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Encyclopedia > Queen Elizabeth Hall

The Queen Elizabeth Hall (QEH) is a music venue on the South Bank in London, which hosts daily classical, jazz, and avant-garde music and dance performances. The QEH was opened in March 1967 as part of the South Bank Centre arts complex built on the site of the Festival of Britain of 1951 alongside the Royal Festival Hall. Wikibooks Wikiversity has more about this subject: School of Music Look up Music on Wiktionary, the free dictionary Wikisource, as part of the 1911 Encyclopedia Wikiproject, has original text related to this article: Music MusicNovatory: the science of music encyclopedia The Virginia Tech Multimedia Music Distionary, with definitions, pronunciations, examples... (This article is about the area of London called South Bank. For the similarly named area of Brisbane, please see South Bank Parklands, Brisbane) The South Bank is the area in London on the southern bank of the River Thames near Waterloo station that houses a number of important cultural... London is the capital city of the United Kingdom and of England. ... Classical music is generally thought of as sophisticated and refined; it may stem from a regional tradition, but aspires to universal form of communication. ... Jazz master Louis Armstrong remains one of the most loved and best known of all jazz musicians. ... A work similar to Marcel Duchamps Fountain Avant garde (written avant-garde) is a French phrase, one of many French phrases used by English speakers. ... A street musician with accordion in Bremen A performance comprises an event in which generally one group of people (the performer or performers) behave in a particular way for the benefit of another group of people (the viewer or viewers, or audience). ... The South Bank Centre is a complex of arts buildings located on the south bank of the River Thames beside the Hungerford Bridge. ... The Festival of Britain was a national exhibition which opened in May 1951 in London. ... 1951 (MCMLI) was a common year starting on Monday; see its calendar. ... The Royal Festival Hall is a concert, dance and talks venue within the South Bank Centre in London. ...


The QEH has over 900 seats and the Purcell Room, a linked but smaller venue for recitals, has 370 seats. These two auditoriums were built together and were designed as additions to the South Bank Centre arts complex, with the Hayward Gallery (opened in October 1968), by the architects department of the Greater London Council. The Purcell Room is a concert and performance venue which forms part of the South Bank Centre, one of central Londons leading cultural complexes. ...

Contents


External Links

Royal Festival Hall website (covers Queen Elizabeth Hall also for bookings)


South Bank Centre website (Governance, management and future plans)


Explore-london.co.uk website (Photographs, including QEH)


Design: Foyer

The most notable feature of the QEH is the interior of the foyer building, with its intimate scale and subtle use of materials, and the terrace overlooking Queen's Walk. The 1960's cool of this area is now somewhat marred by more recent clutter but the space and the use of concrete, glass and marble are still apparent. The bar area and glazed central void capture the effect best.


The building's main problems are its drab appearance by day, and the deadening effect of the overhead walkways on ground level circulation, large amounts of slack space on the walkways and the provision of only an external staircase to the roof terrace. It works much better by night, especially when approached from the eastern one of Golden Jubilee Footbridges beside Hungerford Bridge. Hungerford Bridge is a bridge (or triplet of bridges) over the River Thames in London, between Waterloo Bridge and Westminster Bridge. ...


The roof terrace and bridge to the Hayward Gallery are unfortunately now closed, making impossible one of the most interesting pedestrian circulation possibilities of the original design. The roof terrace is reached by the external concrete staircase at the west corner on Queen's Walk near Festival Pier, which also leads to the lower level and the route to Festival Square.


The foyer is supported on octagonal reinforced concrete columns with an undercroft below, and is vee-shaped. The two arms of the vee-shape are linked to the QEH auditorium by cast concrete tubes, reminiscent of a spaceship's docking arrangement. The foyer is an irregular shape to accomodate the change in angle between the lines of Waterloo Bridge and the north-east side of the Royal Festival Hall.


The main entrance to the foyer is from walkway level near the north end of the terrace of the Royal Festival Hall. To see the intended effect this should be viewed head-on from the north corner of the Royal Festival Hall. You will need to envision the pure effect without the clutter of illuminated poster boxes,the fabric banner over the entrance, stained roof panel, paint on the external staircase and light fittings on the external wall. The entrance, in true Britalist style, is in the form of a horizontal slit in the concrete entrance structure, with six pairs of cast aluminium doors.


A smaller entrance is provided at ground level, intended to be for visitors set down by car (circulation of traffic under the Waterloo Bridge approach was possible before the Museum of the Moving Image building was constructed in the 1980's) or coming from the car park under the Hayward Gallery. This entrance also appears to have led to the undercroft but that access is now blocked off. An internal stairs leads to the foyer level from this lower entrance, past the original box office area.


A cafe lines the north-west side of the foyer, with outdoor seating. While this is pleasant, the external walkway on which the outdoor part of the cafe is placed takes up a lot of space on Queen's Walk and has a deadening effect on Queen's Walk below.


The lavatories take up the south-east wall of the foyer building and are housed in a structure cantilvered out towards the centre access road. This area presents an unfortunate blank facade to the walkway by the north-west facade of the Hayward Gallery. A crude disabled ramp, constructed of breeze blocks and bricks, has been added to the walkway in this area.


Design: Auditorium

The QEH auditorium is a separate building from the foyer. The auditorium building is aligned with the rear of its stage parallel to Waterloo Bridge and the seating area cantilevered out towards the foyer, supported by a massive column containing the emergency escape staircases at the rear.


The north west facade by Waterloo Bridge, although stained by pollution and rain water, is a good example of the massive concrete forms popular in 1960's Brutalist structures in Britain. A slightly raised area, resembling a low stage is provided facing Waterloo Bridge. This may have been intended for outdoor performances.


A great concrete "prow" protrudes towards the Thames, along the side of the auditorium at roof level. The walkway area below this feature is probably the least satisfactory part of the design for pedestrians, a slack space with little obvious purpose. At ground level, there is a utility/access area on Queen's Walk near Waterloo Bridge which again detracts from the pedestrian environment with the presence of delivery vans and waste bins.


The undercroft of the QEH's elevated foyer building has become popular with skateboarders but is partly closed off.


Ventilation services are provided from a plant room on the roof of the Purcell Room via a massive concrete duct between the buildings leading into the QEH roof, and a concrete tower leading to the concrete duct on the north-east edge of the foyer building roof.


Future

The South Bank Centre and Arts Council are considering reconstruction or replacement of the QEH and Purcell Room by two new auditoriums, each of approximately 1,100 seats, one for classical music and one for amplified music and contemporary dance performances. This poses significant architectural challenges, given the constrained site and the presence of the Royal Festival Hall (Grade I listed) and Waterloo Bridge (Grade II* listed), and may require the major alteration or demolition of the QEH.


A further complication is the presence of the National Film Theatre (NFT), and former Museum of the Moving Image building, below Waterloo Bridge. The British Film Institute wishes to obtain much expanded facilities with five screens and space for a national film archive. A plan was put forward in 2003/4 for this to be accommodated below the Hungerford Car Park site of the South Bank Centre but this is likely to be frustrated by Lambeth Council's decision to designate this site as Metropolitan Open Land.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Scotty Moore - UK Queen Elizabeth Hall (701 words)
After an exhausting tour zig-zagging across the country to play at intimate venues, tonight’s show at London’s Queen Elizabeth Hall is an unusually formal affair.
Yet even though the audience doesn’t leap to its feet and sing lustily along as it did at previous dates, the warmth and reverence in the auditorium from the diverse crowd, eagerly assembled on this bitterly cold night, is palpable.
The Grundy-Pritchard band, who have been playing with Scotty on all the UK dates, play a set of rock ’n’ roll favorites to get the punters warmed up, and prove to be adept at whatever they turn their hand to.
RMS Queen Elizabeth 2 (462 words)
The Queen Elizabeth 2, often called "the QE2," was the flagship of the Cunard Line from 1969 until she was succeeded by RMS Queen Mary 2 in 2004.
The QE2 is considered the last of the great transatlantic ocean liners (prior to the Queen Mary 2) and was the last oil-fired passenger steamship to cross the Atlantic in regularly scheduled liner service before she was refitted with a diesel power plant.
The "2" in the name distinguishes her from the first ship of the name, the RMS Queen Elizabeth, which was named for Queen Elizabeth, the wife of King George VI of the United Kingdom, who was Queen Consort when that ship was built.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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