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The Hills are Alive
Construction of 'World-Class' concert hall humming along
By Greg Aragon
Sonoma County, long known for rolling hills and lush wine
vineyards, is about to also be known for its new $63 million
Green Music Center.
The concert hall, which is under construction on the campus
of Sonoma State University in Rohnert Park, will be completed
in early winter 2008. Named for local donors Donald and Maureen
Green, who laid the foundation for the center with a gift
of $10 million, the center is supported by other private donors,
foundations, businesses, the university and the state of California.
"We're expecting a world-class concert hall," says
Clifford Gayley, associate principal with Boston-based William
Rawn and Associates, the design architect on the project.
"The hall will learn from many of the world's great concert
halls, with its classic shoebox shape and very strong acoustical
foundation."
The project's executive architects are Los Angeles-based A.C.
Martin Partners and BAR Architects of San Francisco. The construction
manager is Redwood City-based Rudolph and Sletten and Chicago-based
Kirkegaard Associates is the acoustician.
Modeled after the famed Ozawa Hall (also designed by Rawn)
at Tanglewood in the Berkshire Mountains of Massachusetts,
the 105,435-sq-ft music center sits on 53 acres that were
previously an abandoned hayfield.
Project details include a main 1,400-seat concert hall with
two balcony levels; a 300-seat recital hall for more intimate
concerts; rehearsal spaces; classrooms; a conference center;
a soon-to-be-named restaurant; a 1,077-space parking lot with
mature maple trees; 6,141-sq-ft lobby area; and an open-air
center courtyard.
But the highlight of the music center may be the giant retractable
back door that will open to a lawn on summer nights, allowing
an extra 10,000 guests a seat on the grass. The 19-ft-high
by 50-ft-long "barn door," as it is called, will
be made of panels that will fold into a pocket out of sight
when open. The door will be acoustically wrapped in cedar,
fabric and metal.
"The barn door is an off-the-shelf product that has been
customized for an A-typical use, namely the back wall of a
concert hall," says Gayley.
Gary Schilling, associate principal with BAR, designers of
the recital hall, says the most interesting challenge of the
project was designing the recital hall around another building
(the main concert hall), which was not yet built.
"We had to treat the concert hall as if it was an existing
building and we were adding a very large addition to it,"
Schilling adds. "And that was an unusual situation."
Construction
on Green Music Center broke ground in June of last year. The
concert hall's slab floor is in place and concrete for the
65-ft-tall walls will be poured this month with a 125-ft-tall
tower crane, which is now onsite. This summer, a second crane
will arrive to lift the nine trusses that will support the
roof.
When in place, the 96-ft-span trusses will extend several
ft beyond the width of the concert hall.
When complete, the venue will be the new home of the Santa
Rosa Symphony and a new stage for marquee performers like
Yo-Yo Ma and Wynton Marsalis.
The Project Team
Owner:
Sonoma State University
Architects:
BAR Architects, San Francisco;
A.C. Martin, Los Angeles
Construction Manager:
Rudolph and Sletten, Redwood City
Structural Engineer:
Structural Design Group, Santa Rosa
Civil Engineer:
Brelje& Race, Santa Rosa
Plumbing:
Flack + Kurtz, San Francisco
Landscape Architect:
Quadriga, Santa Rosa
Lighting Design:
Horton Lees Brodgen Lighting Design, San Francisco
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