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Curve Leicester, Theatre, Performing Arts Centre, Building, Architect, Development
Curve : Leicestershire Architecture Information + Images
First Completed English Project by Rafael Viñoly Architects, UK
Curve - Leicester
Theatre & Performing Arts Centre
2007-08
Rafael Vinoly Architects

Photos by Peter Cook/View released 2009
CURVE THEATRE LEICESTER WINS RIBA REGIONAL AWARD
21 May 2009
Rafael Viñoly Architects' first completed project in the United
Kingdom has today been awarded a prestigious Royal Institute of British
Architects (RIBA) Award for the East Midlands region. Curve Theatre
located in the heart of Leicester's Cultural Quarter opened to critical
acclaim in November 2008.
Designed in close collaboration with Leicester Theatre Trust and Leicester
City Council, Curve is a cutting-edge performance space that turns
the typical theatre configuration 'inside out' by exposing the production,
construction, craft and technical components of theatre making to
passers by. Curve blurs the lines between on-stage and off-stage and
seeks to integrate performances into the public areas of the building
and the life of the city itself.
A cornerstone for regeneration of the St George's Conservation area,
in the heart of Leicester's Cultural Quarter, the £61 million
project contains an auditorium with up to 800 seats and a studio which
seats up to 400 screened behind a four-storey glazed and louvered
curtain wall. The theatre's design offers up possibilities for both
traditional and unconventional uses of space enabling a wide variety
of performance configurations to meet the community's diverse cultural
needs.
The RIBA judges commented: "It has achieved a new level of ambition
in theatre design. This venue is attracting world class theatre productions
due to its ground breaking idea of turning the typical theatre configuration
inside out."
Cllr. Ross Willmott, leader of Leicester City Council said: "We
commissioned a world-class architect to design a world-class performing
arts centre that would not only provide Leicester with an iconic venue,
but that would, we hoped, also act as a catalyst for regeneration.
Winning this RIBA regional award is a great honour and suggests that
we got it right."
Ruth Eastwood, Chief Executive of Curve Theatre added: "We are
delighted that Curve Theatre has won this prestigious award. Curve
is a building of which the people of Leicester, Leicestershire and
beyond can be proud and I am thrilled that, so far, over 90,000 of
them have visited since it opened in November last year. We have produced
and hosted a wide range of events from cutting edge drama, to sumptuous
musical theatre, via circus and work for children - all delivered
in the unique space and style that is Curve."
RIBA Awards are given for buildings that have made a substantial contribution
to the local environment. The building now goes through to the next
stage of this national competition to find the RIBA Stirling Prize
Building of the Year, announced in October.

Photos by Peter Cook/View released 2009
Leicesters new inside-out theatre is unveiled
Rafael Viñoly Architects complete first building in the United
Kingdom

Photograph : Will Pryce/Arcaid. Courtesy Rafael
Viñoly Architects
‘Curve’ is Rafael Viñoly Architects’ first completed project in the
United Kingdom. It is an innovative, democratic building that respects
Leicester’s history, whilst helping to redefine its future.
The £61 million project is the result of a close collaboration between
the design team, Leicester Theatre Trust and Leicester City Council.
The cutting edge design turns the typical theatre configuration ‘inside
out’ by exposing the production, construction, craft, and technical
components of theatre to the public, integrating all aspects of performance
into the life of the city and making it truly inclusive and accessible.
For the very first time audiences and passers-by will be engaged in
the actual process of theatre-making, behind the scenes.

Photographs : Will Pryce/Arcaid. Courtesy Rafael
Viñoly Architects
An anchor for the redevelopment of the St. George’s Conservation Area
in Leicester, the heart of the Cultural Quarter, the theatre features
a four-story glazed and louvered curtain wall. Hung from a vast truss
spanning the site, the glass hits the ground without interruption
from structure, offering a continuous and unobstructed 4m high window
revealing the two main audience volumes, a 750-seat main auditorium
and a 350-seat studio, and the production and administrative facilities
behind.
Conceived as islands within a public foyer, a central stage sits at
street level between the two coloured volumes, and a system of metal
shutters enable the creative team to place the audience in a variety
of configurations, creating possibilities for either conventional
or technically more ambitious theatre production and design. The continuum
of stage, foyer and street at one level allows for clear visual connection
between audience, actor and the public, and offers up possibilities
for both traditional and unconventional uses of the space to meet
the community’s diverse cultural needs. No distinction is made between
front and back-of-house; double-height workshops and production spaces
feature glass walls that expose production activities and make them
a visible part of the spectacle. A café is located at street level
to attract visitors throughout the day and during the non-performance
hours.
An L-shaped brick volume along the north and west elevations contains
dressing rooms, rehearsal spaces, production facilities, the ticket
office, a recording studio, a kitchen, Leicester Theatre Trust’s offices,
and support spaces. Tiers of balconies at upper levels overlook the
foyer, giving physical and visual connections to staff, performers,
and the audience from the top to the bottom of the building’s volume
that activate a dramatic, engaging space.
“Curve is an extraordinary contribution to the regeneration of Leicester,”
says Rafael Viñoly. “This could not have been if it weren’t for the
vision of the people involved. They were interested in this notion
of a theatre being an inside-out experience, something in which the
production has an interest and value as well as the performance itself.”
This view has been endorsed by the leader of Leicester City Council,
Councillor Ross Willmott. “We wanted a world-class building that sets
a marker for where we are going as a city. Curve is just that: it
states clearly and powerfully the ambition we have for our city.”
Paul Kerryson, Artistic Director of Leicester Theatre Trust says:
“Curve’s completion has seen the culmination of unparalleled expertise,
ambition and dedication, and we are delighted to have a brand new
home which will enable us to push the boundaries of twenty-first century
theatremaking.”
Curve - Leicester Theatre images / information received 281208
Leicester Theatre
Architects : Rafael Vinoly

image from Rafael Viñoly Architects
Rafael Viñoly Architects
Rafael Viñoly Architects PC is a critically acclaimed international
practice headquartered in New York, with offices in London and Los
Angeles. Founded in 1983, and now employing over 200 architects and
support staff, the firm provides comprehensive services in architecture,
master planning, and interior design for new facilities and renovations.
Its many successes include the Howard Hughes Medical Institute Janelia
Farm Campus (Ashburn, Virginia), the Tokyo International Forum (Tokyo,
Japan), the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania),
and the Mahler 4 Office Tower (Amsterdam, The Netherlands).
Rafael Viñoly, the firm’s principal, has practiced architecture for
forty-five years in the United States, Latin America, Europe, Asia,
Africa, and the Middle East. Driven by the conviction that the essential
responsibility of architecture is to elevate the public realm, his
work has been recognized in the world’s leading design publications
and by numerous prestigious awards. He is a Fellow of the American
Institute of Architects, an International Fellow of the Royal Institute
of British Architects, and a member of the Japan Institute of Architects.
Leicester Theatre Trust
Leicester Theatre Trust (LTT) is the independent charitable organisation
that will run Curve, located on Rutland Street in the city centre.
Curve is the magnificent new home for theatre and the performing arts
in the heart of Leicester’s Cultural Quarter. It is an ambitious project
that has brought together the creative team of Leicester Theatre Trust
and the architect to create a space which makes theatre inclusive
and accessible – truly symbolised through a glazed, transparent façade
which can demonstrate the very heart of theatre-making as far out
as street level.
Leicester City Council
Leicester City Council is responsible for all local government services
within the city of Leicester. It has encouraged and supported a wide
range of regeneration activity in Leicester over the last few years,
with 2008 seeing the culmination of a number of projects, including
a £350m shopping and leisure complex as well as Curve. The new theatre
sits at the heart of the city’s rapidly-developing cultural quarter
and will be supported by a new digital media centre in 2009.
Curve - Funding partners
Principal capital funding partners for Curve are Leicester City Council,
Arts Council England, East Midlands Development Agency, The European
Union, Leicestershire Economic Partnership.
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Leicester Buildings
Buildings by this architect:
Walkie Talkie building
Brooklyn Children's Museum
Bronx County Hall of Justice
Brooklyn College Building
Mahler 4 Office Tower
Vdara Hotel Las Vegas
Theatre Designs
The Shires Leicester

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos for the Leicester Theatre & Performing Arts Centre
Architecture page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
Curve Leicester - page : adrian welch / isabelle
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