Sea organ
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- For the similar device in San Francisco, California, see Wave Organ. For the device in Blackpool, UK see Blackpool High Tide Organ
The Sea organ is an architectural object located in Zadar, Croatia and an experimental musical instrument which plays music by way of sea waves and tubes located underneath a set of large marble steps. The waves create somewhat random but harmonic sounds. The device was made by the architect Nikola Bašić as part of the project to redesign the new city coast (Nova riva), and the site was opened to the public on April 15, 2005.
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[edit] History
Chaotic reconstruction work undertaken in an attempt to repair the devastation Zadar suffered in the Second World War turned much of the sea front into an unbroken, monotonous concrete wall. The Sea Organ has drawn tourists and locals alike. Now, this project sees the construction of white marble steps leading down to the water. Concealed under these steps, which both protect and invite, is a system of polyethylene tubes and a resonating cavity that turns the site into a huge musical instrument, played by the wind and the sea.
In 2006, the Sea Organ was awarded with the prize ex-aequo of the fourth edition of the European Prize for Urban Public Space[1].
[edit] Listen
- The sound of the Zadar sea organ (file info)
- This is a 320kb Ogg recording of the sea organ, made by Toni Perinić
- Problems listening to the file? See media help.