High Performance Spaces: concert halls and opera houses that hit the right note
If music be the food of love, then where better to dine out than a world-class concert hall or opera house? Here, Architonic examines a number of recently completed architectural projects that perform as hard as the artists who take to their stages. Play on.
August 28, 2011 | 10:00 pm CUT

Henning Larsen Architects' new Harpa Concert & Conference Centre was conceived of as part of Reykjavik's harbour-development project; photo © Osbjørn Jacobsen


The architects collaborated with celebrated Danish-Icelandic artist Olafur Eliasson, whose striking 'quasi-brick' glass façade exploits the natural light of the building's location to produce a dynamic play of colours; photo © Osbjørn Jacobsen

The main auditorium at the Harpa Concert & Conference Centre; photo © Osbjørn Jacobsen


The Wexford Opera House, a collaboration between the Irish state's Office of Public Works and London-based Keith Williams Architects, whose visibility increases the further away from it you are; photos Ros Kavanagh


Horseshoe-shaped balconies in the main auditorium bring visitors closer to the action, while encouraging people-watching. The entire space is clad in walnut, a material also used generously in the foyer (above); photos Ros Kavanagh


Frank Gehry's New World Center in Miami Beach, Florida, features an 80-foot-high glass curtain wall and giant LED screen on the exterior, while inside the auditorium sail-like acoustic-panels-cum-projection-screens animate the space; photos Claudia Uribe

Gehry's signature tumbling forms define the foyer of the New World Center, home of the New World Symphony; photo Claudia Uribe


Downtown-Athens' Onassis Cultural Centre uses linear pieces of Thassos marble to construct its façade, which, depending on how close or far away you are from it, appears opaque or semi-transparent; photos © Nikos Daniilidis


Designed by AS.ARCHITECTURE-STUDIO, the Onassis Cultural Centre contains a 900-seater opera house/theatre, a 200-seater conference hall/cinema, plus an open-air amphitheatre; photos © Nikos Daniilidis


New York practice Diller Scorfidio + Renfro was charged with transforming the Juliard School's Alice Tully Hall into a premiere chamber-music venue. Its new glazed façade at street level replaces the old opaque one; photos DSR (top), Iwan Baan (bottom)


A partial 'box-in-box' construction isolates the main space from exterior noise (and the vibration from the subway). African moabi wood was used to line the auditorium throughout, giving it a completely new set of acoustic credentials; photos DSR


Intelligent lighting is used to direct concert-goers intuitively from foyer to auditorium at the refurbished Frits Philips Concert Hall in Eindhoven, Netherlands; photo Frank Tielemans


The word 'Gesamtkunstwerk' comes to mind upon encountering the Frits Philips Concert Hall, where Niels van Eijk and Miriam van der Lubbe designed the interiors, furniture, staff uniforms and even the crockery; photos Frank Tielemans
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