MAD Architects MAD建筑事务所

Harbin Opera House

Harbin Opera House
© Adam Mørk

HARBIN OPERA HOUSE

MAD Architects

ARCHITECTS
MAD Architects

PHOTOS
Adam Mørk (15), Hufton+Crow Photography (12)

AREA
25,000 sqft - 100,000 sqft

BUDGET
Undisclosed

YEAR
2015

LOCATION
Harbin, China

TYPE
Cultural › Hall/Theater

MAD Architects unveils the completed Harbin Opera House, located in the Northern Chinese city of Harbin.

Harbin Opera House
© Hufton+Crow Photography
Harbin Opera House
© Adam Mørk

In 2010, MAD won the international open competition for Harbin Cultural Island, a master plan for an opera house, a cultural center, and the surrounding wetland landscape along Harbin’s Songhua River.

The sinuous opera house is the focal point of the Cultural Island, occupying a building area of approximately 850,000 square feet of the site’s 444 acres total area.

Harbin Opera House
© Adam Mørk
Harbin Opera House
© Hufton+Crow Photography

It features a grand theater that can host over 1,600 patrons and a smaller theater to accommodate an intimate audience of 400.

Embedded within Harbin’s wetlands, the Harbin Opera House was designed in response to the force and spirit of the northern city’s untamed wilderness and frigid climate.

Appearing as if sculpted by wind and water, the building seamlessly blends in with nature and the topography—a transfusion of local identity, art, and culture.

Harbin Opera House
© Hufton+Crow Photography
Harbin Opera House
© Adam Mørk
Harbin Opera House
© Adam Mørk

“We envision Harbin Opera House as a cultural center of the future – a tremendous performance venue, as well as a dramatic public space that embodies the integration of human, art and the city identity, while synergistically blending with the surrounding nature,” said Ma Yansong, founding principal, MAD Architects.

On the exterior, the architecture references the sinuous landscape of the surrounding area.

Harbin Opera House
© Adam Mørk
Harbin Opera House
© Adam Mørk

The resulting curvilinear façade composed of smooth white aluminum panels becomes the poetry of edge and surface, softness and sharpness.

The journey begins upon crossing the bridge onto Harbin Cultural Island, where the undulating architectural mass wraps a large public plaza, and during winter months, melts into the snowy winter environment.

Harbin Opera House
© Adam Mørk
Harbin Opera House
© Hufton+Crow Photography

The architectural procession choreographs a conceptual narrative, one that transforms visitors into performers.

Upon entering the grand lobby, visitors will see large transparent glass walls spanning the grand lobby, visually connecting the curvilinear interior with the swooping façade and exterior plaza.

Harbin Opera House
© Hufton+Crow Photography
Harbin Opera House
© Hufton+Crow Photography

Soaring above, a crystalline glass curtain wall soars over the grand lobby space with the support of a lightweight diagrid structure. Comprised of glass pyramids, the surface alternates between smooth and faceted, referencing the billowing snow and ice of the frigid climate. Visitors are greeted with the simple opulence of natural light and material sensation—all before taking their seat.

Presenting a warm and inviting element, the grand theater is clad in rich wood, emulating a wooden block that has been gently eroded away. Sculpted from Manchurian Ash, the wooden walls gently wrap around the main stage and theater seating.

Harbin Opera House
© Hufton+Crow Photography
Harbin Opera House
© Hufton+Crow Photography

From the proscenium to the mezzanine balcony the grand theater’s use of simple materials and spatial configuration provides world-class acoustics.

The grand theater is illuminated in part by a subtle skylight that connects the audience to the exterior and the passing of time.

Harbin Opera House
© Hufton+Crow Photography
Harbin Opera House
© Adam Mørk

Within the second, smaller theater, the interior is connected seamlessly to the exterior by the large, panoramic window behind the performance stage.

This wall of sound-proof glass provides a naturally scenic backdrop for performances and activates the stage as an extension of the outdoor environment, inspiring production opportunities.

Harbin Opera House
© Adam Mørk
Harbin Opera House
© Adam Mørk

Harbin Opera House emphasizes public interaction and participation with the building. Both ticketholders and the general public alike can explore the façade’s carved paths and ascend the building as if traversing local topography.

At the apex, visitors discover an open, exterior performance space that serves as an observation platform for visitors to survey the panoramic views of Harbin’s metropolitan skyline and the surrounding wetlands below.

Harbin Opera House
© Adam Mørk
Harbin Opera House
© Adam Mørk

Upon descent, visitors return to the expansive public plaza, and are invited to explore the grand lobby space.

Surpassing the complex opera house typology, MAD articulates an architecture inspired by nature and saturated in local identity, culture and art.

Harbin Opera House
© Adam Mørk
Harbin Opera House
© Adam Mørk

As the Harbin Opera House deepens the emotional connection of the public with the environment, the architecture is consequently theatrical in both its performance of narrative spaces and its context within the landscape.


Harbin Opera House
© Hufton+Crow Photography
Harbin Opera House
© Hufton+Crow Photography


Harbin Opera House
Harbin Opera House
Harbin Opera House
Harbin Opera House


Harbin Opera House
Harbin Opera House
Harbin Opera House

MAD Architects MAD建筑事务所
T +86 10 64026632
MAD Architects MAD建筑事务所
8F, Tower A, No. 107 North Dongsi Street, Dongcheng District, China 100007 中国北京市东城区东四北大街107号A座8层