Miami
Beach Symphony SoundScape Park is unique home for New World Center Symphony and
expressive architectural landmark of Miami Beach. It was designed for the
public, with integrated advantages of advanced visual and audio technologies, in
order to reconcile the classical music with everyone routine. The idea of the
complete openness to the public radically changes the way people experience
classical music. 7000-square-foot projection Wallcast is new stage for new
concept to “break down the emotional distance between performers and the public.”[1]
With
varieties of the events, from Wallcast classical music concerts, band play,
movies to dance music, the park has something offers for everyone’s taste. The
park space suggests flexible use, where one can lay down, sit, dance, walk,
eat, or dance. The people presence support more interactive way of the watching
show. Unlike enclosed concert hall, here they can watch themselves watching,
while socializing and relaxing. It is more private arrangement within the
public, where the whole family can gather together in natural way, which gives
the park the sense of community.
[1] www.nytimes.com, by Nicolas Ouroussoff,
Published Jan 23, 2011
Picture 1. The space
flexibility encourages more natural people behavior
Multiple
sidewalks paths, surfing throughout of the landscape, suggest the park of being
the meeting place; the place of the interaction between walking people and
groups. On other hand, the site location does not promote easy access for the
strollers. The streets layout gives the park the feeling of the desolated
island, especially in day time. The front broad Washington Avenue cut most of
the public circulation from the beach side with its constant busy traffic,
while The Conversional Center on the right, is a boarder of Miami depressed
pedestrian circulation, spreading to the north.
From the left side quiet residential street does not redirect the
Lincoln road visitors to the park, - the place is simply is no on their way. In
fact, the New World Center and the park looks hidden from the active
Lincolners, and rarely becomes the part of their journey. Pocked into its own
lot, the park is not cross-passing area for random pedestrians; it stands on
its own as a particular destination.
Picture 2. Buildings
and street traffic barriers make park deserted
Picture 3. Park is
hidden from pedestrians of the Lincoln Road
The
landscape interpretation is an attempt to use exotic tropical foliage for
creating a recreational area image with sequences of eye-catching scenes as ones
would move under green bounganrillea canopies, which planned to grow wide in
the next few years. The landscape
challenges to mask the equipments, like green painted sculptural spines of
pipes running toward projection unit. This fairytale like atmosphere would addes
some magic to the music that was stripped away by transparency of the “music
making labs” of the center. Genius of design is the use of the sculptural
pergolas for the vine support that, similarly to use of media tools for the
music practices, integrates technology into art for the digital-age viewers. The
curvy concrete benches follow the outlines of the winding paths and offer the
resting stop on their way.
Picture 4. Landscape
Green obstacles pose the walker
New
World center and the park are closely engaged in relationship, functioning as a
source and a tool. Park with its high quality media amenities serves as public
generating engine for the Symphony, engaging ones into audience. They embody
themselves into symbiotic self-contained device that works for popularizing the
music and art. Rather than being a place of urban everyday life, it has its
destination and its time. In other words, the event perception is what makes it
alive.
Picture5.
Architecture works as a tool for the music, art and video broadcasting
Picture6.
Despite simplified exterior New World Center, the park
transforms it into digital lighting landmark
2 comments:
Good description of the park, but leaves a number of analytical questions un-asked. For example, the paths and low seating are not restricted to the wallcast portion of the park (the seating slides under and past the speaker structure) and so the park seems to be saying something about the spectacle that occurs outside of the video projection events. What do you make of this? Good point about the busy roads to two sides, but I wanted to hear more about how the park both opens up to, and isolates itself from, those streets.
You set up an interesting question. How is the park designed for specific events, but not for everyday use. Now can you answer the question through analysis of the design, starting with careful description and drawings? that's what is needed here.
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