contact subscribe sponsorshiphome
home call for submissions typologies index jobs resources DBA competitionsDBA   about ArchitypeReview  

 

Back to Project Abstracts
Performing
Arts Centers

 

 
06
North American

Dallas City Performance Hall
Dallas, Texas
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP

 

Credits
Programming Details
Drawings

Previous Project
Next Project

 

performing arts center porto portugal oma koolhaas rotunda da boavista

Credits:

Project Location:
2100 Ross Ave.
Dallas, TX 75201
United States

Owner:
City of Dallas
Thomas Wurtz, Program Director
City of Dallas - Public Works & Transportation

Design Architect:
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP

Partners-in-Charge:
Rem Koolhaas and Ellen van Loon

Management Partner:
Jeffrey McCarthy
Design Partner:
Leigh Breslau
MEP Director:
Roger Frechette
Structural Partner:
William Baker
Project Manager:
Nancy Abshir

Architect of Record:
Corgan Associates
Project Manager:
Kirk Johnson

Services:
Arup London / AFA Lda/RGA, Tim Thornton, Stefan Waldhauser, Dane Green, Dorothee Richter, António José Rodrigues Gomes, Joaquim Viseu, Luís Graça, Paulo Silva, Pedro Albuquerque, Isabel Sarmento, Estevão Santana.

Engineers:
Civil Engineering:
Lopez Garcia Group

Acoustics:
Jaffe Holden Scarbrough Acoustics, Inc

Cost Estimating:
Donnell Consultants, Inc.

Theatre Consultants:
Schuler Shook Inc.

Construction Manager:
McCarthy

Photography:
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP
www.som.com

     
 

Set within Dallas’ cultural district, the City Performance Hall will be home to nearly 80 different performance groups, making it one of the most versatile arts facilities in the region. This will be the people’s building, designed for the City of Dallas.

The hall responds to its neighbors, including the Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts across the street. Together, the architecture of these two buildings will establish a strong street edge and create a southeastern gateway to the Arts District.

 
     
  performing arts center porto portugal oma koolhaas rotunda da boavista rooftop terrace staircase flexspace sustainability  
       
 

No building can survive in isolation; its endurance is dependent on its place and presence within the larger community. Thus, the framework of the City Performance Hall resembles a “village for the arts” that connects directly with the larger area. An asymmetrical arcade passes through the heart of the complex and outlines a direct path to the neighborhood DART station. Internally, the hall’s floor plan is based on a grid of interior “blocks and streets” that are legible and easy to navigate.

The 110,000 square foot facility is centered on a main 41,000 square foot, 750-seat performance space flanked by two multipurpose theatres seating 200 people each. Additional facilities include galleries, a café, retail, education and meeting facilities, artistic support spaces, and enclosed gardens.

The design grew out of a thorough research process. Architects, in association with theatre planners, interviewed local artists, performers, and audiences to determine what was needed in a new complex, and then translated information from those sessions into the building’s plan and design.

One of the project’s main challenges involved creating a visually compelling form that could adapt and evolve in two tightly budgeted phases. In response, the design’s structure is also its surface. Concrete serves as both the core building material and the interior/exterior finish. The massing of the linear pavilions is lyrically articulated so that the building’s purpose, navigation, and use are self-evident.

   
       
     
       
Back to Top

The Phase One iteration of the design features a roof that swells and dips in bands resembling waves. Acoustic and height requirements led to the undulating roof, which provides a free-form counterpoint to the clear grid of the floor plan. In other words, the roof’s form is a direct result of the volume it encloses.
As the complex expands during Phase Two, these forms will be repeated in extensions that subtly and gradually spread outward from the main building, while responding to acoustic and functional requirements. The syncopated rhythm of glass and concrete on the façade likewise corresponds to function—signaling entry, movement, and light within the building. The extensive research and problem-solving that went into the project led to a plan that satisfies multiple users and ingeniously adapts to potential changes in program. When it opens its doors, the new Dallas City Performance Hall will provide the city with a worthy venue for its world-class Arts District.

   
 















 

Dallas City Performance Hall Models, Sketches and Drawings
Site Plan
Site Model
Plan, Ground Level
Plan, Balcony Level
Elevation
Section

 

  Site Plan  
   
   
  Site Model    
     
     
  Floor Plan, Ground Level    
     
     
  Plan, Balcony Level    
     
  oma performing arts east west section    
  Elevation    

 

   
     
Back to Top
Next Project
Section