Walt Disney Concert Hall
Walt Disney Concert Hall is a landmark concert venue at 111 South Grand Avenue in downtown Los Angeles, designed by architect Frank Gehry and opened on 23 October 2003. The fourth hall of the Los Angeles Music Center, it seats 2,265 and serves as the home of the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the Los Angeles Master Chorale. Its billowing stainless-steel exterior has become one of the defining icons of twenty-first-century architecture.
At a glance
- Type
- Concert hall and performing-arts venue
- Period
- Design begun 1987; construction 1999–2003; opened 23 October 2003
- Style
- Deconstructivist; stainless-steel sculptural form
- Architect
- Frank Gehry
- Location
- 111 South Grand Avenue, downtown Los Angeles, California, USA
- Coordinates
- 34.0554° N, 118.2499° W
- Capacity
- 2,265 seats
- Current use
- Home venue of the Los Angeles Philharmonic and Los Angeles Master Chorale
Overview
Walt Disney Concert Hall is widely regarded as one of the finest concert halls in the world, both for the quality of its acoustic design and for the sculptural drama of Gehry’s exterior. The building is part of the Los Angeles Music Center campus on Bunker Hill, a cluster of performing-arts institutions that anchors downtown Los Angeles’s cultural life. The hall was made possible by a major gift from Lillian Disney, widow of Walt Disney, with additional public and private fundraising.
History
Lillian Disney donated fifty million dollars to the City of Los Angeles in 1987 in memory of her husband, initiating the project that would take sixteen years to complete. Frank Gehry won the design competition and developed a scheme that went through multiple revisions — including a period when the project stalled in the mid-1990s due to funding shortfalls. Construction finally began in 1999 and the hall opened to the public on 23 October 2003, with the Los Angeles Philharmonic under Esa-Pekka Salonen performing the inaugural concert. The hall was immediately celebrated as a transformative addition to Los Angeles’s architectural and cultural landscape.
What you see
The exterior is clad entirely in curved stainless-steel panels that catch and reflect light at different angles throughout the day, creating an ever-changing sculptural surface. Inside, the auditorium follows a vineyard-style seating arrangement — with terraced audience sections surrounding the central orchestra platform — combined with classical shoebox acoustic principles to achieve exceptional sound clarity. Douglas fir wood, chosen for its acoustic properties, lines the walls, ceiling, and the Douglas fir pipe organ designed by Manuel Rosales and Glatter-Götz, which dominates the back of the stage.
Cultural significance
Walt Disney Concert Hall is considered a milestone of Deconstructivist architecture and a key example of the “Bilbao effect” — the capacity of a landmark cultural building to redefine the identity of a city. Its opening accelerated the revitalisation of downtown Los Angeles and is routinely cited alongside the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao as one of the most influential works of late-twentieth-century architecture. Acoustically, it is frequently ranked among the world’s top concert halls.
Practical information
- Address
- 111 South Grand Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90012, USA
- Hours
- Lobby and public areas: Monday–Friday 10:00–14:00 on non-performance days; check official website for guided tour schedule
- Tickets
- Available via the Los Angeles Philharmonic website (laphil.com) and at the box office
- Official website
- laphil.com
Getting there
Walt Disney Concert Hall is located on Grand Avenue in downtown Los Angeles. By Metro, take the B Line (Red) or D Line (Purple) to Civic Center/Grand Park station and walk three minutes north. Multiple bus lines serve Grand Avenue and 1st Street. By car, the BP Grand Garage (below the hall) is accessed from 2nd Street between Grand and Hope. Parking validated for ticket holders.
