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The proposal was approved and the site was purchased with some of the
profits from the Exhibition. Once the remaining funds had been raised, in
April 1867 Queen Victoria signed the Royal Charter of the Corporation of the
Hall of Arts and Sciences which was to operate the Hall and on 20 May, laid
the foundation stone.
The Hall was designed by civil engineers Captain
Francis
Fowke and Major-General
Henry
Y.D.
Scott of
the Royal
Engineers and built by Lucas Brothers.
[3]
The designers were heavily
influenced
by ancient amphitheatres, but had also been exposed to the ideas
of Gottfried Semper while he was working at the South Kensington Museum.
The recently opened
Cirque d'Hiver
in Paris was seen in the contemporary
press as the design to outdo. The Hall was constructed mainly of Fareham
Red brick, withterra cotta block decoration made by Gibbs and Canning
Limited of Tamworth. The dome (designed by Rowland Mason Ordish) on
top was made of wrought iron and glazed. There was a trial assembly made of
the iron framework of the dome in Manchester, then it was taken apart again
and transported to London via horse and cart.
When the time came for the
supporting structure to be removed from the dome after re-assembly in situ,
only volunteers remained on site in case the structure dropped. It did drop –
but only by five-sixteenths of an inch.
The Hall was scheduled to be
completed by Christmas Day 1870 and the Queen visited a few weeks
beforehand to inspect.
The official opening ceremony of the Hall was on 29 March 1871. A
welcoming speech was given by Edward, the Prince of Wales; Queen Victoria
was too overcome to speak although she did comment that it reminded her of
the British constitution.
A concert followed, when the Hall's
acoustic problems became
immediately apparent. Engineers first attempted to solve the strong echo by
suspending a canvas awning below the dome. This helped and also sheltered
concertgoers from the sun, but the problem was not solved: it used to be
jokingly said that the Hall was "the only place where a British composer
could be sure of hearing his work twice".
Initially lit by gas, the Hall contained a special system where its thousands of
gas jets were lit within ten seconds. Though it was demonstrated as early as
1873 in the Hall,
[6]
full electric lighting was not installed until 1888.
During
an early trial when a
partial installation was made, one disgruntled patron
wrote to
The Times
newspaper declaring it to be "a very ghastly and
unpleasant innovation".
In 1936, the Hall was the scene of a giant rally celebrating the British
Empire, the occasion being the centenary of Joseph Chamberlain's birth. In
October 1942, the Hall suffered minor damage during World War II bombing
but was left mostly untouched as German pilots used the distinctive structure
as a landmark.
In 1949 the canvas awning was removed and replaced with fluted
aluminium panels below the glass roof, in a new attempt to solve the echo;
but the acoustics were not properly tackled until 1969 when a series of large
fibreglass acoustic diffusing discs (commonly referred to as "mushrooms" or
"flying saucers") was installed below the ceiling.
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