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National Grand Theater, Beijing
National Grand Theater, Beijing, Under construction, to be completed
in 2008
Located near Tiananmen Square, the 490,485-square-foot
glass-and-titanium National Grand Theater, scheduled to open in 2008, seems to
float above a man-made lake. Intended to stand out amid the Chinese capital's
bustling streets and ancient buildings, the structure has garnered criticism
among Bejing's citizens for clashing with classic landmarks like the Monument to
the People's Heroes (dedicated to revolutionary martyrs), the vast home of the
National People's Congress, or Tiananmen Gate itself (the Gate of Heavenly
Peace).
French architect Paul Andreu is no stranger to controversy -- or to
innovative forms. A generation ago, in 1974, his untraditional design for
Terminal 1 of Paris's Charles de Gaulle airport was criticized for its unusual
curves, yet Andreu's groundbreaking, futuristic building later was seen to
distinguish de Gaulle from more generic European and international air hubs.
(The same airport's Terminal 2E, also designed by Andreu, gained attention in
2004 when it collapsed, tragically killing four people.)
Beijing's daring National Grand Theater is as much a spectacle as the
productions that will be staged inside in the 2,416-seat opera house, the
2,017-seat concert hall, and the 1,040-seat theater. At night, the
semi-transparent skin will give passersby a glimpse at the performance inside
one of three auditoriums, a feature that highlights the building's public
nature.

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