The Opéra Nouvel (French pronunciation: [ɔpeʁa nuvɛl], Nouvel Opera House) in Lyon, France, is the home of the Opéra National de Lyon. The original opera house was re-designed by the distinguished French architect, Jean Nouvel between 1985 and 1993 in association with the agency of scenography dUCKS scéno and the acoustician Peutz. Serge Dorny was appointed general director in 2003.

Opéra Nouvel
Facade of the Opéra Nouvel
Map
General information
TypeOpera
LocationPlace de la Comédie, Lyon, France
Coordinates45°46′04.18″N 4°50′11.80″E / 45.7678278°N 4.8366111°E / 45.7678278; 4.8366111
Current tenantsNational Opera of Lyon
Inaugurated1831 and 1993
Design and construction
Architect(s)Antoine-Marie Chenavard and Jean-Marie Pollet, then Jean Nouvel
Other information
Seating capacity1,100
Website
www.opera-lyon.com/

History

edit
 
The old opera house at the beginning of the 20th century

In 1756, one of the first opera houses created inside an existing freestanding building was opened in Lyon. It was designed by Jacques-Germain Soufflot, the architect of the Panthéon in Paris. By early in the following century it was found to be too small, and Antoine-Marie Chenavard and Jean-Marie Pollet erected the new Lyon theatre which opened on July 1, 1831. It was considered rather undistinguished, but served its purpose.

It was not until 1985 that the City decided to once again re-build the opera house, but this time it was to be within the shell of the existing 1831 building. One of France's most distinguished architects was commissioned to create the house.

The style of the house is essentially Italian with a horseshoe-shaped auditorium and tiers of boxes.

Leaving only the existing foyer and the exterior façade, Nouvel tripled the space within the house by excavating below ground to create rehearsal space and, most strikingly, by doubling the height of the building by creating a steel and glass barrel vault which hid the fly tower as well as providing space for the ballet company. It has been noted that this achievement was "an architectural tour de force, in which the past has been successfully wedded to the future..",[1] albeit with the limited backstage space of the 19th-century theatre still remaining.

Main conductors

edit
 
The opera at night

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Beauvert, Thierry, Opera Houses of the World, The Vendome Press, New York, 1995 ISBN 0-86565-978-8
edit