Lindemann Performing Arts Center
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The Lindemann Performing Arts Center is a performing and visual arts facility under construction at Brown University in
Providence, Rhode Island Providence is the capital and most populous city of the U.S. state of Rhode Island. One of the oldest cities in New England, it was founded in 1636 by Roger Williams, a Reformed Baptist theologian and religious exile from the Massachusetts ...
. The building is located at 144
Angell Street Angell Street is a major one-way thoroughfare on the East Side of Providence, Rhode Island. It was named for Thomas Angell, an early settler in Providence. Route Angell Street runs roughly east to west across the East Side of Providence. The str ...
on Brown's main campus in the city's College Hill neighborhood. The Lindemann and adjacent Perry and Marty Granoff Center for the Creative Arts are both utilized by the Brown Arts Institute and comprise part of the university's Ronald O. Perelman Arts District. The Arts Center is named for benefactor Frayda Lindemann and her husband
George Lindemann George Lyle Lindemann (March 26, 1936 – June 21, 2018) was an American billionaire businessman known for being the chairman and chief executive officer of Southern Union, a fossil fuel infrastructure and pipeline company.Robert Trigaux"F ...
. It will officially open in the fall of 2023.


Architecture

Designed by REX, the building features a main hall that physically adapts to accommodate a variety of performance configurations, in a manner similar to that of the firm's Wyly Theatre. The building's exterior is clad in fluted panels made of extruded aluminum. The Lindemann contains Brown's largest performance venue, with the main hall accommodating up to 625 seats in its most expanded configuration. The building's total square footage is 118,000.


Construction

REX revealed the building's design in February 2019; construction on the building began later that year. Freeing up space for the structure's site required the relocation of a historic Victorian duplex from 130-132 Angell Street to a new site along Brown Street. Movement of the historic house was completed in 2018. The Lindemann Performing Arts Center was topped off in December 2020. The venue is scheduled to open in October 2023.


Main Hall

The Lindemann's Main Hall follows a new architectural typology for performing arts spaces. All six surfaces of the hall modulate physically and acoustically to create five distinct stage-audience configurations—experimental media, recital, end-stage, orchestra, and flat floor. An array of secondary modes are also possible. The automated and manually assisted performance equipment installed to make such transformations includes five suspended, four-tier seating gantries (two tiers for audience members and two for technical staff), forty adjustable acoustic reflector panels, seven motorized utility battens, three lighting bridges, two stage lifts, three orchestra platform lifts, six telescoping orchestra risers, three seating wagon lifts, a three-unit retractable seating system, five seating wagons, a ring of deployable acoustic curtains, and a complete technical gridiron fifty-five feet above the floor. The main hall transforms into any of the five primary configurations with five technicians in three hours. The five pre-set configurations can accommodate Brown’s 100-piece orchestra (with a 70-person chorus), individual recitals, major theatrical productions, immersive video and scenic projection with 40-channel ambisonic audio, digital cinema, and traditional lectures and receptions, among many other options. The main hall seats 275 people in the end-stage configuration, 388 for recitals, and 530 in the orchestra configuration. On the lower level, the building contains three additional rehearsal spaces that double as venues. An orchestra rehearsal room doubles as a 135-seat performance space for smaller ensembles, a dance rehearsal room doubles as a 98-seat informal dance performance space, and a theater rehearsal room doubles as an intimate 50-seat performance space. Each of these spaces is equipped with infrastructure to support lectures, presentations, academic and extracurricular activities, and special projects involving motion capture, immersive video, and multi-channel audio.


Gallery

File:Sharpe House (Brown).jpg, Sharpe House was relocated from Angell street to a new site along Brown Street File:Brown's Performing Arts Center under construction.jpg, The building under construction, December 2020 File:Performing Arts Center, Brown University, during construction.jpg, The building under construction, April 2022


References

{{Brown University, state=collapsed Performing arts centers in Rhode Island Buildings and structures in Providence, Rhode Island University and college arts centers in the United States 2023 establishments in Rhode Island