Acoustical design of the Tokyo Opera City (TOC) concert hall, Japan
Identifieur interne : 000750 ( PascalFrancis/Corpus ); précédent : 000749; suivant : 000751Acoustical design of the Tokyo Opera City (TOC) concert hall, Japan
Auteurs : Takayuki Hidaka ; Leo L. Beranek ; Sadahiro Masuda ; Noriko Nishihara ; Toshiyuki OkanoSource :
- The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America [ 0001-4966 ] ; 2000-01.
Descripteurs français
- Pascal (Inist)
English descriptors
- KwdEn :
Abstract
The Tokyo Opera City concert hall seats 1632, volume 15300 m3, and reverberation time, with audience and orchestra, 1.95 s. As part of the design process, measurements on CAD computer and 1:10 wooden models of the hall and full-sized materials samples were conducted over a 5-yr. period. The hall in plan is rectangular. The ceiling is a distorted pyramid, with its peak 28 m above the main floor and nearer the stage than the rear of the hall. This unique shape was analyzed on the models so that all interior surfaces combine to distribute sources on the stage uniformly over the seating areas and to yield optimum values for reverberation time (RT), early decay time (EDT), interaural cross-correlation coefficient (IACCE3), bass ratio (BR), initial-time-delay gap (ITDG), strength (G), and sound diffusion index (SDI) [for definitions see L. Beranek, Concert and Opera Halls: How They Sound (Acoustical Society of America, Woodbury, NY, 1996)]. On the long ceiling facing the stage, Schroeder QRD diffusers provide diffusion, eliminate a possible echo, and strengthen lateral reflections. Performers and critics judge the acoustics excellent. © 2000 Acoustical Society of America.
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Format Inist (serveur)
NO : | PASCAL 00-0020235 AIP |
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ET : | Acoustical design of the Tokyo Opera City (TOC) concert hall, Japan |
AU : | HIDAKA (Takayuki); BERANEK (Leo L.); MASUDA (Sadahiro); NISHIHARA (Noriko); OKANO (Toshiyuki) |
AF : | Takenaka R&D Institute, 1-5-1, Otsuka, Chiba 270-1395, Japan (1 aut., 2 aut.); 975 Memorial Drive, #804, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138; Takenaka R&D Institute, 1-5-1, Otsuka, Chiba 270-1395, Japan (3 aut., 4 aut., 5 aut.) |
DT : | Publication en série; Niveau analytique |
SO : | The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America; ISSN 0001-4966; Coden JASMAN; Etats-Unis; Da. 2000-01; Vol. 107; No. 1; Pp. 340-354 |
LA : | Anglais |
EA : | The Tokyo Opera City concert hall seats 1632, volume 15<hair thin space>300 m3, and reverberation time, with audience and orchestra, 1.95 s. As part of the design process, measurements on CAD computer and 1:10 wooden models of the hall and full-sized materials samples were conducted over a 5-yr. period. The hall in plan is rectangular. The ceiling is a distorted pyramid, with its peak 28 m above the main floor and nearer the stage than the rear of the hall. This unique shape was analyzed on the models so that all interior surfaces combine to distribute sources on the stage uniformly over the seating areas and to yield optimum values for reverberation time (RT), early decay time (EDT), interaural cross-correlation coefficient (IACCE3), bass ratio (BR), initial-time-delay gap (ITDG), strength (G), and sound diffusion index (SDI) [for definitions see L. Beranek, Concert and Opera Halls: How They Sound (Acoustical Society of America, Woodbury, NY, 1996)]. On the long ceiling facing the stage, Schroeder QRD diffusers provide diffusion, eliminate a possible echo, and strengthen lateral reflections. Performers and critics judge the acoustics excellent. © 2000 Acoustical Society of America. |
CC : | 001B40C55 |
FD : | 4355B; Etude expérimentale; Réverbération; Acoustique architecturale; Echo; Réflexion onde acoustique |
ED : | Experimental study; Reverberation; Architectural acoustics; Echoes; Acoustic wave reflection |
LO : | INIST-129 |
ID : | 00-0020235 |
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Pascal:00-0020235Le document en format XML
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">The Tokyo Opera City concert hall seats 1632, volume 15300 m3, and reverberation time, with audience and orchestra, 1.95 s. As part of the design process, measurements on CAD computer and 1:10 wooden models of the hall and full-sized materials samples were conducted over a 5-yr. period. The hall in plan is rectangular. The ceiling is a distorted pyramid, with its peak 28 m above the main floor and nearer the stage than the rear of the hall. This unique shape was analyzed on the models so that all interior surfaces combine to distribute sources on the stage uniformly over the seating areas and to yield optimum values for reverberation time (RT), early decay time (EDT), interaural cross-correlation coefficient (IACC<sub>E3</sub>
), bass ratio (BR), initial-time-delay gap (ITDG), strength (G), and sound diffusion index (SDI) [for definitions see L. Beranek, Concert and Opera Halls: How They Sound (Acoustical Society of America, Woodbury, NY, 1996)]. On the long ceiling facing the stage, Schroeder QRD diffusers provide diffusion, eliminate a possible echo, and strengthen lateral reflections. Performers and critics judge the acoustics excellent. © 2000 Acoustical Society of America.</div>
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), bass ratio (BR), initial-time-delay gap (ITDG), strength (G), and sound diffusion index (SDI) [for definitions see L. Beranek, Concert and Opera Halls: How They Sound (Acoustical Society of America, Woodbury, NY, 1996)]. On the long ceiling facing the stage, Schroeder QRD diffusers provide diffusion, eliminate a possible echo, and strengthen lateral reflections. Performers and critics judge the acoustics excellent. © 2000 Acoustical Society of America.</EA>
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