Showing posts with label WDCH. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WDCH. Show all posts

Friday, September 22, 2023

Breaking: SFS Planning Major Davies Renovations


Louise M. Davies Symphony Hall
Photo by Lisa Hirsch

Um, wow: San Francisco Symphony is in the early stages of planning major, major renovations to Louise M. Davies Symphony Hall. Here are the relevant links:
In brief, they're thinking of the following:
  • Expanding into Lake Louise, aka the parking lot, by building a recital hall there.
  • Connecting it to the existing building.
  • Renovating the existing concert hall to reduce the number of seats to about 2100.
The SFS web site item says that they're in the very early stages, but they've got collaborative partners lined up already, in the form of  Mark Cavagnero Associates (a firm that did the renovations of the Veterans Building for SFO, work at the SFCM campus, and lots more) and FRANK GEHRY, whom I hope needs no introduction.



Walt Disney Concert Hall, Los Angeles
Frank Gehry, architect
Photo by Lisa Hirsch


I made some jokes when Esa-Pekka Salonen was hired about whether we could expect a Frank Gehry concert hall to follow. Prescience?? I mean, this would be awesome in some ways: Davies has had acoustical problems throughout its history, even with the big renovation funded by Gordon Getty, and Lake Louise is a major waste of valuable real estate.

On the other hand, does Civic Center need yet another recital hall? I say this knowing absolutely nothing about what the theoretical new hall would be like. But the larger Civic Center area already has Herbst Theater (renovated a few years ago), the Taube Theater, the Veterans Building Green Room, SF Jazz, three halls in the old bulding at SFCM and two in the new, St. Mark's, and Old First. That's eleven small concert halls within three-quarters of a mile of each other, and I'm not even counting Zellerbach A, the space in Davies used for SFSoundBox, or the Nourse Theater, which SF Performances used while Herbst was under construction.

Can SFS sell tickets for programs in this potential new hall?? Well, one might check attendance numbers for SFS chamber music concerts at Davies and at the Legion of Honor, not that anyone outside SFS has access to those figures.

As exciting as this possibility is, it would be extremely expensive! Davies opened in 1980 and cost $28 million to build. A renovation and expansion could be expected to cost in the neighborhood of $250 to $500 million, based on what it cost the NY Phil/Lincoln Center for a gut renovation of its even more problematic concert hall (which is now on its third name!).

Where would SFS play when Davies was being renovated? Across the street in its old home at the War Memorial Opera House? Across the bay in the dreadful Zellerbach concert hall? Here and there, with runouts to the Paramount Theater (Oakland), California Theater (San Jose), Bing (Stanford), Mondavi (Davis), and points in between?

And where would the money come from? Well, perhaps this is part of the reason that the Board is being intransigent about paying the musicians what they're worth: they have real estate dreams. Ya know, the musicians are what the orchestra is all about! These plans cannot be executed on the backs of the musicians.

But...let's get back to arts patron and composer Gordon Getty, who made major contributions to the first Davies renovation. In the last year or so, he has sold off hundreds of millions of dollars of art and objects that he and his late wife collected over the years. Is it possible that any new hall will be named....Ann and Gordon Getty Hall?

And would the promise of a new hall and newly-renovated hall make it more likely that Salonen would extend his contract?

Huge thanks to reader Josh Williams, who called this story to my attention in blog comments elsewhere.

Update: I've made a few minor updates, including improving the formatting, correcting the original cost of Davies to $28 million, correcting the spelling of Ann Getty, and correcting the number of recital halls.

 

Friday, November 30, 2007

One Thing He Got Wrong

The magnificent Walt Disney Concert Hall has a surprising and distressing omission: none of the doors at box office level are electric. That is, I could not find a door where you push a flat plate with an accessibility symbol on it to open the door. Maybe there's an accessible door there someplace and I just missed it, but I saw a WDCH employee struggling to help a woman who uses a wheelchair get into the lobby. Maybe the accessible entrance is elsewhere; that would be wrong because the building ought not make disabled people feel like second-class citizens having to go around the corner.

It's just not acceptable in a public building constructed well after the passsage of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). I hope the omission will be corrected at some point.

Tuesday, November 06, 2007

At Least WDCH is in a Dry Climate

Frank Lloyd Wright and Frank Gehry: separated at birth?

M.I.T. Sues Architect Frank Gehry

BOSTON (AP) -- The Massachusetts Institute of Technology is suing renowned architect Frank Gehry, alleging serious design flaws in the Stata Center, a building celebrated for its unconventional walls and radical angles.

The school asserts that the center, completed in spring 2004, has persistent leaks, drainage problems and mold growing on its brick exterior. It says accumulations of snow and ice have fallen dangerously from window boxes and other areas of its roofs, blocking emergency exits and causing damage.

[etc.]