Glór Music Centre by NightGlór Music Centre:

1999 - 2001 / Project Cost €6.8m. / Project Size 2,450 sq.m.

Glór is Ireland’s national venue for folk music. Capacity varies from five hundred and in degrees of flexibility to equally accommodate the smaller gig.

The centre’s location in Ennis, Co. Clare, anchors it particularly to the Irish tradition. That immediately puts the emphasis on the informal rather than the formal, on spontaneity, ease of access and on the erosion of the boundaries between the music maker and the listener. In contrast there is an equally serious formal requirement. It is a national institute. It includes a major auditorium and all the associated sophisticated technology and standards of acoustic performance. The juxtaposition of spaces and their architectural expression is about encapsulating those two differing body languages and reconciling their somewhat opposing requirements.. Its architectural form is generated primarily by these unique spatial requirements. The architectural challenge was not merely to design a building in which music could be played but to create an architectural piece , which was in itself an instrument of music.

The building organisation synthesises these contrasts around a central undulating hall. Tall airy and awash with light, this hall is the spine of the building. Off the spine are the intimately scaled interconnecting social spaces finished in warm colours and furnishings for the impromptu. Opposite are the auditorium and stage back-up furnished and finished to more structured geometries for formal activity.

The auditorium is shaped for both acoustic efficiency and to allow comfortable eye contact between performance and audience. The hall accommodates a smaller more intimate auditorium, a restaurant bar , retail space and on the balcony mezzanine at first floor an exhibition space. Many varied types of activity will take place here. Flexibility in use is of the essence. Auditorium seating can be adopted in a series of modes for the quite differing requirements of music, drama and dance.

The building is designed to be as comfortable for a small group on a January evening as for an over-spill capacity on an August holiday. The resolution of opposites internally is manifest in external shape and materials. The clear geometric forms of auditorium and flytower rise up from the less determinate ones below in a cranked composition expressing inner function and simultaneously disguising bulk. This is reinforced by the juxtaposition of steel and glass with more organic materials including local stone, found on site, all of which contributes to the central metaphor of an unfolding music box.