Arts center announces delay to expansion
Young Chang
Saying there’s no need to rush what will likely be here to stay,
officials at the Orange County Performing Arts Center announced this
week that their $200-million expansion will be ready in the fall of
2006, not 2005.
The building of a new 2,000-seat concert hall and a new 500-seat
music theater will take longer than expected, center president Jerry
Mandel said Tuesday.
“A concert hall is an extremely complicated building to build
because not only is it architecturally important, it’s the sound ...
the acoustics are important,” he said. “It’ll take longer to build,
longer to test and longer to finalize than we thought.”
Mandel was quick to add that fund-raising has slowed with the
economy’s prolonged slump, but that the opening of the new facilities
would have been delayed regardless of the center’s fund-raising
status.
The center’s Campaign Committee, formed last July and chaired by
Henry Segerstrom and Roger Kirwan, hopes to raise $30 million in the
next year.
About $100 million has been raised so far and officials hope to
have their total $200 million by 2005 or 2006.
The delayed opening of the center’s facilities will mean not only
more time for building, but more time for the Pacific Symphony
Orchestra to get used to the acoustics in their new home, Mandel
said.
It’s a task that could take three to six months.
“They’ll hear themselves so much differently than they did
before,” he added. “They’ll need to experiment with different things
and sounds.”
John Forsyte, president of the Pacific Symphony, added Tuesday
that he’s actually somewhat “relieved.”
The delay will give the symphony more time to build an endowment
and figure out ways to increase annual fund-raising, as the
1,000-fewer seats in the new hall -- Segerstrom Hall now seats 3,000
-- will decrease the flow of revenue.
“I think the center is being extremely prudent to take their time
to ensure the hall opens when they’re ready to open,” he said.
Forsyte and Mandel cited the barely year-old Verizon Hall in
Philadelphia as an example of what they don’t want happening.
“That opened in December and all the experts said it should’ve
waited six months,” Mandel said.
The center also announced Monday that architect Cesar Pelli’s
designs for the new hall and theater are 100% complete.
With the completion date set back a year, groundbreaking for the
expansion will now take place after the new year, on Jan. 21, instead
of in December as originally intended.
* YOUNG CHANG is the features and arts and entertainment writer.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4268 or by e-mail at
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.