Maison de la culture de Grenoble
Maison de la Culture de Grenoble | |
Address |
Grenoble France |
---|---|
Coordinates | 45°10′20″N 5°43′58″E / 45.172266°N 5.732911°E |
Construction | |
Opened | 13 February 1968 |
Reopened | 17 September 2004 |
Architect |
André Wogenscky Renovation Antoine Stinco |
Website | |
www |
The Maison de la Culture de Grenoble, commonly called MC2 is a public venue for public events located on the Avenue Marcellin-Berthelot in Grenoble, France.
History
Built by Andrew Wogenscky on the occasion of the Olympics, MC2 was inaugurated on 13 February 1968 by André Malraux, Minister of Cultural Affairs and the father of the concept of houses of culture. The following year, in April 1969, another major cultural institution in the city, the Regional National Conservatory of Grenoble was installed close to the Maison de la Culture. In the 1980s the building was called "Le Cargo".
The Maison de la Culture has been called MC2 since 17 September 2004 when it reopened after extensive rehabilitation and expansion at a cost of €38 million, covered 42.3% by the city, 40% by the state, 10.7% by the department and 8% by the Region. While this work was being undertaken, shows were played outside the walls. Attendance after the expansion has reached 100,000 spectators per year.
Operations
The MC2 is a "public institution of cultural cooperation" (établissement public de coopération culturelle) funded by the Ministry of Culture and Communication, the City of Grenoble and the Isère General Council. This is a national institution directed by Jean-Paul Angot. It comprises the National Choreographic Centre for Contemporary Dance led by Jean-Claude Gallotta, the Alpine National Drama Centre led by Jacques Osinski, and Les Musiciens du Louvre led by Marc Minkowski.
In 2010, the institution's budget was 9.3 million euros per year. The premises are designed to accommodate a variety of events. For example in January 2012, for the fifth time since 2007, the Estates General of the Renewal was organized by the newspaper Libération. Nearly 21,000 people attended the debate at the 2011 edition of this event.
Rooms
- a spacious 1,028-seat hall
- an auditorium with 998 seats
- a small room with 244 seats
- a 700 square metres (7,500 sq ft) room
- a theater rehearsal studio
- two dance studios and a recording studio.