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Barbican Centre - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Barbican Centre

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Barbican Centre
194
Logo of the Barbican Centre
Address
Silk Street
City
Country Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Designation Grade II listed building
Architect Chamberlin, Powell and Bon
Owned by City of London Corporation
Capacity 1949 (Barbican Hall)
1166 (Barbican Theatre)
200 (The Pit)
Type performing arts centre
Opened 1982
www.barbican.org.uk
Coordinates: 51°31′13″N 0°05′42″W / 51.5202, -0.0950

The Barbican Centre is the largest performing arts centre in Europe.[1] Located in the north of the City of London, England, in the heart of the Barbican Estate, it hosts classical and contemporary music concerts, theatre performances, film screenings and art exhibitions. It also houses a library, 3 restaurants and a conservatory. The London Symphony Orchestra and the BBC Symphony Orchestra are based in the Barbican Centre's concert hall.

The Centre is owned, funded and managed by the City of London Corporation, the UK's third largest funder of the arts. It was built as "the City's gift to the nation", and opened in 1982, at a historical capital cost of £161 million (the equivalent to almost £400 million in 2007).[2]

Contents

[edit] Performance halls and facilities

  • Barbican Hall, a 1,949 seat concert hall. It is the home of the London Symphony Orchestra and the BBC Symphony Orchestra.
  • Barbican Theatre, a 1,166 seat theatre.
  • The Pit, a flexible 200-seat theatre venue.
  • Barbican Art Gallery and the smaller horseshoe shaped, Curve.
  • Barbican Cinema, 3 cinemas seating 288, 255 and 155 people.
  • Informal performance spaces.
  • 3 Restaurants.
  • 7 Conference and 2 Trade Exhibition facilities.

[edit] History and Design

Barbican Arts Centre and lakeside terrace
Barbican Arts Centre and lakeside terrace
Interior - concert hall foyer; library and gallery above
Interior - concert hall foyer; library and gallery above

The Centre had a long development period, only opening long after the surrounding Barbican Estate housing complex had been built. It is sited on an area which was badly bombed during World War II.

The Centre has a complex multi-level layout with numerous entrances, making circulation difficult for some. Lines painted on the ground to help would-be audience members avoid getting lost on the walkways of the Barbican Housing Estate en route to the Centre. The Centre's design – a concrete ziggurat – has always been controversial and divides opinion. It was voted "London's ugliest building" in a Grey London poll in September 2003[3]. In September 2001 the then arts minister, Tessa Blackstone, announced in that the Barbican complex was to be a Grade II listed building. It has been designated a site of special architectural interest for its scale, its cohesion and the ambition of the project.[4]. A younger generation increasingly admires Chamberlin, Powell and Bon, the architects' brutalist design.[citation needed] This architecture practice also designed the Barbican Housing Estate and the nearby Golden Lane Estate. Project architect John Honer later worked on the British Library at St Pancras – a red brick ziggurat.

In the mid-1990s a cosmetic improvement scheme by Theo Crosby, of the Pentagram design studio, added statues and decorative features reminiscent of the Arts and Crafts movement. In 2005-6, the Centre underwent a more significant refurbishment, designed by architects Allford Hall Monaghan Morris, which improved circulation and introduced bold signage in a style in keeping with the Centre's original 1970s Brutalist architecture. That improvement scheme added an internal bridge linking the Silk Street foyer area with the lakeside foyer area. The Centre's Silk Street entrance, previously dominated by an access for vehicles, was modified to give better pedestrian access. The scheme included removing most of the mid-1990s embellishments.

Outside, the main focal point of the Centre is the lake and its neighbouring terrace. The theatre's fly tower has been surrounded by glass and made into a spectacular high-level conservatory. The Barbican Hall's acoustic has also been controversial: some praised it as attractively warm, but others found it too dry for large-scale orchestral performance.

In 1994, Chicago acoustician Larry Kirkegaard oversaw a £500,000 acoustic re-engineering of the hall "producing a perceptible improvement in echo control and sound absorption", music critic Norman Lebrecht wrote in October 2000[5] – and returned in 2001 to rip out the stage canopy and drop adjustable acoustic reflectors, designed by Caruso St John, from the ceiling, as part of a £7.5 mn refurbishment of the hall. Barbican Centre managing director John Tusa wrote to Kirkegaard Associates to thank them "for doing something that many thought was not deliverable – the acoustic transformation of the Barbican Hall at a highly affordable price and in a very short time. We couldn't have asked for more."[6] But art music magazine Gramophone still complained about "the relative dryness of the Barbican acoustic" in August 2007.[7]

The theatre was built as the London home of the Royal Shakespeare Company, which was involved in the design, but the RSC left in 2002 after a series of allegedly poor seasons and because the then artistic director, Adrian Noble, wanted to develop the company's touring performances. The theatre's response was to extend its existing six-month season of international productions, "BITE" (Barbican International Theatre Events), to the whole year.[8]

The Guildhall School of Music and Drama and the City of London's Barbican Library, neither part of the centre, are also on the site. The Museum of London, is nearby at Aldersgate, and is also within the Barbican Estate.

[edit] Nearby railway stations

[edit] See also

[edit] References and notes

[edit] External links


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