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Copper Country Architects

Gunnar Birkerts

by Mike Fleck

Buildings

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Rozsa Center for the Performing Arts

Rozsa Center
Photograph by A. K. Hoagland, 2009.

Michigan Technological University, Rozsa Center for the Performing Arts, Houghton, MI
Built 1998-2000
Contractor: Gundlach Champion of Houghton
Theater Designer: George C. Izenour
Structural Engineers: Desai/Nasr Consulting Engineers, Inc., West Bloomfield, MI
Steel Fabricators: Daul Industries, Inc.
Mechanical Contractors: August Winters and Sons, Appleton, WI
Electrical Contractors: J. Ranck Electrical, Inc, Cheboygan, WI

The groundbreaking ceremony for the Rozsa Center for the Performing Arts was held in May of 1998 and construction was completed two and a half years later in September of 2000. The entire project had a total cost of $20 million: $5 million from state funding and $15 million from private donations.5 The major contributors to this project were Ted and Lola Rozsa.6 The Rozsa Center for the Performing Arts was dedicated on October 5, 2000, during a week of concerts, lectures, and performances in celebration of its opening.

The Rozsa is an 80,000 square-foot structure, built to resemble the leaning look of the local copper mine hoists and shaft houses. The facility includes a main stage designed by acoustics and theatre consultant, George C. Izenour,7 as well as recital facilities, ticket office, concessions stand and coffee shop, practice rooms, dressing rooms, a wood shop, classrooms, conference rooms, and offices. The main theater holds a maximum of 1101 people and consists of two tiers separated by a large walkway across the center, halfway between the stage and back wall.8

Rozsa Center

Rosza Center. <www.rozsa.mtu.edu/tour.shtml>

Rozsa Center Interior Towards Stage

Rosza Center, interior, towards stage. <www.rozsa.mtu.edu/tour.shtml>

Rozsa Center Interior Towards Seating

Rosza Center, interior, towards seating. <www.rozsa.mtu.edu/tour.shtml>

The stage can be used for performing arts as well as concerts and musical performances. The Rozsa owns a 30 ton shell that can be put into place when needed for concert and musical performances.9 More recently, in 2003, the entire sound system underwent a redesign due to some uneven acoustics.10 The two main differing setups are shown in the diagrams below.

Rozsa Center Play or Performance Setup

Play or performance setup.

Rozsa Center Concert Setup

Concert setup.

Rozsa Skeleton

The steel "skeleton" of the Rozsa <www.pasty.com/>

The frame of the Rozsa consists of a total of 750 tons of steel.11 The outside walls are masonry with steel columns and built to be able to withstand large wind gusts that are prevalent on the MTU campus. These gusts can cause suction wind loads of over 80 pounds per square foot on the skin of the building as well as the roof. The metal roof has one large sloped section that splits into a few smaller sections that cover the lobby area. The roof was originally to be made of copper, but due to an increase of copper costs the contractors were unable to use the local area’s most prized natural resource. The roof also was designed to be able to hold 450 pounds of snow per square foot.12

The outside of the building is mostly brick, capped off with the metal roof that seems to spill down off the roof and onto the sides of the building. The lobby area in the front of the building is encased in a large wall of glass and framed with large metal arches. The glass wall faces to the northeast capturing views of the local wooded areas lining the Portage Lake. The Rozsa is a very stunning piece of architecture in the area, and even though it is very unusual building, it fits into its surroundings as if it has always been there.

The Rozsa received the GLFEA Steel Systems Excellence Award for medium-sized buildings in 2002 for its remarkable steel “skeleton” that is shown above.13 In 2002, the Rozsa won the Design Award from the American Institute of Architects of Detroit.14

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