Schermerhorn Symphony Center
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Schermerhorn Symphony Center | |
Schermerhorn Symphony Center Main Entrance |
|
Building | |
---|---|
Type | Concert hall |
Architectural Style | Contemporary neoclassical (1) |
Location | One Symphony Place, Nashville, Tennessee |
Owner | City of Nashville (2) |
Current Tenants | Nashville Symphony Orchestra (1) |
Construction | |
Started | December 3, 2003 (3) |
Completed | September 9, 2006 (3) |
Floor Count | Four (3) |
Floor Area | 197,000 square feet (18,300 m²) (3) |
Design Team | |
Architect | Earl Swensson Associates David N. Schwarz/Architectural Services Hastings Architecture Associates (3,4) |
Structural engineer | Intertech Design, Inc |
References: 1[1], 2[2], 3[3], 4[4] |
The Schermerhorn Symphony Center is a symphony center in downtown Nashville, Tennessee. It opened with its first concert in the Laura Turner Concert Hall on September 9, 2006. Its opening night gala, conducted by Leonard Slatkin and featuring Bela Fleck, Edgar Meyer, Zakir Hussain, Frederica von Stade and Janice Chandler-Eteme, was broadcast live on PBS affiliates throughout the state. The main affiliate, Nashville's WNPT, celebrated the occasion by presenting the event in high definition, the station's first HD telecast. A selection from the complete concert was broadcast on the NPR program Performance Today, on September 15, 2006.
Ground was broken for construction of the Center on December 3, 2003.
The Center is named in honor of Kenneth Schermerhorn, who was the music director and conductor of the Nashville Symphony Orchestra from 1983 until his death in 2005. The center was named before his death.
Contents |
[edit] Architecture
At the center of the Schermerhorn Symphony Center is the 30,000 square feet (2,800 m²), 1,872-seat Laura Turner Concert Hall, which is home to the Orchestra. Modeled after the "shoe box design" of storied concert halls such as the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam and the Musikverein in Vienna, the Hall is one of only a few such venues in the world to feature natural lighting, which streams in through 30 soundproof, double-paned windows that ring its upper walls. Intricate symbolic motifs appear throughout the Hall and the rest of the Center, including irises (the Tennessee state flower), horseshoes (a tribute to the late Laura Turner's love of horses) and coffee beans (representing Nashville's Cheek family of Maxwell House fame).
The Center's neoclassical exterior belies the technological and acoustical advances embodied inside. For example, the orchestra level seats are mounted on several motorized wagons that can be driven forward and lowered through the floor on spiral lifts, revealing an ornate Brazilian cherry and hickory parquet floor and enabling the Hall to be converted from a concert hall into a ballroom in approximately two hours. Further, dozens of motorized acoustic drapes and panels can be quickly adjusted to predetermined positions in order to accommodate many styles of acoustic and amplified music. Finally, those inside the Hall are spared the intrusion of the inevitable downtown noises by an acoustical isolation joint that encircles the entire Hall and prevents sound waves from traveling into or out of the Hall.
The design architect is David M. Schwarz / Architectural Services of Washington, D.C., with Earl Swensson Associates of Nashville as architect of record.[1]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ a b Schermerhorn Symphony Center. DMSAS.com. Retrieved on 2008-05-09.
- ^ Schermerhorn Symphony Center. CDC-USA.com. Retrieved on 2008-05-09.
- ^ SSC Architectural and Acoustical Fact Sheet. NashvilleSymphony.org. Retrieved on 2008-05-09.
- ^ Donoff, Elizabeth (2007-03-01). "Schermerhorn Symphony Center". Architectural Lighting.
[edit] External links
- Schermerhorn Symphony Center - Official website
- Nashville Symphony - Official website