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ARG BUE Colon vu.jpg (36081 bytes) Teatro Colon

Buenos Aires

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ABOUT THE COLON OPERA HOUSE - from the Teatro Colon official web site

 

The Teatro Colón, in the City of Buenos Aires, is considered one of the best theaters in the world. Acknowledged for its acoustics and the artistic value of its construction, it turned 100 years in 2008

 

The theater is now located in the heart of downtown Buenos Aires, among the streets Cerrito, Viamonte, Tucumán and Libertad. It was inaugurated on May 25th, 1908 with Giuseppe Verdi's opera Aida. This building replaces the former Teatro Colón, which was located in front of Plaza de Mayo, on the block where the Banco Nación (National Bank) building stands now. The old theater was there between 1857 and 1888.

The construction of the new building took around 20 years. Its cornerstone was placed on May 25th, 1890, intending to inaugurate the theater before October 12th, 1892, the date of the fourth centennial of the discovery of the Americas. The architect in charge of the initial project was Francesco Tamburini. After his death in 1891, the project was continued and modified by his partner Víctor Meano, the architect of the Argentinian Congress building. The construction continued until 1894, but it came to a halt due to financial problems. In 1904, Meano was murdered in his house and the government assigned the Belgian Jules Dormal to finish the construction. Dormal introduced some structural changes and stamped his French style on the decoration.

At the end of 1907, the first lease agreement of the Teatro Colón was signed, even though the works to conclude the building were behind the date set for the inauguration – May 25th, 1908. Finally, despite the fact that some parts (such as the Golden Room and the iron marquees on the streets Libertad and Cerrito) were not finished, the main hall of the Teatro Colón was inaugurated with the Great Italian Lyrical Company performing Giuseppe Verdi's opera Aida.

BUILDING DIMENSIONS, CHARACTERISTICS, EXPANSIONS & IMPROVEMENTS

The Teatro Colón's building has an eclectic style, typical of the beginning of the 20th century. It extends for 8,202 m2, 5,006 m of which correspond to the main building and 3,196 m to underground rooms beneath the narrow street Arturo Toscanini (right next to the theater, parallel to the street Viamonte). The total covered area of the initial building was 37,884 m2. The expansions carried out later, especially at the end of the 1960s (by the architect Mario Roberto Álvarez), added 12,000 m2, taking the total area of the Teatro Colón to 58,000 m2.

The main hall, in the shape of a horseshoe, fulfils the most severe standards of the Italian and French classic theater. It has box seats up to the third floor. The horseshoe has a minor diameter of 29.25 m, a major diameter of 32.65 m and a height of 28 m. It can hold up to 2,478 people sitting, but the shows can also be attended by 500 people standing. Its 318 m2 dome used to have paintings by Marcel Jambon, but they got damaged in the 1930s. The repainting of the dome was assigned to the Argentinian painter Raúl Soldi.

The stage has an inclination of 3 cm per meter, 35.25 m wide, 34.50 m deep and 48 m high. It includes a spinning disk with a diameter of 20.30 m which can be electrically activated to spin in any direction and change the scenes quickly. In 1988, the grid sector of the scenic machinery was improved, aiming to make the operation of the scenery easier and to speed up the scenery changes.

The orchestra pit can hold up to 120 musicians. It has been treated with a resonance chamber and special curves for the reflection of sound. These conditions, together with the architectural proportions of the hall and the quality of the materials used, give the Teatro Colón exceptional acoustics, globally acknowledged among the most perfect in the world.

The production of the Teatro Colón's shows is carried out in its own workshops, located in the basements. In 1938, the basements beneath the square on the street Arturo Toscanini were expanded, and a tunnel that linked the production workshops was built. Also in 1938, the machinery, scenery, props, tailor, shoes, scenery mechanics, sculpture, photography, hair and make up workshops were opened. In 1963, new workshops were created – props decoration and costume painting.

Between 1968 and 1972, according to the project of the architect Mario Roberto Álvarez, a second expansion was carried out, under the square and the street Cerrito. The areas of theatrical production, scenery workshops, rehearsal rooms, administrative offices, and a dinning room for the employees are located there. The technical area of production design and the lightning, electromechanical FX, and audio and video workshops were added later.

In 2000, the Executive Branch of the City, through the Undersecretariat of Cultural Patrimony (Subsecretaría de Patrimonio Cultural), called upon the General Directorate of Infrastructure (Dirección General de Infraestructura) to elaborate a "Master Plan" for the restoration of the building and the fly loft technological update.

The theatre underwent massive phased remodeling of both interior and exterior, initially while the house was still open, but production activities ceased at the end of October 2006 to allow full refurbishment.

Initially, what had been planned as an 18-month, $25-million renovation with 500 workers, scheduled for a May 2008 reopening with Aida, became a three-year $100-million extravaganza with 1,500 workers including 130 professional architects and engineers."[8] In addition, an exterior open-air stage was planned for an opening in 2011.  

In all, 60,000 square metres (645,835 sq ft) underwent updating, both inside and out.

While it was originally planned to reopen in time for the centenary on 25 May 2008, delays prevented this, and the house was finally reopened with a gala concert and 3D animations on 24 May 2010, the eve of its own 102nd birthday and the Argentina Bicentennial. Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake and Act 2 of Puccini's La bohème were performed.