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Above: Choral rehearsal. Photography by Greg Murphey Studios, used with permission. 

Ball State University Music Instruction Building/Sursa Performance Hall, 2004

Typical web site commentary is detached and measured. I have to set aside this protocol for a moment. This building was a labor of love for a number of reasons. First, Ball State is my alma mater. Second, I am a musician and the chance to create a building dedicated to performing and teaching music was a dream come true.

 

The real joy in the process though centered on the people who contributed to the building during design and construction. We collaborated with Michael Dennis and Erik Thorkildsen, two of the finest architects I have ever worked with. The university was a marvelous client and the faculty put unimaginable amounts of energy into the design. We literally invented certain elements in the building and then asked Weigand Construction of Fort Wayne, Indiana, to translate our work into physical reality. I can report that Weigand vastly exceeded my expectations. I still reflect on their work and smile.

 

Programmatically, the building includes the Music Technology program studios, an 8,000 square foot state-of-the-art digital recording suite. The Choral Rehearsal space doubles as a small performance space. The Band Rehearsal room is tunable to dampen the high sound pressure levels from a large ensemble. Faculty Office/Studios are specially designed for acoustic isolation. There are a variety of student practice rooms and small ensemble spaces.

 

The building’s crown jewel is the exquisite Sursa Performance Hall, an acoustically tunable space that provides variable reverberation times from 1.6 to 2.2 seconds. This is harder to accomplish than it seems. The space uses six paired heavy acoustic curtains and five paired movable acoustic panels that, when stored, present reflective surfaces and when deployed, present absorptive surfaces. Each paired device is digitally controlled and may be positioned from a single set of curtains to every last curtain and panel.

 

In summary, the building is remarkable. This is because of the efforts of, literally, hundreds of people. My only wish is that I could list them all.

 

Team:

Owner – Ball State University

Architect – CSO and Michael Dennis and Associates

Project Manager – Sam F. Miller (on behalf of CSO)

Structural – CSO

Mechanical/Electrical – L'Aquis Consulting Engineers

Acoustical Consultant – Purcell + Noppe; Roger Noppe

General Contractor – Weigand Construction; Bruce Stauffer, Tom Harris

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