Theatre Auditorium of Poitiers
Deciding what is essential in a given programme for a given place should be the primary objective of every single architecture project and nothing else. This may be even more valid when a public building is concerned, as it involves a strong and vibrant interaction with the city as work in progress.
The building should be as simple as possible, playing a distinctive role as catalyst and support for artistic activities and events, and contributing to social interaction. It should have a clear, strong but discreet presence and image in the city, conveying information about its own content that can be read at different levels.
as simple as possible
The limestone platform open to the public ensures a spatial continuity with the city and a material homogeneity with the surroundings. Slightly suspended above it lie the parallelepiped volumes of the building, covered with white matt glass. This double skin concrete/glass was the only luxury we indulged in, for it works as a medium and allows mutations in the building exterior of color, light, image
on the inside, the possibility of communication
(the auditorium)
Designing a hall exclusively dedicated to music contributed to an optimal acoustic and architectural result. The typological shape of the hall is that of a shoebox, a large rectangular space with a flat seating area. This model a typology inherited from 19th century theatres that is an almost forgotten option nowadays, with the growing popularity of multipurpose halls guarantees the quality and homogeneity of musical performance, as its shape suppresses primary and fragmented sound absorption (usually caused by sloping seating areas).
On the interior, leaning walls made of wood are detached from the containers surface, producing a unitary space that incorporates both stage and orchestra. Their slightly round shape, dictated by acoustics, and their bright texture create a structure that contrasts with the containers darker and more rigid forms.
As a result, the delicate textured surfaces that diffuse the sound provide acoustic perfection and a feeling of sensory well-being for performers and audience alike. Hall and foyer communicate through pivoted doors disguised in the side walls. Once closed, the continuity of the wood texture guarantees a homogeneous reading of the spatial container.
(the theatre)
The theatre hall was meant to be extremely versatile and performant, in order to allow different kinds of productions and events to take place. We have tried to meet both the technical demands of the theatre machine and the requirements of intimacy, well-being, visual and acoustic optimization of the audience space in a balanced and flexible way. The audience space is totally configured by gypsum fibre plates that produce a unitary shape, a dark, neutral, monochromatic cocoon with no edges, only punctuated by
the doors, control room and VIP galleries. Its homogeneous shape and materials ensures acoustic effectiveness, its simplicity emphasises the stage performance.