This was such an exciting project last year and I would like an update if anyone has one? The old Civic Center is not built to current minor league hockey standards and needs new wiring if they want to continue to host major concerts there. I have an old 1970's construction photo of the building. I need some webspace so I can share it.
Civic Center Discussion
#1
Posted 24 February 2004 - 05:50 PM
This was such an exciting project last year and I would like an update if anyone has one? The old Civic Center is not built to current minor league hockey standards and needs new wiring if they want to continue to host major concerts there. I have an old 1970's construction photo of the building. I need some webspace so I can share it.
#2
Posted 20 January 2006 - 06:34 PM
Unfortunately, it would appear to accomplish this goal, it would mean chasing out the arena portion of the Civic Center, leaving a venue able to accommodate such things as the circus or major concerts to try to find a location elsewhere. There's a lot of clamor for such a facility to locate in the suburbs, and one particularly persistent advocate, wants it located in Fletcher, at the Ag Center, or on the site of the failing Biltmore Square Mall.
Of course, others are working to locate an arena downtown or in the River District, and I've spoken out against locating any major facility in a suburb lest we invite another explosion of suburban sprawl in a city that has too much of that to begin with.
Getting back to the PAC, however, what do you think of the conceptual drawings? They're too modern for my tastes personally because modern architecture of this type is such a cliche. Every new civic building these days is an overbearing glass box with unecessary angles to relieve the motony. Ironically enough though, there are links to several successful PAC's on which an Asheville center would like to model itself. One of these is the incredible and very ornate Bass Center in Fort Worth Texas, which was completed in 1998, yet features 30-foot-tall limestone statues of angels blowing trumpets on its facade. That's the kind of architecture we need in Asheville -- not yet another uninspired beotch son of the Akzona Building beamed down from Charlotte or Raleigh.
#3
Posted 20 January 2006 - 08:42 PM
Asheville and western North Carolina deserves a modern arena-like facility for major concerts and sports entertainment. How to do that remains a mystery.
#4
Posted 20 January 2006 - 09:53 PM
I see the PAC wants to completely replace both the Thomas Wolfe Auditorium AND the Civic Center with a large performing arts complex. I wonder how well loss of the Thomas Wolfe Auditorium would go over. That's a historic building, isn't it? Although it was remodeled significantly when they built the Civic Center in the late 70s. The backstage area is entirely inadequate right now, but I wonder if it's possible to renovate the current Thomas Wolfe Auditorium into something more modern.
I like the idea of separating the auditorium from the arena. Having both in the same place hasn't really been synergistic, beyond the sharing of a box office. An arena could go somewhere downtown better suited to handle large crowds, while a performing arts center could be made a little more intimate with its surroundings.
For a performing arts venue, there are a couple of options. The current location on Haywood is great. I also like the idea in the Citizen-Times guest commentary about building the facility on the Renaissance Hotel parking lot, facing Pack Square. Tough choice.
The arena is a difficult problem. The current one has to go, no question. Whether or not we even need an arena - and if we do, where it should go, is tough. For a number of reasons, the river district would not be a good place for an arena, and conversely an arena would not be a good thing for the river district. Suburbs? Um, no. So, we're left with downtown. But where?
Somewhere readily accessible and visible from I-240, but not too central would be best. The civic center site is certainly visible from 240, and a larger arena is certainly possible if we demolish Thomas Wolfe and grow into the space. Other options... how about Woodfin Street?
#5
Posted 20 January 2006 - 11:32 PM
#6
Posted 21 January 2006 - 03:32 PM
Unfortunately, we're likely looking at a PAC project that whose first and foremost concern is cost. Whenever you get into that kind of situation you're virtually assured of a building that will be adequate but little else. It will serve its purpose but people will feel indifferent about it at best and will likely hate it outright. And if we're going to aim for that, we might as well just renovate the Civic Center's interior and leave the facade alone, and save everyone a lot of fuss and money.
#7
Posted 25 January 2006 - 07:42 PM
---
Dear Ms. Powell,
It's been exciting to see the Asheville Area Center for the Performing Arts website come online recently, which makes it so much easier to follow developing news on this exciting project.
I notice in the organization's annual report a mention that the actual facade of a new PAC would be chosen by the community. That's very heartening because, as exciting as it would be to finally have the world-class performing arts center Asheville deserves, to be perfectly honest, the conceptual drawings depict an incredibly unnatractive building. They show the sort of "high-concept" architecture that strives for modernity for its own sake. They show an overbearing glass box with unnecessary angles to relieve the monotony. This is the same sort of concept by which the original Civic Center was built, and like the current Civic Center, such a building will look hopelessly outdated within a decade. It will then decline to outright ugliness, as did the Civic Center, as time wears on. It is neither timeless nor inspiring.
I note that links to other successful performing arts centers are provided on the site, and one such center is the Bass Performance Hall in Fort Worth, TX. What an awesome building! Such beautiful materials, and such majestic statuary! This is the kind of building that Asheville deserves, because not only will age in the most graceful of ways, but it pays homage, as it should, to this city's extraordinary collection of ornate historic buildings. I sincerely hope that a similar, regal concept is to be included in the options from which the public will choose.
And if a pair of limestone angels blowing trumpets could be worked into the concept, I certainly wouldn't complain.
Thank you for your time and consideration. I'm nothing but excited about this performing arts center, but let's please take pains to make it beautiful! You need look no farther than the Bass Hall for the perfect example to follow.
Sincerely,
Me
#8
Posted 17 March 2006 - 07:07 AM
This article talks about possible sites for an arena. The civic center has identified these six sites as the best alternatives (and my opinion of the sites):

A. Current civic center site (map)
Downtown location but the topography and lot size are big constraints. I'd rather see a performing arts center go here.
B. Patton Avenue downtown gateway (map)
The best alternative of the ones given. Definitely downtown, but in an area not likely to be redeveloped any time soon.
C. South of City-County Plaza (map)
Great location, but these lots are already seeing developer interest and I wouldn't take that away.
D. Innsbruck Mall (map)
Interesting thought, just across the tunnel from downtown in an older auto-oriented commercial area that is just starting to densify and redevelop.
E. Biltmore Square Mall (map)
Perhaps this would bring some life to the commercial area down there but it's just too far from the city center.
F. Brevard Rd & I-240 (map)
Absolutely no amenities within walking distance, so not a good idea.
Aerials of each site are available in this PDF.
#9
Posted 17 March 2006 - 07:39 AM
#10
Posted 13 December 2006 - 11:45 PM
#11
Posted 14 December 2006 - 02:28 PM
The city obviously needs both, and could support both, especially if the Civic Center wasn't a soul-sucking dump as it is now.
Then again, this is just getting the center up to code. I agree with the councilmembers. Even if a new arena AND a new PAC were to be built, things are going to be happening in the Civic Center for years until one or both of those new facilities is ready to roll. We may end up with two new facilities, one, or none. My hope though is that the Civic Center becomes an arena, and a new PAC goes up near City Hall.
Until that decision is made, and until something else gets built, at least no more pieces of the roof are going to fall in on Allison Kraus again.
#12
Posted 04 May 2007 - 08:49 AM
The group wants to see a new performing arts center with somewhere around 2300 seats (HUGE!!) and the flexibility to handle all sorts of events, from workshops to Broadway shows to musical performances. The location would be downtown, probably on Pack Square, and the cost would be somewhere in the neighborhood of $85 million.
I can't see this decision happening any time soon, as Concil just bought a couple more years by doing essential, overdue renovations on the existing civic center. Sounds like a nice plan, though I might be inclined to say 2300 seats is a bit too big for Asheville - I'd rather have a high quality, more intimate, smaller venue than a cavernous place that never sells out and feels empty all the time.
#13
Posted 03 September 2008 - 07:52 AM
#14
Posted 12 December 2008 - 02:22 AM
"An upbeat Asheville Civic Center Commission received several pieces of welcome news at their Dec. 2 meeting, including a green light for work to finally begin on replacing the roof of the arena and concourse."
...
"In other business, commission members were introduced to James Baudoin, the new executive director of the Asheville Area Center for the Performing Arts and the project manager for the proposed Performance Center of Asheville, which the group is spearheading."
So, it seems some work is going to be done on the civic center in the near future.
Edited by orulz, 12 December 2008 - 09:37 AM.
Remove long quoted article and add link
#15
Posted 12 December 2008 - 09:52 AM
Hopefully they won't leave the performing arts center completely in the hands of a citizen group that lacks the leverage and resources to get it done in a reasonable timeframe.
#16
Posted 24 December 2008 - 08:43 AM
orulz, on Dec 12 2008, 10:52 AM, said:
Hopefully they won't leave the performing arts center completely in the hands of a citizen group that lacks the leverage and resources to get it done in a reasonable timeframe.
You can bet they will probably be in search of some public funding. At the very least they surely will request some tax, permitting and other breaks. I'm from Orlando and I cant even begin to tell you what a mess getting the new PAC has been. Then again they expect to spend in excess of $300 million on it!!
I cant believe its taken six years to build Pack Square Park! That's crazy ... couldn't we have used inmates from the jails or something to speed it up!! lol what do they have like two guys and a goat putting it together? lol
#17
Posted 13 November 2009 - 09:53 AM
They think it might open somewhere between 2013 and 2015. This is still supposedly going to be a mixed-use project.
#18
Posted 13 November 2009 - 10:26 AM
In regards to the Civic Center, I believe they are working on the roof now.
Edited by rooster8, 13 November 2009 - 10:31 AM.
#19
Posted 15 November 2009 - 04:13 PM
macrocosim144, on 24 December 2008 - 08:43 AM, said:
2 guys and a goat would have gotten it done faster. Hell, I could have finished the thing by now and I a lazy butt.
I just googled...that park cost 20 million.
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