1. ArchDaily
  2. Hamburg Elbphilharmonie

Hamburg Elbphilharmonie: The Latest Architecture and News

Designing for the Performing Arts: Architecture as a Stage for Experience

Subscriber Access | 

Theaters, concert halls, and opera houses are more than just venues — they are meticulously orchestrated environments where architecture, technology, and human emotion converge. Unlike conventional buildings, these spaces must accommodate a dynamic interplay between acoustics, sightlines, stage mechanics, and audience engagement, all while maintaining an architectural identity that resonates with performers and spectators alike. Whether it is the immersive embrace of a vineyard-style concert hall or the grandeur of a proscenium theater, every design decision shapes how performances are experienced and remembered.

The recently published SET PIECES: Architecture for the Performing Arts in Fifteen Fragments by Diamond Schmitt Architects explores these complexities through case studies and reflections. Inspired by its insights, this article examines essential design considerations for performance spaces, from acoustic engineering to the evolving role of theaters in urban life.

Designing for the Performing Arts: Architecture as a Stage for Experience - Image 1 of 4Designing for the Performing Arts: Architecture as a Stage for Experience - Image 2 of 4Designing for the Performing Arts: Architecture as a Stage for Experience - Image 3 of 4Designing for the Performing Arts: Architecture as a Stage for Experience - Image 4 of 4Designing for the Performing Arts: Architecture as a Stage for Experience - More Images+ 60

Why Herzog & de Meuron's Hamburg Elbphilharmonie Is Worth Its $900 Million Price Tag

This article was originally published by Metropolis Magazine as "Will Elbphilharmonie Be Hamburg’s Guggenheim?"

So much has already been written about Hamburg’s undeniably excellent Elbphilharmonie, which formally opened in January but has been publicly accessible, in part, since November. The chatter has mostly revolved around the same two talking points—the building’s on-the-tip-of-your-tongue shape and its fantastic price tag. In addressing the former, critics have called attention to the hall’s resemblance to an iceberg, an outcrop, a ship, circus tents, or the Sydney Opera House. And as for the costs, totaling $900 million, they point out how the project hemorrhaged cash, even if they have inadvertently exaggerated the figures. Having momentarily lost control of the narrative, the city felt compelled to set the record straight in time for the inaugural performance: The building cost just three—not ten!—times the initial budget.

Why Herzog & de Meuron's Hamburg Elbphilharmonie Is Worth Its $900 Million Price Tag - Image 1 of 4Why Herzog & de Meuron's Hamburg Elbphilharmonie Is Worth Its $900 Million Price Tag - Image 2 of 4Why Herzog & de Meuron's Hamburg Elbphilharmonie Is Worth Its $900 Million Price Tag - Image 3 of 4Why Herzog & de Meuron's Hamburg Elbphilharmonie Is Worth Its $900 Million Price Tag - Image 4 of 4Why Herzog & de Meuron's Hamburg Elbphilharmonie Is Worth Its $900 Million Price Tag - More Images+ 6