Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

About $9M later, Carnegie Music Hall in Oakland reopens

Improvemen­ts include new seating, air conditioni­ng

- By Jeremy Reynolds Jeremy Reynolds: jreynolds@post-gazette.com. His work at the Post-Gazette is supported in part by a grant from the San Francisco Conservato­ry of Music, Getty Foundation and Rubin Institute.

In the 19th century, titan of industry Andrew Carnegie funded a system of libraries and concert halls and a university in his adopted city of Pittsburgh.

One of the grandest and most ornate of these buildings, Carnegie Music Hall in Oakland, on Friday flung its doors wide with great fanfare after eight months of silence. (That’s not a figurative statement — brass musicians from River City Brass were present to musically christen the refurbishe­d space.)

The 1895 hall is one of Pittsburgh’s architectu­ral and acoustic crown jewels.

It was once the musical capital of Pittsburgh and the home of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra before Heinz Hall and Benedum Center were transforme­d from movie palaces into concert halls. Over the span of its 130-year history, performers including Pavoratti, Ella Fitzgerald, Arlo Guthrie and many others

Today, it typically hosts a variety of concerts, lectures and other events, including quite a few weddings. It is managed by Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh.

In recent months, crews have updated the hall’s lighting and sound and electrical systems. There’s brand-new seating that is ADA-compliant and significan­tly more comfortabl­e and spacious than the previous seats. Artists worked tirelessly to clean and restore the hall’s murals.

On Friday, Steven Knapp, president and CEO of Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh, gathered with public officials including Allegheny County Executive Sara Innamorato for a ribbon-cutting ceremony.

“Perhaps most importantl­y of all, the time had come to bring air conditioni­ng to the hall,” he joked, later noting that the renovation will now allow community organizers to utilize the space in the summer months.

The total price tag was about $ 9 million, raised through a mixture of foundation and public funding and individual philanthro­py.

The hall previously sat just under 2,000 people. Because the new seats are larger, capacity has reduced to 1,530.

Melissa Simonetti, Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh’s director of constructi­on and project management, noted that the Museums had worked with acousticia­ns and that the “sound” of the hall was not measurably different than before.

There are more than 2,500 Carnegie libraries worldwide but only a handful of Carnegie Music Halls. The most famous of these is of course in New York City, but there are five such halls in Pittsburgh, all of which are going through or have recently completed significan­t renovation­s. The other halls are in Braddock, Homestead, Carnegie and the North Side. There was once a hall in Duquesne, but it was demolished.

(As an aside, there are also Carnegie Music Halls in Kentucky and in West Virginia and overseas in Dunfermlin­e, Scotland, but these feature a different architectu­ral style.)

The Oakland structure is the most elaborate of the Pittsburgh halls.

Regular programmin­g is returning, and the Carnegie Mellon University Philharmon­ic performs in the hall on Sunday.

 ?? Joshua Franzos/Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh photos ?? The Carnegie Music Hall in Oakland had a grand reopening Friday that included a ribbon-cutting with Carnegie Museums Vice President for Developmen­t Carey Miller, state Sen. Devlin Robinson, Councilwom­an Erika Strassburg­er, Sen. Jay Costa, Carnegie Museums Board Chair Geovette Washington, Rep. Dan Frankel, county Executive Sara Innamorato, Carnegie Museums President Steven Knapp, RAD Board Chair Dan Griffen, Project Director Melissa Simonetti, Carnegie Museums COO Kevin Hiles and Carnegie Museums Vice President of Facilities Tony Young.
Joshua Franzos/Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh photos The Carnegie Music Hall in Oakland had a grand reopening Friday that included a ribbon-cutting with Carnegie Museums Vice President for Developmen­t Carey Miller, state Sen. Devlin Robinson, Councilwom­an Erika Strassburg­er, Sen. Jay Costa, Carnegie Museums Board Chair Geovette Washington, Rep. Dan Frankel, county Executive Sara Innamorato, Carnegie Museums President Steven Knapp, RAD Board Chair Dan Griffen, Project Director Melissa Simonetti, Carnegie Museums COO Kevin Hiles and Carnegie Museums Vice President of Facilities Tony Young.
 ?? ?? Carnegie Music Hall in Oakland reopened Friday after an eight-month, nearly $9 million renovation that included ADA-compliant seating, a mural restoratio­n, lighting upgrades and more.
Carnegie Music Hall in Oakland reopened Friday after an eight-month, nearly $9 million renovation that included ADA-compliant seating, a mural restoratio­n, lighting upgrades and more.

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