Curve (theatre), Leicester, England, United Kingdom

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Curve (theatre)
Designer Rafael Vinoly Architects PC, New York, New York, USA
Location Leicester, England, United Kingdom
Date 2008
Building Type Performing Arts
Street Address Rutland Street and Halford Street, Leicester, England, United Kindom
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As an anchor for redevelopment of the St. George’s Conservation Area in downtown Leicester, the city’s new theater, named Curve, seeks to engage with the life of the community. To fulfill this mission, Rafael Viñoly Architects PC turned the typical theater configuration “inside out,” exposing the production, construction, craft, and technical components of the building to the public, and integrated the performance into the life of the city itself.

The design accomplishes this with a four-story glazed curtain wall that reveals the two main performance venues, the 750-seat main theater and the 350-seat black box theater, situated on opposite sides of the main stage and surrounded by the public ground-floor lobby. The stage, lobby, and sidewalk are all at the same level, with ample visual connections among them, making the theatrical performance an extension of activity on the street. Metal shutters open the stage to either of the theaters, to both theaters at once, or to the lobby, allowing a wide variety of performance configurations to meet the community’s diverse cultural needs.

No distinction is made between front- and back-of-house, because the stage itself can be made part of the lobby and circulation. Situated at ground level across the main lobby from the stage, double-height workshops and production spaces feature glass walls that expose production activities and make them a visible part of the performance.

Rectangular building volumes along the north and west elevations contain administrative offices, production facilities, dressing rooms, rehearsal spaces, the box office, a recording studio, a kitchen, and other support functions. Circulation balconies at upper levels overlook the foyer and allow for physical and visual connections among staff, performers, and the audience that activate a dramatic, engaging public 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 theater being an inside-out experience, something in which the production has as much value as the performance itself."



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