Bringing world-class acoustics to the Isabel
August 11, 2014
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This article, printed in the August edition of the Gazette, is the second of a series featuring some of the people and firms behind the planning, design and construction of the Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts. Copies of the newspaper are available around campus.
By Andrew Carroll, Gazette editor
While the soon-to-be completed is a visual splendor, Joe Solway is more interested in how it sounds.
And as impressive as it looks, the Isabel perhaps sounds even better.
That脙垄脗聙脗聶s due in large part to the team at , international design consulting firm, led by acoustician Joe Solway, whose job it is to ensure that the Isabel has world-class acoustics.
Enveloped and surrounded by sound within the cozy confines of the performance hall, the crown jewel of the Isabel, Mr. Solway is confident that anyone attending a concert or performance will be thoroughly impressed. It will not be like anything else they have experienced in Kingston.
脙垄脗聙脗聹There脙垄脗聙脗聶s just a level of acoustical quality that we have achieved, in terms of the audience experience, the level of envelopment, the level of intimacy 脙垄脗聙脗聯 when people come in here and listen they will just be blown away 脙垄脗聙脗聺 he says.
It脙垄脗聙脗聶s a painstaking process. When approaching the acoustics of a building like the Isabel, Mr. Solway has to take in countless minute details. It takes not only a refined ear but a clinical mind as well. There is so much sound that we take for granted 脙垄脗聙脗聯 mechanical systems, rehearsals in the next room, vibrations in the structure of the facility, airflow.
An acoustician takes all of this into account. And it isn脙垄脗聙脗聶t just about the performance hall.
脙垄脗聙脗聹From the beginning we脙垄脗聙脗聶re saying 脙垄脗聙脗聵Okay, what is this building going to sound like: What can you hear as you enter the lobby, what kind of acoustic is there when you are in the classrooms, when you go into the auditorium, when you go into the studio theatre?脙垄脗聙脗聶脙垄脗聙脗聺 Mr. Solway explains. 脙垄脗聙脗聹Each of these rooms, thinking about what is the acoustics inside the spaces, what can you hear from the building systems, the mechanical systems, the lighting systems. Can you hear them? If so, what kind of response do they elicit? What can you hear in the surrounding spaces, can you hear the classroom next door, how loud is it, how do we control that? Can we hear the outside?脙垄脗聙脗聺
The acoustic goals for the building were formulated in consultation with Queen脙垄脗聙脗聶s administration and faculty, from the first planning meetings back in 2008. Then Mr. Solway and Arup translated these goals into design criteria that the architects and designers, Sn脙聝脗赂hetta and N45, could build upon.
It has been a collaborative, interpretive process, One that Mr. Solway feels has been very successful.
And while this applies to each room in the building, the collaboration perhaps is best embodied in the creation of the performance hall.
脙垄脗聙脗聹We worked together from beginning to say 脙垄脗聙脗聵This is what we need out of it acoustically in terms of its volume, its shape, its form, its finishes, and Sn脙聝脗赂hetta and N45 took all that information and then cleverly embedded the very architectural DNA of the room with those requirements,脙垄脗聙脗聺 he says. 脙垄脗聙脗聹So there脙垄脗聙脗聶s no conflict with the architecture and what we are trying to do acoustically.脙垄脗聙脗聺
In those early discussions with the university it became clear that the performance hall would come with world-class acoustics. The quality, it is hoped, will attract the world脙垄脗聙脗聶s finest musicians and draw audiences from across Canada, not just Kingston.
When entering the performance hall the first thing that strikes the visitor is the uniquely-designed walls. The layers of wood with ledges jutting out here and there serve a dual purpose and were borne from the collaborative approach to the project.
脙垄脗聙脗聹We had an ideal opportunity for marrying together Sn脙聝脗赂hetta脙垄脗聙脗聶s desire to reflect the local limestone geology in the architecture with the acoustical work for some surface texture that diffuses sound,脙垄脗聙脗聺 Mr. Solway says. 脙垄脗聙脗聹It was a wonderful interactive process where we sketched out some ideas acoustically how it could work and then came up with a shared interpretive model that we bounced back and forth between ourselves and them. And then came up with something that visually represented what they wanted in terms of the local limestone geology that acoustically also deals with what we need in terms of sound diffusion.脙垄脗聙脗聺
The result of this harmony of architecture and acoustics, along with testing every single item in the hall that creates noise in Arup脙垄脗聙脗聶s Sound Lab, will be the sought-after world-class experience.
The hall itself is physically isolated from the rest of the building. Walk around the outside of the hall and there is a little black line in the floor which marks the separation like a border on a map. This ensures that any sound, any vibration, in the rest of the building will not transmit into the performance hall, Mr. Solway says.
With the official opening mere weeks away, the excitement surrounding this gem on the shore of Lake Ontario isn脙垄脗聙脗聶t lost on Mr. Solway.
脙垄脗聙脗聹It almost feels like I脙垄脗聙脗聶m going to my kid脙垄脗聙脗聶s graduation. They脙垄脗聙脗聶re going off into the world. I脙垄脗聙脗聶ve watched this thing over the last six years and now get to see it go off to university. To go off into the world and be used and just have a whole new life outside the design phase,脙垄脗聙脗聺 he says. 脙垄脗聙脗聹It脙垄脗聙脗聶s quite emotional, releasing this thing out into the world and it脙垄脗聙脗聶s really exciting.脙垄脗聙脗聺
The Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts was made possible by a transformational gift from Alfred Bader (Sc脙垄脗聙脗聶45, Arts脙垄脗聙脗聶46, MSc脙垄脗聙脗聶47, LLD脙垄脗聙脗聶86) and his wife, Isabel (LLD脙垄脗聙脗聶07) as well as the financial backing of the federal and provincial governments, the City of Kingston and additional philanthropic support.