flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Tanglewood in the Berkshires is now a year-round facility

Cultural Facilities

Tanglewood in the Berkshires is now a year-round facility

It recently debuted three climate-controlled event spaces and an indoor-outdoor café


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | August 19, 2019

The Linde Center offers three intimate spaces that support the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the Tanglewood Music Center, a new initiative called the Tanglewood Learning Institute, whose programming will include online programs. Image: Robert Benson Photography

On September 1, the Tanglewood Festival in the Berkshires of Massachusetts wraps up its annual summer season. But for the first time in its long history, Tanglewood is positioning itself as a year-round event and meeting space, thanks to the addition of the four-building Linde Center for Music and Learning, which opened last June 28.

The $33 million complex, designed by William Rawn Associates Architects and built by Consigli Construction, represents the first fundamental expansion on Tanglewood’s 524-acre campus since Ozawa Hall was built in 1994. Linde Center will support the performances and rehearsal activities of the Tanglewood Music Center, the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s (BSO) summer music academy, and the Tanglewood Learning Institute (TLI), a new initiative that offers more than 140 wide-ranging education and enrichment programs to enhance the patron experience.

The four sustainable buildings, which target LEED Gold certification, were designed to be climate-controlled for year-round use by the Berkshire community; it can host everything from weddings to high school performances. The buildings are shaped and built with materials for the best possible acoustics, high-end HVAC systems, sound and vibration isolation treatments, wood and curtain wall façade, and intricate millwork. Solar panels—a last-minute edition to the complex’s design—are mounted on the buildings’ roofs.

Each building provides a museum-quality view of a Tanglewood landmark they collectively surround: a 100-ft-tall red oak. (Reed Hilderbrand was the project’s landscape architect.)

The four-building Linde Center sits on more than an acre of Tanglewood's campus, and surrounds an iconic, 100-ft-tall oak tree. Image: Robert Benson Photography

 

The buildings, which sit on more than an acre of land, break down this way:

•The 4,000-sf Studio E is equipped with technology to accommodate performance, rehearsal and educational offerings. Its retractable seating can be adjusted to support recital, chamber music and chamber orchestra performances with a seated audience of up to 250; performances by larger ensembles, with an audience of 190; rehearsals for a full orchestra as well as large ensembles; lectures for an audience of 270, and social and dining events. Robust audio-visual technology will support recording and digital learning, giving the content created in the space a global reach.

•The 1,500-sf Gordon Family Studio can seat an audience of 60;

•The 750-sf Volpe Family Studio (Mark Volpe is BSO’s president and CEO), with an audience capacity of 40, will host TMC rehearsals and performances, as well as TLI events.

•Cindy's Café, at around 6,000 sf, has 150 seats, plus 50 more on the outside patio. It's designed as an informal gathering place for musicians and audience members, serving as a hub for visitors, TMC Fellows and faculty and TLI participants.

The Linde Center is named in honor or Edward H. Linde, who chaired the BSO board for five years until his death in 2010. Linde’s wife, Joyce, chaired the TMC/TLI Initiative Committee.  “This is really Joyce’s vision, to create something that would engage the younger generation in how they learn and appreciate music,” says Phil Brault, Consigli’s Project Executive.

Brault notes that Consigli’s early involvement in this project (which took 15 months to build) was critical to its success. “The design was constantly changing throughout, and that [involvement] helped us be efficient in construction.”

Large curtainwall brings the outdoors inside of Studio E, Linde Center's largest performance venue. Image: Robert Benson Photography

 

This was the first project of this scale where Consigli fabricated and installed the high-end millwork (produced by its fabricator in Pleasant Valley, N.Y.). Consigli also worked closely with the project’s acoustics consultant, Kirkegaard, to deliver the highest-quality acoustics to the performance and rehearsal spaces. (Brault says the Building Team nicknamed Studio E the “Swiss Watch” for its design and construction precision.)

The team even built 3D models for the cavity spaces to ensure the accuracy of material installation and construction. “Without that modeling, we would not have been able to pull this off,” says Brault.

Related Stories

| Aug 29, 2014

Phifer and Partners to design 'transparent' Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw

The design includes a stage that opens onto the city's Parade Square, so anyone passing by will be able to see performances. 

| Aug 25, 2014

Ranked: Top cultural facility sector AEC firms [2014 Giants 300 Report]

Arup, Gensler, and Turner head BD+C's rankings of design and construction firms with the most revenue from cultural facility projects, as reported in the 2014 Giants 300 Report.

| Aug 25, 2014

Photographer creates time-lapse video of 1 WTC using 30,000 photos

Choosing from 30,000 photos he took from the day construction began in 2006 to the day when construction was finished in 2012, Brooklyn-based photographer Benjamin Rosamund compressed 1,100 photos to create the two-minute video.

| Aug 14, 2014

Museum of Mayan Culture draws inspiration from temple design [slideshow]

The Museo Maya de América in Guatemala City will be the world’s largest museum of Mayan history and culture, at 60,000 sf. 

| Aug 12, 2014

Design firms invited to submit qualifications for St. Petersburg, Fla., waterfront project

The city of St. Petersburg, Fla., invites firms to submit their ideas for a new and improved pier for Florida's fifth largest city.

| Aug 5, 2014

Shigeru Ban-designed Aspen Art Museum will open doors to public this week

After 18 month of planning and construction, the museum will open its new Shigeru Ban-designed facility to the public on August 9.

| Aug 4, 2014

Jean Nouvel commissioned to design Islam Museum next to WTC

El-Gamal's plans has been dubbed controversial by many industry professionals.

| Jul 29, 2014

Studio Gang Architects, MAD to design George Lucas' museum in Chicago

Star Wars director George Lucas selected Chicago-based Studio Gang Architects and Beijing firm MAD to design his proposed art museum on Chicago’s lakefront.

| Jul 28, 2014

Reconstruction market benefits from improving economy, new technology [2014 Giants 300 Report]

Following years of fairly lackluster demand for commercial property remodeling, reconstruction revenue is improving, according to the 2014 Giants 300 report.

| Jul 28, 2014

Reconstruction Sector Construction Firms [2014 Giants 300 Report]

Structure Tone, Turner, and Gilbane top Building Design+Construction's 2014 ranking of the largest reconstruction contractor and construction management firms in the U.S.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category



Museums

The Tampa Museum of Art will soon undergo a $110 million expansion

In Tampa, Fla., the Tampa Museum of Art will soon undergo a 77,904-sf Centennial Expansion project. The museum plans to reach its $110 million fundraising goal by late 2024 or early 2025 and then break ground. Designed by Weiss/Manfredi, and with construction manager The Beck Group, the expansion will redefine the museum’s surrounding site.


halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021