TonyV:
I don't see how they can improve the acoustics at RTH any further considering most of the recommendations (what, 9 out of 10) by the late Russell Johnson at Artec has already been implemented. New hall, perhaps?
AoD
Hi AoD,
The acoustic brains behind the re-do of RTH were those of Artec (Russel Johnson and team). Johnson was a rabid shoebox-hall fan and he got involved in the round RTH redo with some fear as I understand things. It was wondered out loud if Johnson was "putting a square peg into a round hole" so to speak.
Years later I wonder if the outcome would have been better if someone with a different brain had handled the effort. Nagata acoustics did Walt Disney Hall (L.A.) to wide acclaim. Nagata are at work on several European halls now with similar interior proportioning to Disney. They are fashioned after Scharoun's Berlin masterpiece. So there we have it -- in several cities now, designers are embracing the once-controversial Berlin/Scharoun model. It took a while to get the original to sound good, and the recent ones (i.e. Copenhagen) reputedly sound excellent. Edit: there is one thing that Artec and Nagata would agree on -- it is impossible to expect halls with RTH's cubic volume
after the reno be sound great. In other words, the reno left RTH just too darned big.
RTH was conceived to be different from a shoebox and a shoebox it will never be. I wish they had patterned it closely to Berlin's Philharmonie.
So here's my confession - I am bored to tears with shoebox halls and I don't blame Arthur Erickson for trying to come up with something different. He just didn't have Scharoun's genius in these matters. I am in love with the Berlin Philharmonie hall.
As Urban Shocker wrote, the RTH people should take a second kick at the can. But not a third, such as they're about to do in New York. Maybe RTH should get Nagata on the case.
PS--In general I love the RTH building although the way it meets the street is a tad bad ... and there's a parking lot behind it, what's that about? The lobbies are extraordinary, something really sexy in Toronto.
PPS-The Boston Symphony played the Berlin hall last year. Boston Symphony players live in a famous shoebox and they marvelled at the Philharmonie's non-shoebox sound.