Poly Grand Theater
Anyway, You Cut It: A Pritzker Prize-winning architect carves tunnels through a concrete-and-glass box to create a bold theater complex for a burgeoning district in Shanghai. At the Poly Grand Theater in Shanghai, Tadao Ando puts his flair for drama to good use. Starting with his usual Platonic geometry—here a 330-by-330-by-113-foot box—Ando bores large tunnels vertically, horizontally, and diagonally into the form. The move seems aggressive, more like coring an apple than forming holes in Swiss cheese. The cylindrical tunnels meet the concrete structure's aluminum-and-glass curtain walls at various angles to create elliptical shapes on all four facades. On the inside, the tunnels produce a similarly theatrical experience for visitors coming for operas, concerts, plays, and other events. The Poly Theater's look-at-me gestures are intentionally bold. Ando's office says the design “was expected to provide a certain landmark quality.” The project is located in Shanghai's Jiading district, a newly developing area about 12 miles northwest of the city's center. It serves as part of the cultural heart of a new town; a library has also been completed nearby. An artificial lake on two sides and construction on the two others mark the theater building as an icon-to-be. Like many new cultural centers across China, this one aims to change the area where it's located from a backwater to a destination. Ando's design features five “tubes,” each pushing through the 602,000-square-foot building and serving a specific function. Most visitors will encounter two of these elements— a six-story vertical lobby tube and a two-story horizontal foyer tube—on their way from the entrance to the main theater. The lobby is accentuated by two eye-catching stairways that curve left and right like showpieces out of a 1920s Broadway musical. A bridge on the fourth level and windows on the fifth overlook the grand space. The lobby's square ceiling somewhat diminishes the bold impact of the cylinder, but its intersection with a circular skylight creates the kind of dramatic daylighting for which Ando is known. From the lobby, the foyer tube skillfully compresses the visitor's experience, allowing for an explosion of space when entering the theater proper. Three additional tubes—one leading to a covered, but not enclosed, the amphitheater on the ground level; one for an amphitheater on the roof; and one connecting the south side of the site to the main foyer—are active mostly for specific occasions. The connecting tube will link to a forthcoming commercial complex to the south where
Ando's design for a multi-use tower with hotel, office, and retail space is currently under
construction. All of the tubes are steel-frame elements independent of the building's
main concrete structure and have interior surfaces finished in aluminum rib-wall painted
to look like wood.
Inside the 1,600-seat main theater, the cylindrical theme continues. Bands of laminated
wood rib-wall at the orchestra level and up through two balcony levels provide a warm,
textured contrast to the more subdued aluminum and exposed-concrete finishes in the
bulk of the interiors. The theater's 12 box seats particularly revel in unabashed
curviness. Sun Jian of China Poly Group, the state-owned conglomerate that
commissioned the project, says he believes that the architectural acoustics of this
project is the best of the many theaters his company has built around the country.
Ando credits his acoustical engineer, Shanghai-based Zhang Kuisheng Acoustical
Design and Research Studio, for collaborating in making sure the sound quality in the
theater is excellent.
The building's main theater opened in September. A quiet water court off an indoor
exhibition room on the fifth floor is also completed and exemplifies the serenity for which
Ando is known. Many of the ancillary spaces—including a café, restaurant, and
multipurpose hall—were not yet open at the time of this writer's visit in February. And
the building's various covered terraces occupying the spaces inside some of the
building's giant tubes were not in use: they were roped off, as “public” areas often are
in China. It is difficult to predict how well they will be used.
It is similarly unclear how well the building will work as an icon for Jiading. Cultural
centers can be important place-makers in new towns in China that lack churches,
government halls, town squares, and other recognized nodes of urban life. But when
every new building—from a theater to a shopping mall—tries to be unforgettable, the
resulting cacophony can drown out even the strongest voice. Ando counters that the
Poly Theater has enough landscaped areas around it that it will not be so affected by its
neighbors. An even greater success would be that both the theater building and its
public space are not only visually engaging but also physically active. Only in this way
can any cultural complex become a real community center.
Size: 602,000 square feet