Chester Literature Festival
History
The Odeon cinema opened in Chester on 3 October 1936. It was designed in the Art Deco style by Robert Bullivant, under the leadership of Harry Weedon, with a total auditorium capacity of over 1600 seats. While most Odeons of that time were faced in ceramic tiles, red brick was used in Chester to respect its historic setting, near both the cathedral and the Victorian town hall. In 1976 the Odeon was converted to a three screen cinema; two more screens were added in 1991. The main internal fabric and proscenium arch remained intact. The building was listed Grade II by Historic England, then English Heritage, in 1989. The Odeon closed in 2007 and remained unused until the Storyhouse development. The Gateway Theatre in the centre of town opened in 1969, with a capacity of 440 seats. It was closed by the City Council in 2007 to make way for the proposed Northgate development, which was intended to include a new theatre. As a consequence of the financial crisis of 2008, the development did not proceed. The project has subsequently been resurrected; the current proposal does not contain a theatre, but includes a multi screen cinema. From 2007 onwards, there was neither a professional theatre or cinema in Chester city, though the studio theatre of the now defunct Gateway is used by non-professional groups. The Grosvenor Park Open Air Theatre opened in 2010. It has an eight-week summer repertory season held in an open-air theatre constructed each summer in Grosvenor Park. It typically shows a Shakespeare comedy and a tragedy, plus an adaptation of a children's classic. The company was originally known as Chester Performs and in 2016 became the basis of the Storyhouse theatre company.
The Storyhouse Project
Following the 2009 local government reorganisation, Chester became part of the unitary authority of Cheshire West and Chester. The decision was made in 2012 to transform the now derelict Odeon Cinema into a new theatre. A multi-discipline design and construction team was appointed, led by Kier Northern. The architects, Bennetts Associates, and theatre planners, Charcoalblue, had both worked on the renovation of the Royal Shakespeare Theatre. It was soon evident that the cinema building was inadequate to house a theatre. The adjacent office block, Commerce House, was demolished in 2013 and the plan revised to create an integrated cultural hub, providing theatre, cinema, library and restaurant. Planning permission was granted in 2014 and was followed by an archeological survey, which revealed remains of Roman roads. Construction started in 2015 and was completed by Spring 2017. Following a public consultation led by Manchester agency True North, the name Storyhouse was adopted in 2016 to cover both the building and the activities contained within it. Of Storyhouse's £37m build cost, Cheshire West and Chester Council contributed £33m, with the remainder coming from Arts Council England and major local employer MBNA. It was the UK's largest regional arts project and the biggest capital development in Chester for 50 years.
Current uses
The Storyhouse building serves four uses: a theatre, cinema, library and restaurant. The theatre is contained in the extension, which is located behind the position of the screen of the original Odeon. The main auditorium can be arranged in an 800-seat proscenium format, which is used to house visiting shows during autumn and spring. It can be reconfigured to form a 500-seat thrust stage for in-house productions, typically the Christmas show and productions destined to move to the Grosvenor Park open air theatre. There is in addition a 150-seat studio Garrett Theatre and linked bar, which sit over the main auditorium. The shell of the old Odeon incorporates a 100-seat cinema, which sits in its own box suspended above the Kitchen restaurant and bar. The lofty lobby between the extension and the old Odeon provides a circulation space, which can be used for performances or informal film screenings. A temporary screen can be lowered from the old proscenium arch. The bookshelves of the library are distributed throughout the Odeon building at both ground and first floor levels; they are not separated from the restaurant and bar. The dedicated children's library occupies its own separate room near the main entrance at ground floor level, with a story-telling space.
Alex Clifton was appointed artistic director of Storyhouse in 2015. The building opened on 17 May 2017 with Clifton's new version of John Gay's The Beggar's Opera. Storyhouse received its official opening by Queen Elizabeth II and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, on 14 June 2018. As well as a full programme of theatre and cinema, Storyhouse hosts a range of community activities. The annual Literature Festival appoints a poet in residence; the current incumbent is Lemn Sissay. Almost 150 community groups use Storyhouse and it received over 1 million customers in the first year since opening.
Awards
- RIBA National Award and North West Award 2018
- LABC Excellence Award
- RICS North west Community Benefit Award 2018: Highly Commended
- Civic Trust Community Impact & Engagement Special Award
- Brick Awards 2017. Winner in Public Building Category
- Building Award 2017. Refurbishment Project of the Year
See also
- Parr Hall, Warrington
- The Brindley, Runcorn
- Lyceum Theatre, Crewe
- Grade II listed buildings in Chester (central)
References
- ^ Historic England, "Odeon Buildings and Odeon Cinema, Chester (1376369)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 14 January 2020
- ^ Ellis, DA; Howe, S. "A brief history of cinema in Chester". Retrieved 31 December 2018.
- ^ Historic England. "Odeon Buildings and Odeon Cinema (1376369)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
- ^ Ellis, D; Davis, P; Shone, R. "Odeon". Chester Cinemas. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
- ^ "New shopping and leisure in the heart of Chester". Chester Northgate. Retrieved 31 December 2018.
- ^ "Forum Studio Theatre". Retrieved 1 January 2019.
- ^ "Kier Construction North West and Northern". Retrieved 31 December 2018.
- ^ "Bennetts Associates". Retrieved 31 December 2018.
- ^ "Charcoal Blue Theatrical Innovation". Retrieved 31 December 2018.
- ^ "Eyesore to be demolished for theatre work to begin". Chester Chronicle. 8 August 2013. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
- ^ "Roman roads discovered at Chester's new theatre site". Council for British Archaeology. 21 February 2013. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
- ^ "Storyhouse. Branding the biggest arts centre outside London". True North Communications Ltd. Retrieved 31 December 2018.
- ^ Moore, Rowan (7 May 2017). "Chester Storyhouse: how a repurposed art deco cinema could revitalise the city". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
- ^ Rob Wilson (26 May 2017). "A new chapter for Chester: Bennetts' Storyhouse". Architects Journal.
- ^ Rob Wilson (26 May 2017). "A new chapter for Chester: Bennetts' Storyhouse". Architects Journal.
- ^ Green, Michael (26 May 2015). "Alex Clifton becomes Chester Performs artistic director". Chester, Crewe and Nantwich Chronicles.
- ^ Green, Michael (10 May 2017). "Chester Storyhouse in pictures". Chester Chronicle. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
- ^ Brennan, Clare (21 May 2017). "The Beggar's Opera review – John Gay goes electric". The Guardian.
- ^ Green, Michael. "Queen and Meghan are stars of the show at the opening of Chester Storyhouse". Cheshire Live.
- ^ Dowling, Mark (19 November 2018). "Writing's on the wall as celebrated poet Lemn Sissay has new works emblazoned at Storyhouse Chester". The Standard.
- ^ Cresswell, Steve (9 May 2018). "Chester Storyhouse celebrates first birthday and a million visitors". Chester and District Standard.
- ^ "Storyhouse". RIBA.
- ^ "Storyhouse, Chester wins at 2018 LABC Building Excellence Awards Grand Finals". LABC. 9 November 2018.
- ^ "2018 Project of the Year: RICS Awards, North West". RICS.
- ^ "Storyhouse, Chester". civictrustawards.org.uk.
- ^ "Storyhouse is the winner in the Public Building category at the Brick Awards 2017". Bennett's Associates. 10 November 2017. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
- ^ "Building Awards 2017". building-awards.com.