OMA-DESIGNED TAIPEI PERFORMING ARTS CENTER COMPLETES – ARCHINESIA
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OMA-DESIGNED TAIPEI PERFORMING ARTS CENTER COMPLETES

OMA-DESIGNED TAIPEI PERFORMING ARTS CENTER COMPLETES

Evening view of Taipei Performing Arts Center, next to the MRT station
© OMA by Chris Stowers

[Text provided by OMA] Taipei, May 13, 2022 – OMA / Rem Koolhaas and David Gianotten-designed Taipei Performing Arts Center complete. This compact and flexible space at Taipei’s vibrant Shilin Night Market is a place for new possibilities in performing arts. Its free-to-access Public Loop invites the masses into the building to experience different aspects of the theater.

The building is composed of a spherical 800-seat Globe Playhouse, a 1,500-seat Grand Theater, and an 800-seat Blue Box plugged into a central cube. The cube accommodates the three theaters’ stages, backstages, and support spaces, allowing the Grand Theater and the Blue Box to be coupled to form a Super Theater—a massive space with factory quality for unsuspected performances. The Globe Playhouse with a unique proscenium allows experimentation with stage framing.

Exterior view showing the Blue Box with a landscaped rooftop and the west tower
© OMA by Chris Stowers

Grand Theater interior
© Shephotoerd Co. Photography, courtesy of OMA

Super Theater
© OMA by Chris Stowers

Globe Playhouse auditorium
© OMA by Chris Stowers

The central cube is lifted off the ground to create a landscaped plaza. From there, a Public Loop – with portal windows open to view inside the three theaters – runs through the infrastructure and spaces for performing arts production that is typically hidden.

Public Loop
© OMA by Chris Stowers

Public Loop
© Shephotoerd Co. Photography, courtesy of OMA

Rem Koolhaas, Founding Partner: “Theater has a very long tradition. We have seen contemporary performance theaters increasingly becoming standardized, with conservative internal operating principles. We want to contribute to the history of the theater. Here in Taipei, we were able to combine three auditoria in a particular way. We are interested to see how this architecture will have an impact in terms of extending what we can do in theater.”

David Gianotten, Managing Partner – Architect: “The configuration of three theaters plugged into a central cube has resulted in new internal workings of the performing spaces to inspire unimagined productions. The Public Loop exposes visitors with and without tickets to these new works and their creative processes. We are excited by how the building constantly generates new relationships between artists, spectators, and the public.”

Kris Yao, Founder of KRIS YAO | ARTECH, the Taiwanese design collaborating architect: “This new building not only presents itself to the world as a brand new and unique configuration of theater complexes, but it also sits perfectly in its location – right at the center where the plebian life of Taipei happens. Its informal, unpretentious, and raw architecture spaces echo the spirits of how citizens of Taipei approach art.”

Taipei Performing Arts Center next to the Shilin Night Market
© OMA by Chris Stowers

In terms of architectural form, Taipei Performing Arts Center has multiple faces defined by the protruding auditoria—different than typical performance centers that have a front and a backside. The auditoria with opaque facades appear as mysterious elements docking against the animated and illuminated central cube clad in corrugated glass.

Central cube corrugated glass façade
© Shephotoerd Co. Photography, courtesy of OMA

Corrugated glass façade at 11F viewing deck at night
© Shephotoerd Co. Photography, courtesy of OMA

Liu Ruo-yu, Chairman of Taipei Performing Arts Center: “The completion of Taipei Performing Arts Center has a significant meaning for the arts. It is special in the sense that it is a platform that grows together with the younger generation. Their continuous reflection and practice will result in a spectacular arts scene in the future.”

Austin Wang, CEO of Taipei Performing Arts Center: “Taipei Performing Arts Center’s completion represents the positioning of Taiwanese theater in 21st-century contemporary theater. All perspectives are welcome. All possibilities are included. All art forms can happen here.”

The project is led by Rem Koolhaas, David Gianotten, and Project Director Chiaju Lin, with Taiwanese design collaborator KRIS YAO | ARTECH.

Design consultants include Inside Outside, Arup, dUCKS Scéno, and Royal HaskoningDHV.

Test performances at Taipei Performing Arts Center took place between March and May 2022. The theater will be officially open to the public in August.

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