Auditorium

Jeffrey Shaw
Source: Jeffrey Shaw

Jeffrey Shaw

Auditorium , ongoing
Co-workers & Funding
Coauthor: Theo Botschuijver, Sean Wellesley-Miller
Documents
  • Auditorium
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  • Auditorium
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  • Auditorium
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  • Auditorium
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  • Auditorium
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  • Auditorium
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  • Auditorium
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  • Auditorium
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  • Auditorium
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  • Auditorium
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  • Auditorium
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Description
The Auditorium was the world’s first two-level air-supported structure. With two sets of revolving doors, the ground level could operate at a higher pressure than the upper level. This was necessary to support the weight of people sitting on its ceiling, which was itself the upper-level floor.

The foyer on the ground level was circular, with transparent walls, and numerous sandbags held down its ceiling. The ceiling constituted a soft, air-supported floor for the upper level, which could be reached via a spiral staircase. Sitting on that air-cushioned floor, visitors could enjoy performances and talks that were given on a small stage in the centre (though this functionality was sometimes undermined by the audience's preference for wildly jumping around on the inflatable floor).

The upper floor of this structure had a yellow, air-supported, dome-shaped roof that could be removed to create an open-air theatre. Its emergency exits were simply zips in the wall and rope ladders that could unfurl down the outside of the ground-floor cylinder.
Keywords
  • aesthetics
    • installation-based
    • multi-user
    • sculptural
    • site-specific
    • three-dimensional
    • visual
  • genres
    • installations
  • subjects
    • Arts and Visual Culture
      • architecture
      • theater
    • Society and Culture
      • communities
    • Technology and Innovation
      • development
      • innovation
  • technology
    • displays
      • non-electronic displays
        • inflatable structures
Technology & Material
Exhibitions & Events
Bibliography