Location | 111 South Grand Avenue Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
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Coordinates | 34°03′19″N 118°15′00″W / 34.05528°N 118.25000°W |
Public transit | Civic Ctr Grand Av |
Owner | Los Angeles Music Center |
Type | Concert hall |
Seating type | Reserved |
Capacity | 2,265 |
Construction | |
Built | 1999–2003 |
Opened | October 23, 2003 |
Construction cost | $130 million (plus $110 million for parking garage) |
Architect | Frank Gehry |
Structural engineer | John A. Martin & Associates |
Tenants | |
Los Angeles Philharmonic Los Angeles Master Chorale | |
Website | |
Venue website |
The Walt Disney Concert Hall at 111 South Grand Avenue in downtown Los Angeles, California, is the fourth hall of the Los Angeles Music Center and was designed by Frank Gehry. It was opened on October 23, 2003. Bounded by Hope Street, Grand Avenue, and 1st and 2nd Streets, it seats 2,265 people and serves, among other purposes, as the home of the Los Angeles Philharmonic orchestra and the Los Angeles Master Chorale. The hall is a compromise between a vineyard-style seating configuration, like the Berliner Philharmonie by Hans Scharoun,[1] and a classical shoebox design like the Vienna Musikverein or the Boston Symphony Hall.[2]
Lillian Disney made an initial gift of $50 million in 1987 to build a performance venue as a gift to the people of Los Angeles and a tribute to Walt Disney's devotion to the arts and to the city. Both Gehry's architecture and the acoustics of the concert hall, designed by Minoru Nagata,[3] the final completion supervised by Nagata's assistant and protege Yasuhisa Toyota,[4] have been praised, in contrast to its predecessor, the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion.[5]