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Mecanoo's porous Performing Art Centre is set to open in October in Taiwan

Taiwan Architecture News - Apr 25, 2018 - 03:46   20021 views

Mecanoo's porous Performing Art Centre is set to open in October in Taiwan

Mecanoo-designed the National Kaohsiung Center for the Arts is set to open in October this year in Taiwan, which will be the world's largest performing arts centre hidden under one roof. 

Named Weiwuying, the porous-formed cultural complex will feature five separate state of the art performance spaces, covering a surface area of 35 acres (141,000 square meters). The building will also include a spectacular 116-acre (470,000-square-metre) subtropical park in the heart of Kaohsiung, making it the world’s largest performing arts centre under one roof.

The city of Kaohsiung, known with its almost 3 million population, is located in the south of Taiwan, once a major international harbour, is now a modern, diverse city with a rich cultural offer. "The new National Kaohisung Center for the Arts, occupying a site that was formerly a military training base, symbolises a new outlook for the city of Kaohsiung and Taiwan - with a mission to connect local and global talent through arts and culture," stated in a press release.

Mecanoo's porous Performing Art Centre is set to open in October in Taiwan

Mecanoo's new cultural complex will host performances by the world’s top artists as well as work created specially for the Center’s unique spaces, developed within the local community. 

"Weiwuying is one of Mecanoo’s most ambitious buildings and embodies all the key elements of our philosophy.  Inspired by the beauty of the local Banyan trees with their iconic canopies of leaves, the vast, undulating structure is composed of a unique skin and roof under which generous free spaces can flow," said Francine Houben, Founding Architect of Mecanoo Architects.  

"We have aimed to deliver a flagship cultural destination for Taiwan, a beacon to attract performers and audiences from around the world," she added.

The Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra under Gustavo Dudamel, who conducts in Taiwan for the first time, will be among the first artists to perform at the Center.  International collaborative partners have so far included New York’s Lincoln Center, the Spoleto Festival, Singapore International Festival of Arts, Deutsche Oper am Rhein, Esplanade Theatres on the Bay Singapore and Aerowaves Spring Forward contemporary dance festival.

Mecanoo's porous Performing Art Centre is set to open in October in Taiwan

The new Center, which will be Taiwan’s most significant cultural investment in a generation, will incorporate a 2,260 seat Opera House, with a proscenium design, orchestra pit and equipped with the latest stage technology for performances on a large scale, a 2,000 seat Concert Hall in vineyard style and equipped with a 9,085 pipe organ built by Orgelbau Klais, the largest pipe organ ever built in Asia. 

The building will also include a flexible Playhouse, seating between 1,094 and 1,254 depending on its varying configuration between proscenium and thrust stage, suitable for theatre, dance, and Chinese Opera, a 470 seat Recital Hall, ideal for chamber music and solo recitals and an outdoor performance space, seamlessly linking the building with the park, and open to audiences of up to 20,000.

"Weiwuying is one of the most beautiful, iconic and best-equipped performing arts centres in the world. The creative industries are extraordinarily lively in Taiwan. Once our doors are officially open, the Center will become an exciting springboard from which talent can soar," said Chien Wen-Pin, The Executive and Artistic Director, current Kapellmeister of Deutsche Oper am Rhein and former Music Director of Taiwan Philharmonic.

Envisioned as Taiwan’s national umbrella organisation, the National Performing Arts Center will incorporate Taipei’s National Theater and Concert Hall and the National Taichung Theater.  

The three flagship institutions will be home to Taiwan’s internationally renowned contemporary dance and theatre companies, orchestras of Western and Chinese music, Peking, Taiwanese and Western opera troupes, hand puppet companies, Oscar and Golden Lion-winning filmmakers, Booker-nominated authors, Mando-pop stars and beyond.

All images © Iwan Baan, except the last one/screenshot from the video.

> via Mecanoo/National Kaohsiung Center for the Arts