Alice Tully Hall
Encyclopedia
Alice Tully Hall is a concert hall at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts is a complex of buildings in the Lincoln Square neighborhood of New York City's Upper West Side. Reynold Levy has been its president since 2002.-History and facilities:...

 in New York City
New York City
New York is the most populous city in the United States and the center of the New York Metropolitan Area, one of the most populous metropolitan areas in the world. New York exerts a significant impact upon global commerce, finance, media, art, fashion, research, technology, education, and...

. It is named for Alice Tully
Alice Tully
Alice Bigelow Tully was a U.S. singer, music promoter and philanthropist.Alice Tully was born in Corning, New York. She spent her high school years at the famous Westover School in Middlebury, Connecticut. Tully began her career as a mezzo-soprano, then became a soprano. She studied in Paris and...

, a New York performer and philanthropist whose donations assisted in the construction of the hall. Tully Hall is located within the Juilliard Building, a Brutalist structure, which was designed by renowned architect Pietro Belluschi
Pietro Belluschi
Pietro Belluschi was an American architect, a leader of the Modern Movement in architecture, and was responsible for the design of over one thousand buildings....

, and completed and opened in 1969. Since its opening, it has hosted numerous performances and events, including the New York Film Festival
New York Film Festival
The New York Film Festival has been a major film festival since it began in 1963 in New York. The films are selected by the Film Society of Lincoln Center...

. Tully Hall seats 1,086 patrons.

As part of the Lincoln Center 65th Street Development Project, the Juilliard School and Tully Hall recently underwent a major renovation and expansion by architects Diller Scofidio + Renfro
Diller Scofidio + Renfro
Diller Scofidio + Renfro is a New York City-based interdisciplinary design studio that integrates architecture, the visual arts, and the performing arts. Originally founded by Elizabeth Diller and Ricardo Scofidio in 1979, the firm is particularly well known for its interdisciplinary approach to...

 and FXFOWLE, completed in 2009. The building utilizes new interior materials, state-of-the-art technologies, and updated equipment for concerts, film, theater, and dance. The expansion of the Juilliard Building created a three-story all-glass lobby and sunken plaza beneath a new, cantilevered extension, “projecting a newly visible public identity to Broadway.”

What makes the Tully Hall/Juilliard expansion important are two stories: one of urban design and a re-imagining of public space, and one of creating a dialogue between Modernist and “Contemporary/Post-Modern” architecture that preserves the past while advancing new ideas in design.

History

Before the construction of Alice Tully Hall, most of the chamber music performances in New York City were held at The Town Hall
The Town Hall
The Town Hall is a performance space, located at 123 West 43rd Street, between Sixth Avenue and Broadway, in New York City. It seats approximately 1,500 people.-History:...

 on West 43rd Street, which had been built in 1921. The founders of Lincoln Center wished to have a chamber music hall in the complex, as there was still a need for a dedicated space. Before construction on Lincoln Center began, the architects considered placing a chamber music hall in the basement of Philharmonic Hall (since renamed Avery Fisher Hall). However, as the Juilliard School needed a concert hall that was equal in size to a chamber music hall, Lincoln Center decided to build one in the Juilliard building. Construction on the Juilliard building began in 1965 — on a site one block north of the original Lincoln Center complex and part of the parcel designated for improvement through urban renewal. The cost of the chamber music hall was approximately $4.2 million, all of which was covered by donations from Alice Tully, a New York chamber music patron and former singer.

Tully Hall was designed by architect Pietro Belluschi
Pietro Belluschi
Pietro Belluschi was an American architect, a leader of the Modern Movement in architecture, and was responsible for the design of over one thousand buildings....

, and associate architects Eduardo Catalano
Eduardo Catalano
Eduardo Fernando Catalano was an Argentine architect.-Biography:Born in Buenos Aires, Catalano came to the United States on a scholarship to the Universities of Pennsylvania and Harvard...

 and Helge Westermann. Renowned acoustician Heinrich Keilholz designed the hall’s acoustics. Alice Tully played an influential role in the design of the hall. "She was very, very particular and meticulous about her choices of colors and what she wanted in the hall that would bear her name," said Patrick McGinnis, former director of operations and manager of Alice Tully Hall, in a 1992 interview. Tully also insisted on there being ample space between the rows of seats, wishing concertgoers of all heights to be comfortable.

Tully Hall opened on September 11, 1969. Its opening night showcased the first concert of the new Lincoln Center Chamber Music Society. The New York Times praised the “restrained, elegant interior” of basswood, deep lavender carpeting, and raspberry seats,” and Mildred Schmertz of Architectural Record stated that Alice Tully Hall and the other auditoriums in the Juilliard School building “prove that it is possible to create elegant halls in contemporary terms without resorting to skimpy evocations of the gilt, plaster, and crystal décor of the great halls of the past.”

Since its opening, Tully Hall has served as a venue for numerous events, including Mostly Mozart, Great Performers, the New York Film Festivals, and Jazz at Lincoln Center
Jazz at Lincoln Center
Jazz at Lincoln Center is part of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts. JALC's performing arts complex, Frederick P. Rose Hall, is located at West 60th Street and Broadway in New York City, slightly south of the main Lincoln Center campus and directly adjacent to Columbus Circle. Frederick P....

. In 1975, a cathedral-sized, 4,192-pipe organ was installed.

Lincoln Center’s first three buildings — Avery Fisher Hall, David H. Koch Theater, and the Metropolitan Opera House — had been criticized since their completion. The buildings’ forms were derided for their “watered down” modernist take on Classicism, subpar acoustics, unusual interiors, and inept circulation schemes. Renovations over 50 years following their construction had helped overhaul the buildings, but much work was still required. The complex as a whole remained blatantly detached from the developing Lincoln Square area, and as such needed a more appealing and open public identity. Several renovation and remediation proposals — notably a glass-and-steel-canopy over the main plaza by Frank Gehry
Frank Gehry
Frank Owen Gehry, is a Canadian American Pritzker Prize-winning architect based in Los Angeles, California.His buildings, including his private residence, have become tourist attractions...

 — were widely criticized and shelved.

In April 2004, Lincoln Center unveiled the designs by Diller Scofidio + Renfro (who were selected as the project’s design architect in 2003) and FXFOWLE for the first phase of its redevelopment project, which included the expansion of the Juilliard building and the redesign of Alice Tully Hall. The scheme received final approval and construction began in March 2006. The scheme was praised by many architecture critics, but it also received criticism from preservationists who wished to see the original Belluschi building remain intact. A 2005 proposal for landmark status was declined by the Landmarks Preservation Commission. Docomomo International
Docomomo International
Docomomo International is a non-profit organization whose full title is International Working Party for Documentation and Conservation of Buildings, Sites and Neighborhoods of the Modern Movement.-History:Its foundation was inspired by the work of ICOMOS, the International Council on Monuments and...

, an organization that works to protect twentieth-century Modernist buildings and sites was a leading organization protesting the renovation. The majority of the controversy has been focused on changes being made to other parts of Lincoln Center, in phase two of the redevelopment project.

By June 2006, Lincoln Center, Inc. had raised $339 million, 75% of the $459 million it was responsible for raising for the project. The total goal for the project was $650 million, and the remainder of the money was provided by the federal government and the governments of New York City and State. Lincoln Center also received 20 gifts of $5 million or more, nine of which were at $10 million and above. Donors were represented among individuals, corporations, and foundations, including Morgan Stanley
Morgan Stanley
Morgan Stanley is a global financial services firm headquartered in New York City serving a diversified group of corporations, governments, financial institutions, and individuals. Morgan Stanley also operates in 36 countries around the world, with over 600 offices and a workforce of over 60,000....

, Credit Suisse
Credit Suisse
The Credit Suisse Group AG is a Swiss multinational financial services company headquartered in Zurich, with more than 250 branches in Switzerland and operations in more than 50 countries.-History:...

, and Bank of New York Mellon
Bank of New York Mellon
The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation is a global financial services company formed on July 1, 2007 as result of the merger of The Bank of New York and Mellon Financial Corporation...

.

Construction was completed and Tully Hall was re-opened in February 2009 with a two-week opening celebration. Reviews from the architectural community have been outstanding. The Juilliard expansion and renovation was projected to cost around $100 million, but is reported to have cost as much as $360 million (no official numbers have been released). The entire West 65th Street project was projected to cost $325 million. Charles Renfro, a partner at Diller Scofidio + Renfro, stated that the sum was probably twice as high as it would have cost to tear down Belluschi’s building and build anew.

Architect

Alice Tully Hall was designed as part of the Juilliard School building by Pietro Belluschi
Pietro Belluschi
Pietro Belluschi was an American architect, a leader of the Modern Movement in architecture, and was responsible for the design of over one thousand buildings....

, a renowned Modernist architect who had participated in the design of over one thousand buildings throughout his career. He blended the International style of architecture with a use of indigenous materials (i.e., wood for residential buildings and aluminum for tall office buildings), though his use of Italian travertine
Travertine
Travertine is a form of limestone deposited by mineral springs, especially hot springs. Travertine often has a fibrous or concentric appearance and exists in white, tan, and cream-colored varieties. It is formed by a process of rapid precipitation of calcium carbonate, often at the mouth of a hot...

 as cladding for the Juilliard Building would not be considered an example of this. Belluschi became involved with the Lincoln Center project in October 1956, when he participated in a two-week conference devoted to discussing the planning of the center. He was involved with the Juilliard project from its inception, having been brought in by Wallace Harrison
Wallace Harrison
Wallace Kirkman Harrison , was an American architect.-Career:Harrison started his professional career with the firm of Corbett, Harrison & MacMurray, participating in the construction of Rockefeller Center...

 of Harrison & Abramovitz
Harrison & Abramovitz
Harrison & Abramovitz was an American architectural firm based in New York and active from 1941 through 1976, a partnership of Wallace Harrison and Max Abramovitz....

. The president of the Juilliard School consulted with Belluschi on which architect to choose for the project, and though Belluschi had submitted a list of architects to be considered, he was ultimately chosen as the building’s architect. He associated with Eduardo Catalano
Eduardo Catalano
Eduardo Fernando Catalano was an Argentine architect.-Biography:Born in Buenos Aires, Catalano came to the United States on a scholarship to the Universities of Pennsylvania and Harvard...

 (whom he had brought to MIT as an architecture professor) and Helge Westermann (a former student of Catalano’s). Westermann had established an office in New York, which Belluschi and Catalano used as a local liaison for the project.

The project had been put on hold, pending decisions on the final site and budget. When the project went forward in 1963, Belluschi had also been involved in the final stages of the Pan Am Building (now the MetLife Building
MetLife Building
The MetLife Building, originally called the Pan Am Building, is a skyscraper located at 200 Park Avenue in Midtown Manhattan, New York City.-History:...

), the Bank of America Building, and the Cathedral of St. Mary of the Assumption (the latter two in San Francisco). Tired of battling budget restrictions and changing program requirements, Belluschi and Catalano had difficulty generating new schemes when the project restarted. Several of their previously proposed schemes were turned over to Robert Burns, Frederick Taylor, and Frederick Preis, three employees at Catalano’s office. Burns’ scheme was based heavily off Catalano’s MIT Student Center (completed in 1965). Catalano was regularly available for guidance and criticism on the project, whereas Belluschi would only stop in occasionally to review the work of Catalano’s office. Belluschi played a more public role, communicating with Juilliard and with donors. He also was highly involved in designing spaces like the performance hall lobbies and foyers.

Over the course of 12 years, the architectural team had developed approximately 70 sets of preliminary drawings.

Diller Scofidio + Renfro
Diller Scofidio + Renfro
Diller Scofidio + Renfro is a New York City-based interdisciplinary design studio that integrates architecture, the visual arts, and the performing arts. Originally founded by Elizabeth Diller and Ricardo Scofidio in 1979, the firm is particularly well known for its interdisciplinary approach to...

 were chosen in 2003 as the design architects to redevelop Lincoln Center’s 65th Street corridor, after defeating Norman Foster
Norman Foster, Baron Foster of Thames Bank
Norman Robert Foster, Baron Foster of Thames Bank, OM is a British architect whose company maintains an international design practice, Foster + Partners....

, Richard Meier
Richard Meier
Richard Meier is an American architect, whose rationalist buildings make prominent use of the color white.- Biography :Meier is Jewish and was born in Newark, New Jersey...

, and Santiago Calatrava
Santiago Calatrava
Santiago Calatrava Valls is a Spanish architect, sculptor and structural engineer whose principal office is in Zürich, Switzerland. Classed now among the elite designers of the world, he has offices in Zürich, Paris, Valencia, and New York City....

 in a 2002 design competition. Founded in 1979 by Elizabeth Diller and Ricardo Scofidio (Charles Renfro became a partner in 2004), they are an interdisciplinary firm with few built works (most notably the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston and the High Line Park in New York City), but they have been highly influential in the realms of architectural criticism and theory, and are the only architects to be awarded the MacArthur Genius Grant. They are well known for a wide variety of artistic installations, built on the themes of display, tourism, surveillance, ritual, control, and selling and buying. The plan envisioned transforming West 65th Street into a “Street of the Arts,” making it a more pedestrian-friendly environment. Elizabeth Diller, partner-in-charge of the project, “imagined a Lincoln Center that is more Lincoln Center than Lincoln Center.” As she stated,

“Rather than replace the image of this cultural icon with one alien to it, we propose to amplify its most successful features and fulfill its unrealized potential. The challenge is to interpret the genetic code of this 'Monumental Modernism' into a language for younger, more diverse audiences following several generations of cultural and political change. We would like to turn the campus inside-out by extending the intensity within the performance halls into the mute public spaces between those halls and the surrounding streets. The range of the project's scope requires an effort that dissolves boundaries between urban planning, architecture, streetscape and landscape design.”

True to their methods of weaving architectural design with performance and electronic media, DS+R envision Tully Hall as an active participant in a performance, and not merely a house for one. Regarding the way in which the renovated theatre’s walls glow (a result of LED lights embedded beneath translucent resin panels), DS+R’s website states:

“Like the raising of a chandelier or the parting of a curtain signaling the start of performance, the blush will be part of the performance choreography; a hush will fall in the seconds of transition from distraction to attention when the blushing walls become the first performer.”
At Lincoln Center, DS+R recently completed the sloping grass-roofed Hypar Pavilion and Illumination Lawn, and designed the installation for Fashion Week 2010. Furthermore, they have redesigned Lincoln Center’s public spaces, enhancing the fountain in the Josie Robertson Plaza, installing benches, and creating outdoor seating areas. They embedded LED
LEd
LEd is a TeX/LaTeX editing software working under Microsoft Windows. It is a freeware product....

 lights in the risers of a new grand stair that leads from Columbus Avenue to the central Josie Robertson Plaza, which display marquees and acts as an “electronic welcome mat.” The Promenade project depressed a roadway beneath the stair to enable vehicular access for dropping off and picking up patrons, in order to relieve congestion along Columbus Avenue during busy performance times. Along the 65th Street corridor, DS+R have designed 13 vertical 4-by-8-foot LED screens called blades that will provide information about the performances at Lincoln Center through the use of video and text. The architects designed the video content as well. Diller felt that the monumental scale of the buildings at Lincoln Center “needed to be softened up by a different, pedestrian scale,” noting that the use of such media is part of the architectural expression of this softening.

Site and context

The Juilliard School building sits along the west side of Broadway
Broadway (New York City)
Broadway is a prominent avenue in New York City, United States, which runs through the full length of the borough of Manhattan and continues northward through the Bronx borough before terminating in Westchester County, New York. It is the oldest north–south main thoroughfare in the city, dating to...

, between 65th and 66th Streets (across the street from Avery Fisher Hall and the Lincoln Center parking garage). Prior to its expansion, it maintained a rectangular footprint of approximately 200 x 350 feet (106.7 m). Also, prior to the re-development project, the building’s primary means of connection to the main Lincoln Center complex was a large pedestrian footbridge (named the Paul Milstein Plaza) that crossed over—and covered a large portion of—West 65th Street. Despite the original building’s shape, its site was rhomboidal in shape, due to the diagonal progression of Broadway through the rigid orthogonal grid of Manhattan. Rejecting Broadway’s diagonal, the architects oriented Juilliard to the grid, using the remaining triangular section as a small plaza.

Lincoln Center was constructed as part of the Slum Clearance Committee’s Lincoln Square Urban Renewal Area Project (also known as the Lincoln Square Title I project), in which 17 blocks of tenements and slums were demolished and over 7,000 families were displaced. In the years following the complex’s construction, the surrounding area has been extensively rebuilt, establishing itself as an important commercial and cultural hub. Lincoln Center and Juilliard are now surrounded by myriad high-end cafes, shops, restaurants, and mixed-use high-rise buildings. Some notable facilities in the area include the Empire Hotel on West 63rd Street & Broadway, the Manhattan New York Temple
Manhattan New York Temple
The Manhattan New York Temple is the 119th operating temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints . It is the second "high rise" LDS temple to be constructed, after the Hong Kong China Temple, and the third LDS temple converted from an existing building...

 of the The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on West 65th Street & Columbus Avenue, and the American Museum of Folk Art. Concerning public transportation, Lincoln Center can be reached by the M5, M7, M10, M11, M66 and M104 bus lines and the #1 subway line.

Though not located on the complex’s superblock between West 62nd and 65th Streets, the architects identified the original Juilliard building with Lincoln Center through the footbridge connection and use of cladding. Gordon Bunshaft originally envisioned the bridge to better integrate Juilliard with the main Lincoln Center campus and hide street traffic. Little to no consideration was given regarding the effects of such a wide bridge on the street below. Further amplifying a sense of detachment from the urban fabric of New York, the theatres of Lincoln Center sit on a plinth above street level. The October 1956 conference in which Pietro Belluschi had participated produced a consensus among the architects that the complex would be an inward-looking area that was isolated from the activities of the city. Alvar Aalto, another conference participant, envisioned Lincoln Center as a “casbah with high walls to the outside world.” In the 1950s, the Upper West Side, especially the west 60s, was not viewed as a pleasing walking environment, but more as something alien and unfriendly by the architects.

The structures of the main complex are designed in a Neoclassical Modernist style, while Juilliard is a Brutalist building. When compared with the open and transparent facades of the “superblock buildings” in the main complex, the heavy massing of the Juilliard building gives it the appearance of a fortress. However, Juilliard fits within its immediate context because of its exterior cladding. All of Lincoln Center’s original buildings (built before the redevelopment project) are clad with travertine.

As Juilliard’s main public theatre, Alice Tully Hall was not given a prominent entrance, despite the fact that it was housed in the only Lincoln Center building on a site directly facing Broadway. The entrance was instead tucked under the second-story outdoor terrace/footbridge and the monumental exterior staircase that led up to it from the plaza. This, the rejection of the diagonal, and the setting back of the building from Broadway, follow a similar logic of detachment from the city street that the main Lincoln Center campus embodied. This original entrance to Tully Hall became fully visible only once the terrace, staircase, and footbridge were removed in 2006.

The expansion of Juilliard and Tully Hall extended the travertine cladding of the original building along the West 65th Street facade, which helps maintain a visual/material connection with Avery Fisher Hall across the street. However, the most significant move was the establishment of a monumental public entrance along Broadway that is instantly recognizable as a point of public entry. The extension cantilevers over a new sunken plaza that is open at all times. Furthermore, the edge of the extension follows the diagonal of Broadway, bringing the formerly reclusive-feeling Juilliard building all the way to this busy avenue and engaging it more actively with the life of the Lincoln Square area while maintaining the presence of outdoor public space. Whereas the modernist Lincoln Center had shied away from and rejected the street, the new Lincoln Center and the new Alice Tully Hall reject this anti-street sentiment wholesale. The expansive use of glazing along the Broadway facade extends the transparency of Lincoln Center’s buildings. People can now look inside and outside far more easily than before, just as they had been able to do in the superblock buildings since their construction.

Form, use and construction

In keeping with the Brutalist style, Juilliard features rigorous geometries and highly cantilevered forms. Initial studies by Pietro Belluschi and Eduardo Catalano related more toward the white classical temple image adopted for the other Lincoln Center buildings. As the studies progressed and the site moved to the lot between West 65th and 66th Streets, there was an administrative shift at the Juilliard School. The new president expanded the curriculum and altered the program of the school. In response to these changes in both site and program, the design, ultimately constructed, was the Robert Burns scheme fashioned off the MIT Student Center.

The scheme is based on the placement of main performance spaces on either side of a central vertical circulation core. At a cost of nearly $30 million, the 490000 square feet (45,522.5 m²) building contained: 10 floors (4 above ground, 4 below), 3 Juilliard theaters, the public Alice Tully Hall, 15 large dance, opera, and drama studios, 3 organ studios, 84 practice rooms, 27 classrooms and ensemble studios, 30 private instruction studios, numerous orchestra and choral rehearsal rooms, scenery and costume studios and workshops, a library, lounge, snack bar, and administration offices. The theatres and working floors are tied together by a West 65th Street vestibule-lobby that rises several stories, allowing one to orient oneself upon entering the building. The arrangement and packing of a campus’ worth of spaces into a single building greatly impressed architectural critics, but was not as well-received by the students of Juilliard, who were confused by the building’s circulation.

The Juilliard building, set on a regular structural grid, was designed in steel and concrete with a travertine veneer (for which the material was donated by the Italian government). Most of the building’s interior was extremely simple, with walls often left as bare concrete aggregate with wall-to-wall carpeting on the floors in several areas. The theatres, on the other hand, were far more finely detailed. Tully Hall was (in accordance with the desires of Alice Tully herself) designed with wood batten with dampening behind, and lavender carpet “casting 1930s-ish mauve lights in the foyer.” Though the theatre's lobby was large, it was depressed several feet below grade. The theatre was designed mainly for recitals and chamber music performances, but because the first three rows of seats could be replaced by an expanded stage, it could also accommodate small orchestras. Tully Hall is located within 22 feet (6.7 m) of the subway tunnel under Broadway, and this required the insertion of a one-inch-thick, cork-lined asbestos pad between the theater's foundation and bedrock, as well as the isolation of the theater's walls from structural columns. Tully Hall’s acoustics were praised as being among the best of any performance hall in Lincoln Center, thanks to the work of acoustician Heinrich Keilholz (who consulted on the acoustics of the entire building as well).

An area of disappointment, however, was the tucking of the public entrance to Alice Tully Hall under the second-story terrace and exterior staircase, making it difficult to find. The removal of the West 65th Street footbridge, in 2006, unveiled this entrance, but it did not attain full prominence until the renovation and expansion of Tully Hall and Juilliard.
As part of the Lincoln Center Redevelopment Project, the Juilliard School needed another 45000 square feet (4,180.6 m²) of space and wanted Alice Tully Hall’s interiors and public spaces to be more welcoming. The expansion by Diller Scofidio + Renfro and FXFOWLE extended the travertine cladding of the original building along the West 65th Street facade, and also created an adapted extension of the Brutalist geometries on the upper stories. The fourth-story row of recesses housing windows is extended, but with the glass displaced and extending beyond the recesses, differentiating the extension from the original building and subtly beginning to break the original Brutalist box. The Juilliard extension cantilevers over a sunken public plaza and a new 38-foot-6-inch-high glazed lobby. The underside of the extension tilts up at a 16-degree angle. A dance studio punches through the curtain wall, overlooking Broadway. The transparency of the entry makes it feel like an extension of the Broadway sidewalk. A grandstand of bleacher-style seating on the far corner of the plaza rises at a similar angle to the canopy.

Structural glazed walls bring daylight into three stories of rehearsal space and classrooms in the extension, and the protruding dance studio is suspended beneath its soffit. East-west running trusses were installed between the third and sixth levels to carry the load for the four floors of the expansion, the longest of which has a 75 feet (22.9 m) back span with a 50 feet (15.2 m) cantilever. Some of the trusses’ diagonals needed to be offset to accommodate doors, passageways, and other obstructions. Steel diagonal brace frames extend from the ground to the roof to support the lateral load.

Acoustician Mark Holden and his team measured every surface of the old performance hall to determine which were re-radiating the noise of the subway, and found that the stage and seating floors, and proscenium stage’s vertical panels were the responsible members. The new floors sit on a floating concrete slab with a rubber pad, and the spin walls are mounted on giant rubber isolators, which work to mitigate the sounds of the subway.

Tully Hall’s lobby doubled in size from 5,157 to 9468 square feet (879.6 m²), now with a 3600 square feet (334.5 m²) patron’s salon on the mezzanine level. A public café named at65 is visible in the lobby along Broadway, backed by blood-red walls of tongue-and-groove muirapiranga wood, which now wrap the new performance hall (renamed the Starr Theater). The lobby’s floors are made of Portuguese ataija azul limestone. The east and south elevations are sheathed with a mullionless one-way-cable wall system, allowing for maximum transparency.

Narrow passageways lead to the side entrances of the concert hall. The passageway walls are lined with dark gray felt and the floors are covered with gray industrial carpeting. Elisabeth Diller calls this the “sensory deprivation space”, as it is meant to heighten the drama of coming into the auditorium. The theatre’s new skin consists almost entirely of translucent eco-friendly resin and African moabi wood panels that were developed with 3form
3form
3form Free Knowledge Exchange is one of the earliest examples of human-based computation and human-based genetic algorithm . It uses both human-based selection and three types of human-based innovation , in order to implement collaborative problem-solving between humans.-References:# Kosorukoff ...

(and are between 1 and 1.5 inches thick). The panels form gill-like acoustic baffles along the side walls or become pivoting pyramid shapes that bounce sound. Sections of the balcony and side walls give emit a soft pinkish light as LEDs hidden behind them glow through the superthin moabi veneer. Aesthetics, acoustics, and lighting were all incorporated into these panels to remove visual clutter and create a more inviting space. The stage can now be configured in three different ways, as the front rows are capable of sliding down and underneath it.

Significance

Elizabeth Diller called Lincoln Center the “place that architects love to hate,” but said that DS+R wanted to give it a “second chance.” It had long been criticized by the architectural community, due to the general dissatisfaction with the complex’s overall feeling of detachment from its urban environment (the consequence of an antiquated architectural and planning ideology), the unsavory forms of the main theatre buildings, and the inadequacies of the actual performance spaces. The Juilliard Building, by comparison, received far more favorable reviews, especially with regard to its performance spaces. Despite its improvements over the superblock buildings, it was not without its problems: no clear, distinct public entrance for Tully Hall, the massive exterior stair and footbridge, lack of engagement with Broadway (either its social vitality and unique diagonal shape).

The expansion of Juilliard and the comprehensive renovation of Alice Tully Hall resolve many of the original building’s issues, meeting the program requirements of the Juilliard School while actively engaging the once-reclusive Juilliard building with Broadway and Lincoln Square, making it an integral part of the area’s vibrant street life. Furthermore, the expansion and renovation successfully merge the Brutalist/Modernist language of the original building with the contemporary Post-Modernist language of the addition. It is this Post-Modern language that interacts most with the streetscape, reflecting contemporary ideas regarding the creation of public space and the relationship/transition between indoor and outdoor spaces. The new Tully Hall and Juilliard building has received rave reviews, with critics who liked the original building praising the architects for “pulling off the near-impossible feat of improving a good building without subverting its finer traits.”

External links

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