Brucknerhaus
48°18′37″N 14°17′33″E / 48.31028°N 14.29250°E / 48.31028; 14.29250Type Festival and congress centre Construction Built 1969-1973 Opened 23 March 1974 (1974-03-23) Architect Heikki and Kaija Siren Website https://www.brucknerhaus.at/en
The Brucknerhaus (German pronunciation: [ˈbʁʊknɐˌhaʊs] ⓘ) is a festival and congress centre in Linz, Austria named after the Austrian composer Anton Bruckner. The building was designed by Finnish architects Heikki and Kaija Siren.[1] Its construction took place from 1969 to 1973. It opened on 23 March 1974.
It holds about 200 performances per year, with about 180,000 of total audience.[2] It is home to the International Brucknerfest Linz and the Linzer Klangwolke, two annual musical events.
Brucknerhaus has three main halls:[3][4]
- Large or Brucknersaal (named after Anton Bruckner): 1,420 seats, standing room for 150
- Middle or Stiftersaal (named after Adalbert Stifter): 352 seats, standing room for 40
- Small or Keplersaal (named after Johannes Kepler): 100–150 seats
References
External links
Official Homepage - https://www.brucknerhaus.at/
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Brucknerhaus.
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Anton Bruckner
- Symphonies (1863–1896)
- Symphony in F minor (1863)
- No. 1 in C minor (1866/1891)
- Symphony in D minor (1869)
- No. 2 in C minor (1872/1877)
- No. 3 in D minor (1873/1877/1889)
- No. 4 in E♭ major (Romantic; 1874/1878–1880/1888)
- No. 5 in B♭ major (1876)
- No. 6 in A major (1881)
- No. 7 in E major (1883)
- No. 8 in C minor (1887/1890)
- No. 9 in D minor (1896) (unfinished)
- Four Orchestral Pieces (1862)
- Overture in G minor (1862–1863)
- March in E-flat major (1865)
- Symphonisches Präludium (1876)
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- Piano works (1850–1868)
- Chamber music (1862–1879)
- String Quartet (1862)
- Rondo in C minor (1862)
- Abendklänge (1866)
- String Quintet (1879)
- Intermezzo in D minor (1879)
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