Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts: Difference between revisions
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===Designers=== |
===Designers=== |
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The Kauffman Center was designed by lead [[architect]] [[Moshe Safdie]],<ref>[http://www.msafdie.com/ Moshe Safdie & Associates]</ref> [[architectural acoustics|acoustician]] Yasuhisa Toyota,<ref>[http://www.nagata.co.jp/english.htm Nagata Acoustics]</ref> theater consultant Richard Pilbrow, and engineering firm [[Arup]].<ref>[http://www.arup.com Arup]</ref> Local firm [[BNIM]] is the executive architect. |
The Kauffman Center was designed by lead [[architect]] [[Moshe Safdie]],<ref>[http://www.msafdie.com/ Moshe Safdie & Associates]</ref> [[architectural acoustics|acoustician]] [[Yasuhisa Toyota]],<ref>[http://www.nagata.co.jp/english.htm Nagata Acoustics]</ref> theater consultant Richard Pilbrow, and engineering firm [[Arup]].<ref>[http://www.arup.com Arup]</ref> Local firm [[BNIM]] is the executive architect. |
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===Architecture=== |
===Architecture=== |
Revision as of 15:30, 14 April 2009
Template:Future building The Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts is a performing arts center currently under construction in downtown Kansas City, Missouri, USA. Once completed, it will be home to the Kansas City Symphony, the Lyric Opera of Kansas City, and the Kansas City Ballet. It is part of the ongoing redevelopment of downtown Kansas City, and will be located at 16th and Broadway near the Power & Light District, the Sprint Center and the Crossroads Arts District.
Construction
Ground was broken on October 6, 2006 and the Center will open in Fall 2011.[1] The Center itself is a 284,780 square foot (26,457 m2) facility with two state-of-the-art performance venues: a 1,800-seat Proscenium Theatre and a 1,600-seat Concert Hall. The Kauffman Center will cover 9 acres (36,000 m2), including landscaped grounds over a 1,000 space underground parking garage.[1] The technical requirements and exacting standards required of a facility like the Kauffman Center make it one of the most complex structures in the world to design and build. The cost of the project is approximately $413 million which includes a $40 million operating endowment.[2]
Designers
The Kauffman Center was designed by lead architect Moshe Safdie,[3] acoustician Yasuhisa Toyota,[4] theater consultant Richard Pilbrow, and engineering firm Arup.[5] Local firm BNIM is the executive architect.
Architecture
The structure of the Kauffman Center is formed by a series of undulating vertical segments of a circle, forming the northern container of the Proscenium Theatre's backstage, and Concert Hall. They form an ascending, segmented, gently curving, crown to the building. From the crest, the roof descends in a curve following the geometry of a torus of light cables, metal and glass structure toward the South. The tensile forces of the suspended glass roof of the foyer are counteracted by a series of cables tying down the structure to anchors at the entrance terrace. The curved, segmented northern walls are sheathed with stainless steel and punctuated by perpendicular, acid-etched, limestone-colored, pre-cast concrete walls. The theater facades are sheathed with beechwood panels forming continuous, curved, stacked balconies. The various lounges form sculptural shapes visible under the glass foyer structure.
Performance and other facilities
The Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts will house two performance halls:[1]
- The Proscenium Theatre, will be an 1800-seat theater for general theatrical performances, ballet, and opera.[1]
- The Concert Hall designed for musical performances, will seat 1600 people.[1] It will feature vineyard-style seating in which audience seating will be on all four sides of the stage. It also will contain a pipe organ built by the firm Casavant Frères in Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec, Canada.[6]
The concert hall will be joined to the theater by a central glass-enclosed lobby, which will lead to the terraces outside.
Organization
The Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. Unlike other major civic construction projects, no taxpayer funds have gone into its construction.[1] The city of Kansas City has, however, pledged to build and operate a parking garage at the Kauffman Center.[1]
See also
External links
References
- ^ a b c d e f g Visit KC - Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts
- ^ Kansas City Star - Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts within budget, but at least two years before occupancy
- ^ Moshe Safdie & Associates
- ^ Nagata Acoustics
- ^ Arup
- ^ "The Son of All Pipe Organs," Kansas City Star, May 20, 2007