a holiday village were ambitious: 75 houses, a hotel-club, 2 tennis courts—in a seaside town which counts only 1,500 year-round inhabitants. The promoter was a convincing salesman: he quickly sold all the houses—on paper, anyway. But no plans were made for water, electricity or draining.

In the 2000s, Pirou-Plage began to attract graffiti artists, painters, photographers and film-makers.
In the 2000s, Pirou-Plage began to attract graffiti artists, painters, photographers and film-makers.

By April 1992, 25 houses were already up when the building work suddenly stopped. The contractors were not paid anymore: the promoter had vanished with its investors’ money. Pirou-Plage would never turn into a holiday village.

Pirou-Plage is located near the beach and was intended to be a holiday village, complete with hotel, houses and tennis courts.
Pirou-Plage is located near the beach and was intended to be a holiday village, complete with hotel, houses and tennis courts.

The new houses were systematically plundered: everything that could easily be taken away disappeared. Stripped of their doors, windows, and roof tiles, the desolate houses then became homes for squatters and ravers who came and went as they pleased. A sort of seasonal ghost village was born, open to whoever wanted to come, without barriers.

What's left of Pirou-Plage's hotel-club.
What’s left of Pirou-Plage’s hotel-club.

Pirou-Plage’s story took another interesting twist when it started to attract artists in the 2000s. Street artists, painters, photographers, and filmmakers adopted the abandoned resort, and for the first time its houses were lively. In 2014, some Pirou inhabitants were featured in projects led by the famous French photographer and street artist JR, and filmmaker Agnès Varda. Word of mouth and media coverage spread the news: Pirou-Plage had become a cool place to go.

Pirou-Plage was abandoned in 1992.

Pirou-Plage was abandoned in 1992.

But not for long. After years of legal battles, the local authorities have finally won the land back and are ready to put it to other use. “First of all, we’ll board up the village as it’s dangerous—there is asbestos and tripping hazards. Then we’ll demolish it. We don’t want to waste time anymore,” says Noëlle Leforestier, the Mayor of Pirou.

What will happen next? “We are thinking about a mix of houses, shops and businesses—but with a reliable promoter!”

Blown-up portraits by photographer JR glued on houses at Pirou-Plage.
Blown-up portraits by photographer JR glued on houses at Pirou-Plage.
The site is set to be demolished.
The site is set to be demolished.
Surveying the ghost town.
Surveying the ghost town.