The move of the Ministry of the Economy and Finance was decided in 1981, as part of the launched by the new president
François Mitterrand, in order to free up the Richelieu Wing of the
Louvre Palace and extend the
Louvre Museum to the entire palace for the
Grand Louvre project. The department headquarters had been housed there since May 1871, in
expansions built during the Second Empire for the
Ministry of State and other ministerial offices alongside
rue de Rivoli. Most employees, which numbered several thousands, were actually scattered in other government buildings, and another purpose of the move was for a large part of them to work in a single location. The place chosen was in the
Bercy area in eastern Paris, which was being redeveloped; an alternative choice would have been the caserne Dupleix in the
15th arrondissement. The main lot was previously used by the
Ministry of Veterans, which moved out in 1983. Other in the area include the
opéra Bastille and the
new Bibliothèque nationale de France headquarters across the river. Opposite the Colbert building across boulevard de Bercy is the
Accor Arena, also built in the 1980s. There were 137 submissions in the competition, launched in March 1982, from which the jury selected four; the winning entry, that of
Paul Chemetov and
Borja Huidobro from the Atelier de l'urbanisme et de l'architecture (AUA), was chosen by Mitterrand in December 1982. Additional buildings to the northwest of the initial lot, which became Turgot and Sully, were commissioned to
Louis Arretche and
Roman Karasinsky in July 1983 based on an earlier submission to the
SNCF. Chemetov recalled that Mitterrand took a limited interest in the project by comparison with other of the , and might have chiefly wanted to symbolically tone down the influence of the powerful department. Construction lasted between 1984 and 1989, at a cost of 3,7 billion
francs. It was described by the civil servant who coordinated the project as the largest office building construction ever carried out in France. There were significant
cost overruns, as is common for massive construction projects, but also because the initial stages had been rushed due to the parallel launch of the Grand Louvre operation, and the competition was held with little financial consideration. This was in fact used by Mitterrand to overrule criticism from the department over the cost of his other . The project was contested by
Jean Nouvel in 1984 in . It was not well received by some at the ministry, both due to the modern architecture of the new headquarters and because the area was deemed peripheral by comparison with the main government institutions and offices.
Édouard Balladur, who was the main minister in the
cohabitation government opposed to Mitterrand, delayed construction for a time when he took office in 1986, and although his predecessor had moved to another government house, hôtel de Roquelaure, he had the prior offices restored at the Louvre and settled there despite the ongoing work for the Grand Louvre, refusing to move to Bercy in 1988. Although
Jacques Chirac, the mayor of Paris, was Mitterrand's main opponent in the 1980s, he supported the move, as his urban planners argued for the development of the East of the city.
Michel Charasse, who served as budget minister in the left-wing government formed after Mitterrand's re-election, obtained to take the
Empire style furniture of his office to Bercy, where it is still used by his successors, contrasting with the modern furniture used everywhere else. The completed parts of the complex were gradually occupied from the second half of 1986 until late 1989, starting with the Turgot and Sully buildings (called E and D at the time), followed by the Necker and Vauban buildings (C and B) in 1988, ending with the Colbert building (A) in 1989.
Pierre Bérégovoy and his junior ministers moved from Rivoli to Bercy on 25 June 1989, and took their permanent offices in January of the next year. Chemetov and Huidobro donated the project papers, for a total of 170 linear metres, to the departmental
archives in 2016. == Architecture ==