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Steven Chilton Architects wraps Guangzhou theatre in tattoo-imprinted cladding

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Steven Chilton Architects has designed a theatre in Guangzhou, China, which has a shape informed by the city's historical connection to silk and is imprinted with patterns that represent its current tattoo culture.

Named the Sunac Guangzhou Grand Theatre, the building will host performances from visiting production companies as part of a group of entertainment venues being built in the city's Huadu District.

The building's distinctive cladding was informed by Guangzhou's history as a key trading port.

Sunac Guangzhou Grand Theatre

Steven Chilton Architects designed the Sunac Guangzhou Grand Theatre

"Guangzhou is the birthplace of the Silk Road on the Sea, it has been the home of and inspiration for artists who have helped to define the world's concept of Chinese culture for thousands of years," said Steven Chilton Architects founder Steven Chilton.

"Aside from its functional purpose, our intention with the design has been to channel the history, emotion, and creative energy of the city through a building whose mission is to nurture the next generation of cultural leaders in the performing arts," he told Dezeen.

Red-clad theatre in the Guangzhou

Its cladding is designed to look like flowing silk

The theatre is wrapped in undulating red cladding made from triangular panels, which was designed to recall the folds in flowing silk.

"We have drawn inspiration from traditional and contemporary arts commonly practised in the region. Silk cloth has been made, painted, and embroidered in the city since the Han Dynasty," explained Chilton.

"We drew from the physicality of the material in our approach to the form through a series of gently twisting folds that define the outer envelope."

Cladding with tattoo informed designs

The cladding is covered with tattoo-informed patterns and animals

Across this red cladding, a series of darker patterns informed by tattoo art were drawn. Above this base layer, a series of golden figurative animals that were influenced by a local myth titled 100 Birds Paying Homage to the Phoenix, were added to the facade.

Phoenix characters were given positions of prominence, while birds were arranged over the facade dependent on the geometry.

Phoenix's and birds on cladding

The theatre's design was informed by the Guangzhou's history

"Tattoo culture has recently gained prominence as a respected artistic medium, driven by a younger generation embracing it as an expression of individuality," said Chilton.

"It has inspired a renewed interest in traditional Chinese culture, where symbols and myths often fetishized in popular western culture are being repatriated and worn as a contemporary expression of kinship with the national identity as expressed in the visual arts."

Sunac Guangzhou Grand Theatre entrance

The theatre's entrance

A circular auditorium was placed at the centre of the building with all the supporting facilities, including rehearsal areas and offices, wrapped around it.

As the auditorium was originally designed to host a fully immersive water show, it is surrounded by 360 LED screens, while there are 12 acrobatic hoists and three acrobatic tracks and trolleys above the stage.

The stage itself stands above a nine-metre deep pool and can be raised or lowered into it to allow for water-based performances to take place.

Auditorium with circular stage

The theatre has a fully immersive auditorium

"The auditorium design is based on an immersive concept developed by show creators, Dragone," explained Chilton. "The original brief was to develop the seating and equipment to serve a resident show that would be performed for 10 years or more," he continued.

"Halfway through the project, the client updated the brief to enable the theatre to be used for travelling productions and short-term events," he added.

"Fortunately, the design of the seating and theatre specialist equipment leant themselves to this purpose and the immersive elements were retained, as was the ability to transform the stage for productions that require spectacular water effects."

Mixed-use development near Guangzhou

It forms part of a mixed-use development on the edge of Guangzhou

Sunac Guangzhou Grand Theatre is the latest theatre designed by Steven Chilton Architects in China whose aim is to be attention grabbing.

"The theatre sits at the heart of a large, mixed-use development, conceived to attract visitors and tourists into a previously under-developed region of the city," said Chilton.

"To this end, the client wanted a design that could assert itself into the consciousness of the city's residents and beyond, so yes, part of its job is to project a strong visual identity."

Red building in China

Sunac Guangzhou Grand Theatre was designed to be attention grabbing

"Whether developers in China value memorable or striking design more than anywhere else is hard to say. Architecture is being commissioned in cities all over the world with the explicit objective of drawing attention to itself," continued Chilton.

"Such is the competition to attract visitors and investment, it is now commonplace to leverage architectures potential to create bombastic experiences and visual spectacle to draw in the crowds."

Other striking theatres by the studio include a theatre designed to look like an intricately carved ivory puzzle ball, which is also set to be built in Guangzhou, and a theatre wrapped in a steel structure designed to look like a bamboo forest, which opened last year near Shanghai.

Photography by Chong‐Art Photography.


Project credits:

Client: Sunac China Holdings Ltd.
Architect: Steven Chilton Architects
Project team: Steven Chilton, Roberto Monesi, Chuck Wang, Paula Isabella Saavedra Rosas, David Rieser, Natalie Dillon
Architecture and design management: Sunac China Holdings Ltd. Auditorium Concept Design: Dragone
Theatre consultant: Auerbach Pollock Friedlander
Local design institute: Beijing Institute of Architectural Design
Concept engineer: Buro Happold
Artist: Zhang Hongfei

(Sources: DeZeen)

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