1 E Pershing Rd Kansas City Mo 64108 to Kauffman Performing Arts Center

American performing arts center

Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts
Kauffman Center logo (6390725237).jpg
Kauffman Center for Performing Arts 2.jpg
Accost 1601 Broadway
Kansas Urban center, Missouri
United States
Coordinates 39°05′37″N 94°35′xiii″West  /  39.093698°N 94.586824°W  / 39.093698; -94.586824 Coordinates: 39°05′37″N 94°35′13″W  /  39.093698°N 94.586824°W  / 39.093698; -94.586824
Type Performing arts middle
Chapters Helzberg Hall: 1,600
Muriel Kauffman Theatre: 1,800
Structure
Opened September sixteen, 2011
Builder Moshe Safdie
Website
www.kauffmancenter.org

The Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts is a performing arts centre in downtown Kansas City, Missouri, USA, at 16th and Broadway, near the Ability & Lite District, the T-Mobile Center and the Crossroads Arts District. Its construction was a major role of the ongoing redevelopment of downtown Kansas City.

The Centre was created as a 501(c)(iii) non-profit organization. Dissimilar some other major borough structure projects, no taxpayer funds went into its construction. The Metropolis of Kansas City contributed to and operates a parking garage adjacent to the Kauffman Center.

It is the performance domicile to the Kansas City Symphony, the Lyric Opera of Kansas Urban center, and the Kansas City Ballet which in the past performed at the Lyric Theatre, eight blocks north of the centre. The Kauffman Center houses two unique performance venues: Muriel Kauffman Theatre and Helzberg Hall.

According to its website, the Kauffman Center'due south mission is "to enrich the lives of communities throughout the region, country and earth by offering boggling and diverse performing arts experiences". Non only do notable performances take place virtually weekly, but the Center is a place where the KC community comes together and celebrates the city's rich arts civilisation.[1] The Kauffman Centre seeks to fulfill this mission by offering a broad selection of performances, and also by offer specific programs to connect with the youth in the Kansas Metropolis surface area.

Construction [edit]

Origins [edit]

Muriel McBrien Kauffman first discussed her thought for a performing arts center in Kansas City with her family and the community in 1994. After her death the following year, her daughter and chairman of the Muriel McBrien Kauffman Foundation, Julia Irene Kauffman, began to move the projection forward. A feasibility written report was conducted in 1997; it resulted in a report that gave Julia Irene Kauffman and the rest of the board a practical foundation on which they could begin to build Muriel Kauffman'south vision.

In 1999, the Muriel McBrien Kauffman Foundation purchased an xviii.v-acre plot of land just due south of the central business concern commune. The Foundation announced that this site would be the home of the proposed performing arts middle. Past 2000, the then-named Metropolitan Kansas City Performing Arts Eye board had narrowed downwardly the pool of potential architects to four.[2] They ultimately chose Moshe Safdie, an accolade-winning modernist known for such buildings as Habitat 67 in Montreal, Canada; the Khalsa Heritage Centre in India; the Marina Bay Sands resort in Singapore; and the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas.[3] Soon later, he arrived in Kansas City to come across the site for himself, and while at dinner with Julia Irene Kauffman he sketched an idea for the heart on his napkin. Presently, that sketch would evolve into an architectural icon and the dwelling for performing arts in Kansas Urban center.

Safdie presented his programme in May 2002, and iv years later, on October half-dozen, 2006, ground was cleaved for what had at present been officially named the Kauffman Middle for the Performing Arts.[two]

Design and construction [edit]

Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts

The technical requirements and exacting standards required of a facility like the Kauffman Centre fabricated it ane of the nearly complex structures in the world to design and build. The building, which took nearly five years to complete, contains 40,000 square feet of glass, 25,000 cubic yards of concrete, and 27 steel cables. The main lobby, Brandmeyer Dandy Hall, is built of a glass ceiling and sloping glass walls that provide a panoramic view of Kansas City to the south. The twenty-seven steel cables on the southward façade are anchored in embeds that weigh approximately 1 and a half tons, and the embeds are an extension of the foundation and bedrock beneath the edifice. When the steel cables were pulled taut during the construction process, the entire steel structure shifted two to six inches to the south. This tensioning provides stability to the structure and keeps the drinking glass lobby deeply in place. The Kauffman Center covers 13 acres (53,000 m2), including landscaped grounds over the 1,000-space, urban center-owned Arts Commune Garage. The cost of the project was approximately $413 one thousand thousand, which includes both a $forty meg operating endowment and the city's $47 million construction of the parking garage. The Kauffman Center was designed by atomic number 82 architect Moshe Safdie, acoustician Yasuhisa Toyota, theater consultant Theatre Projects Consultants and Richard Pilbrow, and applied science firm Arup. Local business firm BNIM was the associate architect. Lead contractor was J.Eastward. Dunn Construction Group of Kansas City.[4]

Architecture [edit]

A view of the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts every bit seen from the Kansas City Convention Center

The center's outside consists of two symmetrical half shells of vertical, concentric arches that open toward the southward. Each trounce houses one acoustically independent performance venue, although the backstage area is shared. The south façade of the Center is made entirely of glass. Safdie describes the lobby as "an expansive glazed porch contained by a glass tent-similar structure". For those inside Brandmeyer Great Hall, the glass puts Kansas Urban center on display; for those on the outside, the Kauffman Center becomes like a terrarium, revealing the thousands of attendees backlit against the white interior.[iii]

Operation facilities [edit]

The 285,000-square-foot (26,500 mtwo) Kauffman Centre for the Performing Arts houses two performance halls: Muriel Kauffman Theatre and Helzberg Hall. The venues share backstage infinite that runs the entire length of the Kauffman Center. There are dressing rooms that can adapt more than 250 performers, along with 11 rehearsal rooms. The Kauffman Middle joins the Lincoln Center equally some other of the few performing arts centers in the country to have two (or more) operation venues in one building. Some other instance is the Kennedy Middle in Washington, D.C.

This determination to have two halls, each tailored to a specific purpose, rather than a multipurpose building, reminded many Kansas City residents of a similar determination in the 1970s—when Ewing Kauffman and city officials decided to build divide stadiums for the Kansas Metropolis Chiefs and the Kansas Urban center Royals, rather than a single arena for both.[v] Both stages accept been rented out for private events, and the lobby features flooring-to-ceiling windows, forth with state-of-the-fine art refreshment stands, gift store and architecturally invigorating staircases.

View of the Muriel Kauffman Theater from the mezzanine level

The Muriel Kauffman Theatre is a 1,800-seat theater whose design was inspired by the nifty European opera houses. With multiple balconies and box seating on either side of the theater, attendees are much closer to the stage than in most other auditorium-type venues. The balconies and boxes, which feature seats covered in various shades of red, besides boast balustrades that blink with gold lighting and dim when the operation begins. The undulating walls of the theatre are painted with a brightly colored mural, designed and carried out by students at the Kansas City Art Constitute, under the guidance of Moshe Safdie. With a 5,000-square-pes stage, an orchestra pit that tin can house up to ninety musicians, and a 74-human foot tall fly tower, Muriel'south Theatre is the performance home of the Kansas City Ballet and the Lyric Opera of Kansas City, also as the site of many other theatrical, musical, and dance productions. Another feature of the Muriel Kauffman Theatre is the installation of the Figaro Simultext Seatback System, which displays subtitles in diverse languages on the backs of chairs, as opposed to most other opera houses that require the audience to look above the stage for opera translations.

The Kansas City Symphony prepares to begin their annual performance of Handel's Messiah in Helzberg Hall.

Helzberg Hall is a 1,600-seat, oval-shaped concert hall, and information technology is the performance home to the Kansas City Symphony. Considering the phase extends into approximately 1-tertiary of the space, even the seat uttermost from the stage is a mere 100 feet away. Helzberg Hall features vineyard-mode seating on all four sides of the phase, adding to the intimate feel of the space. Safdie explains it thus: "From the first, nosotros wanted a hall that was intimate and in which the public is engaged with the musicians in a feeling of embrace." Within the stage itself are motorized risers, which can either lie apartment or rise into a tier, depending on the needs of the functioning. Helzberg Hall also houses a 79-stop, 102-rank pipage organ congenital by the firm Casavant Frères in Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec, Canada.[6] Fewer than 10 per centum of the 5,548 pipes are visible to those in the hall. The largest pipe is 32 anxiety alpine and weighs approximately 960 pounds. Afterwards the 2-calendar month installation process, and an additional two-calendar month tuning period, the organ was dedicated on March 10, 2012 with a special concert by James David Christie.

Brandmeyer Great Hall links Muriel Kauffman Theatre and Helzberg Hall, and features an expansive view of the Kansas City skyline to the southward. It serves as a anteroom for patrons on operation nights and is as well available for special events.[seven] The pristine white neat hall provides admission to the functioning halls by a serial of stacking, open balconies. This means that on performance nights, patrons attending events in either hall are visible to each other, as well as to the metropolis below.

Opening [edit]

The Thou Opening celebration of the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts took place the weekend of September 16 – 18, 2011. The Friday nighttime commemoration, entitled "An Evening of Theatrical Delights", inaugurated Muriel Kauffman Theatre. Tenor Plácido Domingo gave a special concert, mark his Kansas City debut. He was accompanied by the Kansas City Symphony and Chorus, which was directed past Michael Stern. Other performers earlier in the evening included Canadian Brass, the Kansas Metropolis Ballet, Tommy Tune, Patti LuPone, with special appearances past the Lyric Opera of Kansas City, the University of Missouri – Kansas Urban center Conservatory of Music and Dance, Robert Gibby Make, and the Kansas City Symphony. The dark culminated in the showing of "Projections", an audio-visual production by Quixotic and the Baruch/Gayton Entertainment Group. The visual element of the production was projected onto the façade of the Kauffman Center, and featured animation that made it appear as though the building was coming alive. Alive dancers were suspended from the building past cables in order to interact with both the animation and the original soundtrack.

The Sat nighttime celebration, entitled "An Evening of Acoustical Wonder", inaugurated Helzberg Hall, with the intention of showcasing the acoustics of the hall. Violinist Itzhak Perlman and jazz vocalist and pianist Diana Krall both performed in concert. The evening also included pieces by the Kansas City Symphony with conductor Michael Stern, the Kansas City Symphony Chorus, and Bobby Watson & the American Jazz Museum Orchestra.

On Sunday, September 18, the Kauffman Middle held a gratuitous open up house for the public, and an estimated 55,000 people came through the doors that day. Scores of performances over a broad variety of genres—all of them local to Kansas City— took place in Muriel Kauffman Theatre and Helzberg Hall, likewise as on four outdoor stages.

Partnerships [edit]

The Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts also provides partnership opportunities for local, regional, and student organizations in the Kansas Metropolis expanse. In the inaugural season, such partnerships included the Kansas City Friends of Alvin Ailey, the Harriman-Jewell Series, the Heartland Men'south Chorus, the Kansas Metropolis Broadway Series, Kansas City Friends of Chamber Music, the University of Missouri – Kansas City Conservatory of Music and Dance Artist Series, The Kansas City Jazz Orchestra, the Youth Symphony of Kansas Metropolis, and Starlight Children's Theatre.

Pedagogy [edit]

The Kauffman Middle'south Open up Doors Programme is an educational program and community initiative that gives schools across the Kansas City metropolitan area the opportunity to bring children to the Kauffman Center. Through the Open Doors Transportation Fund, donations assistance make the cost of bringing children to performances at the Kauffman Center more than affordable. Through the Open Doors Tickets Fund, donations assist offset the cost of tickets for various events at the Kauffman Eye, in order to provide gratis or low-toll performing arts experiences for program recipients supported past select not-turn a profit agencies.[eight]

On February xiii, 2012, The Grammy Museum announced that information technology would debut its Music Revolution Plan at the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts in June 2012. The program will host twenty-5 15- to 23-yr-olds selected after an application and audition process. The students will spend four weeks receiving intensive instruction and mentoring in their preferred genre of music and will have opportunities to rehearse and to perform at both the Kauffman Center and the nearby Sprint Center.[9]

Arts District Garage [edit]

Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts (6664849273).jpg

Side by side to the south side of the Kauffman Center is the city-owned and operated Arts Commune garage. The $47 meg projection was paid for in bonds. It provides covered parking for Kauffman Center attendees, with entrances on 17th Street and Wyandotte Street. The Arts District garage too has special spaces reserved for electrical cars, complete with a auto-charging station. The roof of the garage doubles as the landscaping for the Kauffman Center. It required 300,000 pieces of high-density foam, 3,000 tons of sand mixture, and 100,000 square feet of sod. The eco-friendly light-green roof was designed and constructed by local landscape architect Jeffrey L. Bruce & Visitor. Construction projects typically disrupt the natural ecosystem of dark-green spaces, then Bruce and his team worked to re-institute the sustainability of the new front backyard, which consists of fescue and Reveille, a low-water-use grass. In addition to making the front of the Kauffman Center more attractive and providing an area for outdoor events, the garage's dark-green roof reduces the destructive heat inherent to more traditional paved lots.[10]

Terpsichore [edit]

Every bit a part of the Metropolis of Kansas City's One Percent for Art ordinance, a mixed media art installation called "Terpsichore for Kansas City" was placed in the Arts District garage. Named after the Muse in Greek mythology who ruled over choral song and dance, the installation is a combination of original musical compositions played over speakers in the ceiling and a iv-story "light organ".[11] The light organ consists of seven acrylic tubes that encase a serial of LED lights, which movement in sync with the music overhead.[12]

Notable performers and performances [edit]

  • Kansas City Ballet
  • Kansas Urban center Symphony
  • Lyric Opera of Kansas City
  • Willie Nelson (August 16, 2012)
  • Aretha Franklin
  • Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater
  • Ben Folds
  • Diana Krall
  • Idina Menzel
  • Itzhak Perlman
  • Joyce DiDonato
  • Ladysmith Black Mambazo
  • Laurie Anderson
  • Lily Tomlin
  • Mavis Staples
  • Philip Glass
  • Plácido Domingo
  • Yo-Yo Ma
  • 2019 ACDA National Award Choirs

Encounter also [edit]

  • Listing of concert halls

References [edit]

  1. ^ "About". kauffmancenter.org . Retrieved March seven, 2019.
  2. ^ a b "The Project'southward History," The Kansas City Star, September 11, 2011.
  3. ^ a b "Safdie Architects". www.safdiearchitects.com . Retrieved March 7, 2019.
  4. ^ "The Centre". Archived from the original on May 27, 2012.
  5. ^ Steve Paul, "Optics on the Prize", The Kansas City Star, September 11, 2011.
  6. ^ "The Son of All Pipe Organs," The Kansas Urban center Star, May 20, 2007.
  7. ^ "Special Issue Rentals".
  8. ^ Lisa Jo Sagolla, "Bringing Kids to the Arts,",The Kansas City Star, September 11, 2011.
  9. ^ "The GRAMMY Museum's Music Revolution Project". Archived from the original on May xvi, 2012.
  10. ^ Maria Cote, "The Drama Begins Exterior," The Kansas Urban center Star, September 11, 2011.
  11. ^ "Terpsichore for Kansas City". Americans for the Arts. 2014-05-xv. Retrieved 2018-01-eleven .
  12. ^ "Iv-story "Light Organ" is New Public Art in A Kansas City Garage Stairway | Greater Des Moines Public Fine art Foundation". Greater Des Moines Public Fine art Foundation. 2011-12-01. Retrieved 2018-01-eleven .

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • Kansas Urban center Symphony
  • Kansas City Ballet
  • Lyric Opera of Kansas City

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kauffman_Center_for_the_Performing_Arts

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