View Full Version : Oman’s House of Musical Arts Is a Palace for Music


Ramzi
15-02-08, 06:04 PM
I found this article about the House of Musical Arts.
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How do you . . . design a traditional and versatile music hall in a Middle Eastern nation?

Summary: The House of Musical Arts in Muscat, Oman, is a historically iconic 2,000-seat concert hall. WATG’s design is modeled after Omani palaces, and it shares their outward design features and circulation patterns.


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Though it’s a bit off the beaten path of starchitect-penned architecture in United Arab Emirates states like Dubai and Abu Dhabi, the Middle Eastern nation of Oman is undergoing its own building boom. In place of space-piercing super talls, city-creating master plans, and new Guggenheims and Louvres, Tom Russell of WATG says Oman is undergoing its own Beaux Arts period. “They’re building all their public buildings that the West built hundreds of years ago,” he says. Russell’s entry into this emerging oeuvre is the House of Musical Arts in Oman’s capital city of Muscat—a versatile 200,000-square-foot concert and opera hall styled after grand Omani palaces.

WATG’s client for the project was the Omani government: the Royal Court of Affairs, which manages royal palaces and properties. They sponsored a competition, and WATG (a broadly international firm based in Honolulu that specializes in leisure, hospitality, and entertainment design) and three others became finalists. Of all the finalists, Russell says his firm was the only one to enter a design that was historically literal; the rest were all contemporary, geometric, and Modern.

WATG had originally proposed a design that was traditional in form and feel, but had lots of modern materials, but when they began to collaborate with the client after the competition was over, it became clear that a more literal interpretation was sought.

“It was a getting-to-know-you thing,” says Russell, the building’s primary designer. “It is a very literal interpretation of modern Omani traditional architecture.”

Unparalleled scale
“There are no buildings of this scale in Oman,” says Russell. But, he says, the House of Musical Arts can be compared to Muscat’s Grand Mosque, a soaring showcase of Islamic design completed in 2001. In terms of performance spaces, Russell likens the House of Musical Arts to a better known landmark: New York’s Lincoln Center.

The House of Musical Arts is located on Sultan Qaboos Street in Muscat, the main east-west arterial highway, near the center of the city. The façade materials are locally sourced limestone and limestone aggregate stucco. The front entrance is an expansive palm-treed piazza backed by five tall, arched entryways into a hall that forms the central focus of a colonnade designed to create “a grand feeling of entrance,” according to Russell. Turrets and decorative crenulations top the corners of the palace-themed venue. To the east of the building, a mangrove forest and public park lead to a beach. To the west lies an 8,000-square-foot marketplace souk complete with bars and clubs.

Inside, a progression of formal reception spaces leads into the auditorium, similar to the circulation patterns of an Omani palace and not a specifically programmed array of cafes, shops, and lobbies. “If we were doing it in the West, we’d probably do a big, modern, open space for a lobby, but here it’s more like a palace, where you have different rooms and clustered spaces that are more formally integrated,” says Russell, who is based in WATG’s London office. Hospitality spaces can be set up nearly anywhere in the music hall with the aid of versatile pantry spaces.

The 100,000-square-foot auditorium can be divided into two performance spaces when a 200-ton concert shell moves into place to divide it. A mobile proscenium can be pulled back to create a thrust-style stage. The auditorium, with a maximum capacity of 2,000 people, is lined with acoustically dampening hardwood.

Oman generally lacks an iconic building that people immediately recognize as a symbol of the nation, and Russell says that it was his goal to design this building as an imposing structure that would appear on magazine covers and travelogues featuring this hot new Middle Eastern destination. The hall is under construction and is slated to open in 2010.

http://www.aia.org/aiarchitect/thisweek08/0208/0208d_oman.cfm

NuniBoo
15-02-08, 06:07 PM
I heard about this ..
Woow! Love the building! :hyper:
Cant wait! :hyper:

spirit
15-02-08, 06:09 PM
Isn't the place is too small for such a huge thing? What about the parking spaces?

Looks amazing & I really do hope that the outcome is like that image.

Amjad
15-02-08, 07:33 PM
Isn't the place is too small for such a huge thing?
Exactly.


What about the parking spaces?
Parking will be underground, and they will construct a tunnel for this theatre, which sounds very scary.

NiGhTFaCe
16-02-08, 01:29 AM
It looks really great!

Nella
16-02-08, 01:44 AM
i heard about this too. looks amazing.

Cosme
16-02-08, 02:08 AM
It's amusing that the anti-West members of Sabla are always quiet on issues such as these. Why haven't they invaded this thread yet and angrily demanded for a reason why the Sultanate chose to enter into a preliminary agreement with a Western [American] architecture company, why aren't they yet crying that fully qualified Omani men/woman are being overlooked while the pockets of foreigners are being stuffed full of money?

I think the plans for the new music hall looks great. Can't wait to see it in operation.

A.B-8
18-02-08, 12:54 AM
Niceeeeee cant wait to see it (Y)

$w€€ŧ¥
18-02-08, 11:54 AM
!!
makes me wonder! how could it fit!
even if not the parking issue... the traffic this will cause everytime there is an event!!

roads and passages are so small there?

i hope this is not one of the fantacies that get out and never be done

Thanks for sharing..it is a beautiful dream :)

BLING
18-02-08, 12:29 PM
Okay it looks good but does it really deserve 91 million Omani Rials?

Endure Whisper
18-02-08, 12:54 PM
Yeaaps,, my husband is on top of it and he's recruiting all the manpower that are taking care of it ;)

Amjad
18-02-08, 05:39 PM
Okay it looks good but does it really deserve 91 million Omani Rials?
if they'll really construct a tunnel then yeah. not to mention that this tunnel would be an official way to the theatre.

Amjad
18-02-08, 05:40 PM
!!
makes me wonder! how could it fit!
even if not the parking issue... the traffic this will cause everytime there is an event!!

roads and passages are so small there?

i hope this is not one of the fantacies that get out and never be done

Thanks for sharing..it is a beautiful dream :)
They're going to make this tunnel to be an official way to the theatre as I mentioned in the post above. This will be done to prevent traffic issues I'm guessing. So yeah, they're considering such stuff...

Superbia
18-02-08, 05:45 PM
Amazing! Something to look forward to :)

Ramzi
18-02-08, 07:22 PM
They're going to make this tunnel to be an official way to the theatre as I mentioned in the post above. This will be done to prevent traffic issues I'm guessing. So yeah, they're considering such stuff...

http://video.do7a.com/data/thumbnails/5/defaultCAETN18K.jpg

Is it going to be similar to Dubai tunnels? or just like Al-Sahwa tunnel? :rolleyes:

Amjad
18-02-08, 07:31 PM
http://video.do7a.com/data/thumbnails/5/defaultCAETN18K.jpg

Is it going to be similar to Dubai tunnels? or just like Al-Sahwa tunnel? :rolleyes:
lol .. No I don't think it would be like Al-Sahwa tunnel , if you consider that a tunnel y3ni...

BLING
18-02-08, 10:07 PM
Yeaaps,, my husband is on top of it and he's recruiting all the manpower that are taking care of it ;)

Can you ask your husband if they're going to construct a tunnel too?

5alfanooh
19-02-08, 10:51 AM
The Building really reflects the Omani Architecture style, but they could've designed it better.. I am not saying it doesnt look gr8.. but they could've made it gr8er..

Endure Whisper
20-02-08, 08:29 PM
Can you ask your husband if they're going to construct a tunnel too?

He's only taking care of human resource. He's not really informed about the construction and design part, so he wouldn't know.

Cosme
23-02-08, 12:13 AM
He's only taking care of human resource. He's not really informed about the construction and design part, so he wouldn't know.

Can he be sure to provide the workers with fair wages, benefits, and working conditions? Please?

Endure Whisper
23-02-08, 08:50 AM
^ What are you talking about?