David Kennedy, chief executive of Eden Park Trust, [and ex Fletcher  employee] writes about a new stadium 'experience' in store for sports  fans.
Eden  Park will get all the trimmings in preparation for the Rugby World Cup  2011. Eden Park will get all the trimmings in preparation for the Rugby  World Cup 2011. Photo / Supplied From the ticket purchase to the final  whistle, Eden Park is gearing up to give rugby fans a world-class  sporting and entertainment experience - and not just for Rugby World Cup  2011.
Redevelopment at Auckland's traditional home of  rugby is on track to ensure fans old and new enjoy every minute of the  action in vastly improved surroundings. It will earn Eden Park its place  among the great international sporting stadiums, in terms of atmosphere  and amenities. With the park having its biggest transformation in its  100-year history, we will have a $350 million regional asset that Rugby  New Zealand 2011 chief executive Martin Sneddon has dubbed the "surprise  package" of the Rugby World Cup. With Government funding helping  transform the park, the new Eden Park Trust Act requires that the  Government-appointed trustees operate the park for the benefit of the  people of Auckland. That certainly starts with our traditional rugby and  cricket fans, whose support over many years has helped create the Eden  Park legacy that is famous the world over.
Their support  has been tested at times, as the Eden Park experience has not always  lived up to expectations. But our redevelopment is offering a prime  opportunity to turn every rugby fan's wish for a much better Eden Park  into reality - although the results on the field will still be beyond  our control.
Over the next 18 months, patrons will notice  many improvements including:
• Electronic ticketing.
•  Faster, smoother access through four main gates.
• An integrated  full walk around concourse (no more ducking outside the park to access  another stand).
• Top-line electronics - all the action, on  screen.
• Better lighting and sound systems.
• About 80 per  cent of seating covered and better seats all round. Also 48 new  corporate boxes and two VIP lounges.
• Upgraded food and beverage  outlets, better toilet facilities, easier access to enter and leave the  ground and improved and streamlined transport options.
These  enhanced features aren't just for the RWC but are permanent and are  designed to start Eden Park on the journey to become New Zealand's  number one sporting and entertainment stadium. That is a big ambition  but one the new trust is determined to fulfill. The new Eden Park  experience begins with the ticket. New electronic ticketing facilities  will mean fans will be able to buy online and get bar coded tickets that  can be swiped at one of four enlarged main gates, which will be a  feature of each corner of the park. These will replace the 27 gates of  the past, which were needed because there was no concourse linking all  parts of the park.
The old Eden Park was six buildings  around a patch of grass. The new stadium is a fully integrated facility  with the concourse a key part of the redevelopment. Fans will be able to  access all stands in the park without leaving the park. The concourse,  with its internal TV monitors linked into the two 110sq m superscreens  in the stadium, means not a second of on-field action will be missed if  fans move around to catch up with friends or to buy refreshments. With  our food and beverage outlets, the redevelopment is the perfect  opportunity to lift our game, with permanent outlets replacing some of  the former temporary setups, enabling better variety, better service and  easier access. Our new catering facilities include Auckland's  second-largest kitchen.
Better lighting and sound systems will  enhance the sporting atmosphere inside the grounds, while minimising  disturbance to neighbouring properties.
Recent visitors  have been impressed by the vision taking shape with 60,000 seats planned  for Rugby World Cup 2011. That includes the new three-tier 22,000-seat  South Stand, with 50 corporate boxes, the new two-tier East Stand  replacing the eastern terraces and the extension of the ASB Stand with a  2000-seat lower bowl. After the cup, Eden Park will return to a  permanent capacity of 50,000 seats. We'll be working hard to deliver an  experience that gives fans every reason to fill the stands. In the near  future, holders of Eden Park combination membership will no longer have  to toss up between the prime seating for winter and summer codes. With  the cricket pitch being aligned to the north-to-south axis, that perfect  block of seats between the 22s will also be in the ideal cricket  sightline, right behind the bowler. Redevelopment also means rugby fans  can indulge their love of other sporting and entertainment options,  without leaving "home".
To ensure our new stadium pays its  way, both as the heartland of Auckland rugby and cricket and a  community asset, the trust will be opening it up to other codes and  entertainment events - starting with the rugby league international  double header in November. This more diverse use means more  opportunities to enjoy the park in a variety of sporting and  entertainment settings. As anyone attending big games overseas can  attest, getting to them can be as much a part of a great day out as the  game itself. Eden Park visitors will now be able to share the  anticipation of a "last leg" walk to the ground, in common with other  major sporting stadiums.
Direct car access to the stadium  will now be a thing of the past - if you still come by car then get used  to a final short walk. If you want more direct access then public  transport options are vastly improved.
A new bus terminal has been  incorporated into the development, which will make bus access to the  stadium very easy. Patrons will be dropped at the door and can catch a  bus at the same spot at the end of the game.
A new walkway from  the transformed Kingsland Station will also make pedestrian access  quick, safe and easy.
It's all change at Eden Park -  change we believe is for the better. We hope rugby fans share that view  when they come to experience the full amenity later this year. Eden Park  has a wonderful sporting legacy which the new trust intends to build on  through this redevelopment.
In discussions earlier this  year with Auckland mayors who agreed in principle to underwrite a $40  million loan to Eden Park to complete the upgrade, the trust directors  made it clear their intention was to explore all commercial  opportunities - including sponsorship - to help the park pay its way and  not be a burden on rugby or cricket fans, ratepayers or taxpayers.
We  said then that nothing was off the table but fans can be assured the  trust will be doing everything in its power to try to preserve the  traditional name of Eden Park.
By David Kennedy
Monday, April 26, 2010
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
Japanese Architects win 2010 Pritzker (Highest Honour in Architecture)
31 March 2010
KAZUYO Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa, partners in the architectural firm, SANAA, have been chosen as the 2010 Laureates of the Pritzker Architecture Prize. The Pritzker Prize, considered the highest honour in architecture, is regarded by many as equivalent to the Nobel Prize.
Pritzker Prize jury chairman, The Lord Palumbo quoted from the jury citation to focus on this year’s selection: “For architecture that is simultaneously delicate and powerful, precise and fluid, ingenious but not overly or overtly clever; for the creation of buildings that successfully interact with their contexts and the activities they contain, creating a sense of fullness and experiential richness; for a singular architectural language that springs from a collaborative process that is both unique and inspirational; for their notable completed buildings and the promise of new projects together, Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa are the recipients of the 2010 Pritzker Architecture Prize.”
While most of their work is in Japan, Sejima and Nishizawa have designed projects in Germany, England, Spain, France, the Netherlands and the US, under their combined name SANAA. The first SANAA project in the US began construction in 2004 in Ohio – a Glass Pavilion for the Toledo Museum of Art. Completed in 2006, it houses the museum’s vast collection of glass artworks, reflecting the city’s history when it was a major centre of glass production.
While that building was still under construction, the New Museum of New York City broke ground in 2005. Completed in 2007, the building has been described as “a sculptural stack of rectilinear boxes dynamically shifted off-axis around a central steel core.” The jury citation specifically mentions these projects as well as two projects in Japan: “the O-Museum in Nagano and the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art in Kanazawa.” The Ogasawara Museum was one of their first projects together.
The formal ceremony will be held on May 17, 2010 on Ellis Island in New York. At that time, a $100,000 grant and bronze medallions will be bestowed on the two architects. This marks the third time in the history of the prize that two architects have been named in the same year.
The De Kunstline Theater and Cultural Center in Almere, the Netherlands, and a more recent Rolex Learning Center in Lausanne, Switzerland are also major projects of SANAA. Other works in Japan include the Naoshima Ferry Terminal and the Christian Dior Building in Tokyo. In Essen, Germany, in 2006, the Zollverein School of Management and Design was inaugurated in a new building designed by SANAA on an historical coal mining site. The building is described as an oversized cube with an unusual arrangement of openings and windows of four different sizes.
New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York City. (Photos by Hisao Suzuki, courtesy SANAA.)
The Serpentine Pavilion in London, their first built project in the United Kingdom, was in place for three months on the gallery’s lawn – the ninth such commission in the Serpentine’s series of pavilions. In Valencia, Spain, SANAA provided a unique expansion solution to IVAM (Valencian Institute of Modern Art) in which their existing building housing eight galleries will be completely enclosed by a translucent skin covering an entire block, and thus creating new indoor/outdoor public spaces between the building and the skin. The proposed skin is a light weight perforated metal that allows daylight, wind and rain to pass through. Construction has not yet begun. Both architects have extensive lists of completed works and projects as individual architects.
Upon learning that she was being honoured, Kazuyo Sejima had this reaction: “I have been exploring how I can make architecture that feels open, which I feel is important for a new generation of architecture. With this prize I will continue trying to make wonderful architecture.” And a similar reaction from Ryue Nishizawa: “Every time I finish a building I revel in possibilities and at the same time reflect on what has happened. Each project becomes my motivation for the next new project.”
For more than 15 years, the two architects have worked together in their collaborative partnership, SANAA, where it is virtually impossible to untangle which individual is responsible for what aspect of a particular project. Each building is ultimately a work that comes from the union of their two minds. Their architecture explores the ideas of lightness and transparency and pushes the boundaries of these concepts to new extremes.
The field of architecture was chosen by the Pritzker family because of their keen interest in building due to their involvement with developing the Hyatt Hotels around the world; also because architecture was a creative endeavour not included in the Nobel Prizes. The procedures were modelled after the Nobels, with the final selection being made by the international jury with all deliberations and voting in secret. Nominations are continuous from year to year with hundreds of nominees from countries all around the world being considered each year.
KAZUYO Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa, partners in the architectural firm, SANAA, have been chosen as the 2010 Laureates of the Pritzker Architecture Prize. The Pritzker Prize, considered the highest honour in architecture, is regarded by many as equivalent to the Nobel Prize.
2010 Pritzker Architecture prize winners Ryue Nishizawa and Kazuyo Sejima. (Photo by Takashi Okamoto, courtesy SANAA.)
While most of their work is in Japan, Sejima and Nishizawa have designed projects in Germany, England, Spain, France, the Netherlands and the US, under their combined name SANAA. The first SANAA project in the US began construction in 2004 in Ohio – a Glass Pavilion for the Toledo Museum of Art. Completed in 2006, it houses the museum’s vast collection of glass artworks, reflecting the city’s history when it was a major centre of glass production.
Glass Pavilion, Toledo Museum of Art, Ohio. (Photos by Hisao Suzuki, courtesy SANAA.)
While that building was still under construction, the New Museum of New York City broke ground in 2005. Completed in 2007, the building has been described as “a sculptural stack of rectilinear boxes dynamically shifted off-axis around a central steel core.” The jury citation specifically mentions these projects as well as two projects in Japan: “the O-Museum in Nagano and the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art in Kanazawa.” The Ogasawara Museum was one of their first projects together.
The formal ceremony will be held on May 17, 2010 on Ellis Island in New York. At that time, a $100,000 grant and bronze medallions will be bestowed on the two architects. This marks the third time in the history of the prize that two architects have been named in the same year.
The De Kunstline Theater and Cultural Center in Almere, the Netherlands, and a more recent Rolex Learning Center in Lausanne, Switzerland are also major projects of SANAA. Other works in Japan include the Naoshima Ferry Terminal and the Christian Dior Building in Tokyo. In Essen, Germany, in 2006, the Zollverein School of Management and Design was inaugurated in a new building designed by SANAA on an historical coal mining site. The building is described as an oversized cube with an unusual arrangement of openings and windows of four different sizes.
New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York City. (Photos by Hisao Suzuki, courtesy SANAA.)
The Serpentine Pavilion in London, their first built project in the United Kingdom, was in place for three months on the gallery’s lawn – the ninth such commission in the Serpentine’s series of pavilions. In Valencia, Spain, SANAA provided a unique expansion solution to IVAM (Valencian Institute of Modern Art) in which their existing building housing eight galleries will be completely enclosed by a translucent skin covering an entire block, and thus creating new indoor/outdoor public spaces between the building and the skin. The proposed skin is a light weight perforated metal that allows daylight, wind and rain to pass through. Construction has not yet begun. Both architects have extensive lists of completed works and projects as individual architects.
The Rolex Learning Center, Ecole Polytechnique Federale, Lausanne, Switzerland. (Photos by Hisao Suzuki, courtesy SANAA.)
Upon learning that she was being honoured, Kazuyo Sejima had this reaction: “I have been exploring how I can make architecture that feels open, which I feel is important for a new generation of architecture. With this prize I will continue trying to make wonderful architecture.” And a similar reaction from Ryue Nishizawa: “Every time I finish a building I revel in possibilities and at the same time reflect on what has happened. Each project becomes my motivation for the next new project.”
For more than 15 years, the two architects have worked together in their collaborative partnership, SANAA, where it is virtually impossible to untangle which individual is responsible for what aspect of a particular project. Each building is ultimately a work that comes from the union of their two minds. Their architecture explores the ideas of lightness and transparency and pushes the boundaries of these concepts to new extremes.
Naoshima Ferry Terminal, Japan. (Photo by Hisao Suzuki, courtesy SANAA.)
The field of architecture was chosen by the Pritzker family because of their keen interest in building due to their involvement with developing the Hyatt Hotels around the world; also because architecture was a creative endeavour not included in the Nobel Prizes. The procedures were modelled after the Nobels, with the final selection being made by the international jury with all deliberations and voting in secret. Nominations are continuous from year to year with hundreds of nominees from countries all around the world being considered each year.
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