Project Name: Conversion Theatre 11
Client: MCH Messe (Schweiz) Zurich A
Principal Designer/s: EM2N | Mathias Mueller | Daniel Niggli
Design Team: Dirk Hamdorf, Elke Kirst, Sidsel Kromann, Verena Lindenmayer, Claudia Meier, Mathias Muller, Verena Nelles, Daniel Niggli, Claudia Peter, Frank Schneider, Christof Zollinger
Contractor/s: Bauengineering.com AG
Date of commencement of project: March 2005
Date of completion of project: September 2006
Location of site: Zurich, Switzerland
Site Area: 3930 m2
Built-up Area: 9188 m2 (Gross Floor Area), 2724 m2 (Building Footprint)
Cost of Construction/Execution: CHF 22, 320, 000
Photographs: Hannes Henz
"Nowadays musical theatres are inherent parts of our urban cultural
landscape. There is a correlation between the establishment of this
popular performing art and the choice of unconventional venues." from EM2N, Switzerland.
Musical theatres are inherent parts of our urban cultural landscape.
There is a correlation between the establishment of this popular
performing art and the choice of unconventional venues. Former
industrial halls often give the musicals a special atmosphere. Both the
rich industrial history of the location Oerlikon and the prominent
neighbourhood to the Hallenstadion and Messe Zurich (trade fair) offer
in this respect ideal conditions for a musical theatre.
Only a strategy dealing in a radical way with the existing building
fabric could succeed. Demolishing the original Stadthof provided the
chance of realising a customized building.
A new spatial layer was placed around the laid open and enlarged stage
and auditorium, which develops its height in a way that the highest
point is reached at the corner of Thurgauer-/Wallisellenstrasse, thus
proclaiming a confident urban attitude. This simple volumetric gesture
mediates between the opposite Hallenstadion and the adjoining
small-scale residential houses at Birnbaumstrasse.
The dynamics of the new building is counteracted by the presence of the heavy stage tower. A skin of perforated steel and aluminium sheeting covers the building "all over", thus underlining the equality of roof and walls. With the exception of the few precisely composed "eye windows" and the glazed entrance area, the aluminium sheeting covers dozens of small windows. The theatre obtains two faces like the neighbouring Hallenstadion: at daytime it seems mysteriously secretive, while at night a glittering and festive atmosphere is created.
The inner organisation reacts to the new urban gesture. The new entrance
at the junction is visible from all directions. The restaurant was
relocated from the unattractive location at Wallisellenstrasse to the
more prominent side of Thurgauerstrasse, gaining a direct visual
relation to the Tram stop and the Hallenstadion.
A direct, raw and industrially charged atmosphere was the aim, which provides an independent and unpretentious background for the musical productions. This was achieved by exposing the surfaces of the structural work such as the concrete walls and floor, and the technical elements of steel beams and service installations. Painted concrete and the accentuated lighting create a vibrant atmosphere.
The auditorium was deliberately planned to be dark and conservative:
after all, the spectacle and the music take the main stage. Red seats on
a red carpet were the only design elements.
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