Aotea Centre
Aotea Centre | |
---|---|
View of venue from Aotea Square | |
Address |
50 Mayoral Drive Auckland 1010 New Zealand |
Location | Auckland CBD |
Owner | Auckland Council |
Operator | Regional Facilities Auckland |
Built | 1985-89 |
Inaugurated | 9 September 1990 |
Opened | 24 January 1990 |
Renovated | 1998, 2011, 2013 |
Construction cost |
NZ$128.5 million NZ$15 million (2011 renovations) |
Classroom-style seating | 25 (Durafort Room) |
Banquet/ballroom |
650 (Lower NZI) 280 (Upper NZI) 200 (Limelight) 100 (Goodman Fielder Room) |
Theatre seating |
2,139 (ASB Theatre) 186 (Herald Theatre) |
Enclosed space | |
• Total space | 48,000 square metres (520,000 sq ft) |
Website | Venue Website |
The Aotea Centre is a performing arts and events centre / theatre in the Auckland CBD, Auckland City, New Zealand. Located at the western edge of Aotea Square, off Queen Street, the centre provides cultural venue space in the heart of the city and is managed by Regional Facilities Auckland (which also operates the Auckland Town Hall and the Auckland Civic Theatre, both close by around the square).
The main construction of the centre was finished in 1989, having cost NZ$ 128.5 million.[1] The centre officially opened the following year.[2]
Designed by the City architect Ewen Wainscott in 1974, this building was not actually built until the late 1980s. It won the NZIA Silver Medal award. Costs escalated greatly during construction resulting in several features being omitted. Due to poor acoustics the main auditorium required an expensive refit in the mid-1990s.
The centre provides a range of foyers, gallery spaces and function rooms as well as a 2,256 seat 'ASB Auditorium' and the much smaller 186-seat Herald theatre, which is mainly used by small independent theatre companies.[1]
In 2000 a design competition was held for the Aotea Precinct, and the winner was the landscape architecture-urban design team consisting of Ted Smyth, Rod Barnett and Dushko Bogunovich.
In 2011, an upgrade of Aotea Square also included a major facelift of the public stairs in front of the centre, including creating a cafe space under a large veranda open to the square.
References
- 1 2 "Aotea Centre". Auckland Live.
- ↑ What's Doing In; Auckland - The New York Times, 25 November 1990
External links
- Photographs of Aotea Square held in Auckland Libraries' heritage collections.
Coordinates: 36°51′07″S 174°45′45″E / 36.8519301°S 174.7624075°E