This document summarizes 10 recent convention centers and their designs. It discusses how the designs integrate the massive facilities into the surrounding urban fabric, capture something distinctive about the host city, and improve the pedestrian experience. The centers employ sustainable strategies like natural ventilation and daylighting. They range in location from Liverpool to Guangzhou to Virginia Beach.
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1. ulx r o n n y r e n
Outside the Box: Contemporary Convention Centers
Back in 1989, New York Times The best examples capture attention to the experience at the
Ten recent convention centers architecture critic Paul Goldberger something distinctive about the pedestrian level, exposing activities
provide models for integrating lamented the uninspired architec- city they inhabit, using contem- within and offering street-friendly
ture and blank, bulky, windowless porary architecture to convey the facades and landscaping. Inside,
these massive facilities into the street presence of most conven- essence of place so that out-of- they bring in plenty of natural light
tion centers, likening them to “a town visitors feel they have arrived and take advantage of views to the
urban fabric that surrounds them. beached whale on a city street— someplace unique, rather than city, while relying on sustainable
enormous, inert, and totally out of simply being shuttled from an design strategies to mitigate the
place.” Since then, with competi- anonymous airport to an anony- vast energy and resource drain that
tion for the convention market mous meeting facility. These newer massive buildings entail.
intensifying among cities, the convention centers have sculptural
design of the typical facility has forms, eschewing the old “box Ron nyRen is a freelance architecture and urban
design writer based in the San Francisco Bay Area.
improved significantly. with docks” model. They also pay
3. 2. Badajoz Congress Center
baDajoz, spain
In the city of Badajoz in the region of Extremadura, Spain, Madrid-based architecture
firm selgascano not only had to fit a 180,000-square-foot (16,722-sq-m) congress
center into a city well over 1,000 years old, but also had to contend with an unusual
site: it previously housed a bullfighting ring dating back to the 19th century, built
within the pentagonal walls of an even older fortress. Respecting the layers of his-
tory, the congress center follows the ring’s footprint, with a circular drum containing a
1,000-seat auditorium, largely underground and daylit by a dramatic oculus.
Ringing that structure is a lattice of translucent tubes marking the grandstands that
once occupied the site. The circulation path between lattice and drum serves as a
plaza. A smaller auditorium, meeting spaces, and a café are also underground, radiat-
ing outward from the auditorium to the fortress walls. Protected by a curvilinear red
roland halbE
canopy, a staircase leads down from the public square at the building’s front to the
main entrance. The facility opened in 2006.
4. 3. Duke Energy Center
cincinnati, ohio
The renovation and expansion of the Cincinnati Convention Center, renamed the Duke
Energy Center, not only enlarged the facility’s capacity when it opened in 2006, but also
put the city’s name in lights. Located at a primary entry point to downtown, the two-block
expansion incorporates a facade with white metal panels set at angles within a three-
dimensional, 320-foot-long (97.5-m-long) steel grid; the panels spell out the city’s name in
50-foot-high (15.2-m-high) letters, easily visible from the interstate highway, especially when
illuminated at night. Up close, the composition appears as an abstract kinetic sculpture.
J. milES wolf / wolf PhoTograPhic arTS
The design, by Seattle-based LMN Architects, includes 220,000 square feet (20,439
sq m) of expansion and 550,000 square feet (51,097 sq m) of renovation; new openings
and public spaces along the existing south facade improve the facility’s connection to the
urban context. At the western edge, extensive glazing reveals activities in new circulation
areas and lobbies to passersby, while providing views to the downtown skyline and the
Ohio River. A three-story, two-block-long graphic wall along the main concourse displays
a collage of water and bridge images.
5. 4. Gold Coast Convention and Exhibition Centre
broaDbeach, QUeensLanD, aUstraLia
The Gold Coast Convention and Exhibition Centre adds a major conven-
tion and event facility to Broadbeach’s tourism district, a short distance
from the beach. The mass of the facility—designed by Peter Hunt Archi-
tects of Sydney—is minimized by means of its curving, segmented roof,
which slopes downward on all sides to create a pedestrian-scaled envi-
ronment along the exterior.
In tandem with steel and fabric sunshades, the lightly colored roof and
long eaves reduce solar heat gain, keeping the building cool during hot
summers. Accommodating up to 3,500 conventioneers, the facility opened
william long/longShoTS PhoTograPhy
in 2004 and is owned by the Queensland state government; Tabcorp, the
Melbourne-based gambling and entertainment company that owns the
nearby Conrad Jupiters Hotel and Casino, built the facility and manages it.
An 885.6-foot-long (270-m-long) covered walkway connects the conven-
tion center to the Jupiters, while a monorail links to nearby hotels, shops,
and restaurants. The 6,000-seat tiered arena can be integrated with the
exhibition hall to create a 75,347-square-foot (7,000-sq-m) space.
6. 5. Guangzhou Baiyun International Convention Center
gUangzhoU, china
A highway cut off Guangzhou, the capital of Guangdong Prov- breaks down the facility’s scale and maintains views to the
ince in southern China, from the nature preserve at the foot of mountains. Extensive glazing on the south facades, protected
the Baiyun Mountains. A massive new convention center at the by sunshades, maximizes natural light. Completed in 2007,
border of the two, on a site that once housed an airport and the 3.2 million-square-foot (300,000-sq-m) convention center
an amusement park, might have exacerbated the situation. includes three buildings with meeting and exhibition facilities
Instead, Roeselare, Belgium–based architecture firm BURO II as well as auditoriums for 2,500, 1,000, and 500 people; the
achieved the opposite. structures at each end are hotels with a total of 1,100 rooms.
The design configured the convention center into five slop-
ing volumes, with landscaped “fingers” running between each
building and linking to four bridges that cross the highway and
reconnect the preserve to the city. Fragmenting the structures
PhiliPPE van gEloovEn
PhiliPPE van gEloovEn
7. 6. Magma Art and Congress Events Centre
aDeje, tenerife, spain
rooms. The undulating roof, made of white fiber-cement panels,
The Magma Art and Congress Events Centre occupies a hill in
contains “cracks” that let in daylight. Built substantially from
Adeje, one of Spain’s most popular tourist destinations on the
concrete with local volcanic stone mixed in, the facility contains a
island of Tenerife. Santa Cruz de Tenerife–based architects
30,000-square-foot (2,787-sq-m) column-free main hall that can
Fernando Martin Menis, Felipe Artengo Rufino, and José María
hold up to 2,500 people or be divided into nine small conference
Rodríguez Pastrana drew on the island’s volcanic landscape
rooms. With raked seating (i.e., a seating area that is sloped so
in designing the building, giving it a forceful presence along a
each person can see over the head of the person sitting in front)
busy highway.
on movable platforms, the hall can host cultural events on its
Completed in 2005, the 240,000-square-foot (22,297-sq-m) edi-
3,229-square-foot (300-sq-m) stage, which is equipped with a fly
fice comprises 13 geometrical shapes that rise from the base and
tower. The upper floor can also be subdivided into smaller rooms.
include secondary spaces such as offices, a cafeteria, and rest-
magma arT & congrESS EvEnTS cEnTrE
9. brian gaSSEl/TvSdESign
8. Puerto Rico Convention Center
san jUan, pUerto rico
views to the ocean. The building incorporates materials such as stucco
The Puerto Rico Convention Center opened in 2005 as the first and central
and wood chosen to recall architectural elements of Old San Juan. Atlanta,
piece of the redevelopment of a naval base into a convention and tourism
Georgia–based tvsdesign led the design and programming and San Juan–
district. The 580,000-square-foot (53,884-sq-m) convention center’s steel
based Jimenez + Rodriguez Barcelo served as architect of record.
and glass roof takes the form of a wave—a nod to the surrounding sea—
The 113-acre (45.73-ha) district on San Juan’s Isla Grande peninsula
and shades a large, landscaped outdoor plaza.
will ultimately include hotels, residential and office buildings, restau-
The roof’s glass skylight lets natural light flood the prefunction areas, as
rants, waterfront cafés, and retail and entertainment uses. The first
does the 13-story glass curtain wall at the entrance. The 40,000-square-foot
hotel, with 500 rooms, is slated to open in the fall.
(3,716-sq-m) ballroom is placed on the top floor, with an open terrace giving
10. 9. Qwest Center
omaha, nebrasKa
When planning the redevelopment of a Union Pacific rail shop
site on the Missouri River, the city of Omaha weighed the merits
of building a sports arena versus a convention center—and ulti-
mately chose both. Designed by DLR Group of Omaha, Nebraska,
and completed in 2003, the facility includes 1,118,000 square
mETroPoliTan EnTErTainmEnT & convEnTion auThoriTy
feet (103,866 sq m) of exhibition, ballroom, meeting, and support
space with an arena seating up to 18,300 for sporting events and
concerts. A 30,000-square-foot (2,787-sq-m) swing space can be
opened up to the arena, the convention center, or both.
The swooping, winglike roof—appropriate for a facility located
only three miles (4.8 km) from the airport—includes a cantile-
vered overhang to mark the ten-story arena and give the center
a presence on the city skyline, while a glass curtain wall runs
the length of the structure’s front, exposing activities within the
exhibit hall lobby and prefunction spaces. The building is cred-
ited with helping spark revitalization efforts along the riverfront.