The Headquarters of the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra in Katowice is a concert hall located at 1 Wojciech Kilar Square in the Bogucice district of Katowice, Poland. It serves as the home of the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra.It is also a main component of the , which also includes the International Congress Centre and the Silesian Museum.
Constructed on the site of a former timber storage area of the , the building was officially opened on 1 October 2014. Designed by local architect , the structure draws inspiration from the architectural heritage of Upper Silesia, particularly the Nikiszowiec workers' housing estate. The concert hall has received numerous architectural awards for its design and cultural significance.
At the time of its opening, the concert hall was the largest concert and recording complex in Poland. In 2019, it joined the European Concert Hall Organisation, a network of European concert venues. Since its inauguration, the venue has become a highly popular cultural hub in Katowice, hosting performances by renowned artists and musical ensembles.
The Headquarters of the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra is located at 1 Wojciech Kilar Square. It lies within the Bogucice district of Katowice, in the southwestern part, near the borders with Koszutka and à Âródmieà Âcie.
The building is situated in the , adjacent to the Silesian Museum, the International Congress Centre, and the Spodek arena. A pedestrian bridge connects it to the International Congress Centre and Spodek. Together with other Culture Zone structures, it forms a hub of facilities for education, culture, and large-scale events, sharing technical infrastructure and green spaces.
Constructed on former mining land near above-ground and underground roads, the building is positioned between T. Dobrowolski Street, H. M. Górecki Street, Wojciech Korfanty Avenue, and .
A tram line runs along Wojciech Korfanty Avenue. The Metropolitan Transport Authority's Katowice Rondo tram stop is approximately 300 metres from the building's main entrance. In October 2022, 10 tram lines operated from this stop, connecting the concert hall directly to Katowice districts such as Dàb, Brynów-Osiedle Zgrzebnioka, Koszutka, Osiedle Tysiàclecia, à Âródmieà Âcie, Weà Ânowiec-Józefowiec, and Zawodzie, as well as the cities of Bytom, Chorzów, Siemianowice à Âlàskie, and à ÂwiÃÂtochà Âowice.
Approximately 20 metres south of the building, along Walenty Roà ºdzieà Âski Avenue, is the Katowice Culture Zone NOSPR bus stop. In October 2022, about 20 bus lines operated from this stop, linking the concert hall with Katowice districts including Dàbrówka Maà Âa, Dàb, Giszowiec, Janów-Nikiszowiec, Koszutka, Murcki, Osiedle Tysiàclecia, Szopienice-Burowiec, à Âródmieà Âcie, Weà Ânowiec-Józefowiec, and Zawodzie, and cities such as BÃÂdzin, Dàbrowa Górnicza, Mysà Âowice, Siemianowice à Âlàskie, Sosnowiec, and Siewierz.
A Metrorower city bike station, number 27704, operates in the parking lot adjacent to the building.
The new Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra's headquarters addressed longstanding spatial limitations faced by the orchestra since its reactivation in 1945. Previously, the orchestra was based on one floor of the so-called at 2 , which lacked adequate concert and recording facilities. Discussions about building a new concert hall had persisted for years. In that venue, musicians struggled to hear each other due to the hall's design, prioritizing audience acoustics over performers' needs. The orchestra's final performance at the former was held on 13 June 2013.
In 2008, Katowice, in collaboration with the Warsaw and Katowice branches of the Association of Polish Architects, announced an international architectural competition for the building's design. 17 proposals were submitted by Polish and international architectural firms. The project required consideration of its unique context, as the building was to be constructed on a large post-industrial site east of Spodek, along Walenty Roà ºdzieà Âski Avenue. This land was previously used as a timber yard by the , closed in 1999.
The competition was decided on 15 December 2008, with the first prize awarded to local architect . Konior had prior experience with music-related projects, including the 2007 opening of the new wing of the Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music, the , which received multiple awards, and a redesign of the interiors of the historic Academy of Music building four years earlier.
In October 2010, the project received over 122 million PLN in funding from the European Union. In June 2011, Katowice secured a 254.2 million PLN loan from the European Investment Bank to finance cultural facilities on post-industrial land, including the orchestra building.
An invitation to tender for the construction was announced in February 2011. Four companies were invited to submit bids: a consortium led by Hydrobudowa Polska with Spanish OHL, a consortium of with Karmar, Bouygues Batiment International, and Acciona Infraestructuras, a consortium of with LTT and Ebud-Przemysà Âówka, and . Warbud's consortium submitted the lowest bid at 191 million PLN net, followed by Mostostal Warszawa's consortium, compared to an estimated cost of 201.8 million PLN net. In December 2011, Warbud was selected as the general contractor.
On 13 February 2012, Katowice Mayor Piotr Uszok signed the construction contract with Warbud, with completion planned for 13 October 2013. In June 2011, an acoustic model of the concert hall, built in Aleksandrów à Âódzki, was displayed in the lobby of Katowice's Altus Skyscraper, as part of the city's bid for the European Capital of Culture 2016. It was accompanied by visualizations of the new concert hall building.
The cornerstone was laid on 6 June 2012. By August 2012, all underground walls, columns, and ceilings were completed, while above-ground walls and columns around the Great Concert Hall were finished, and steel structures and ceilings above the second floor were being installed. By December 2012, external walls reached the fourth floor, and glass facade installation began on the western side, with approximately 300 workers involved.
In February 2013, roof elements for the Great Concert Hall, weighing over 300 tons, were being installed, including 11 girders. The hall's undulating concrete walls were completed using rubber formwork, and structural work in the Chamber Hall was finished, with installation work ongoing at the -1 level. Window installations were nearly complete on the northern, southern, and partially western sides. On 12 April 2013, a topping out ceremony marked the completion of reinforced concrete work, with the first concert held in the Great Concert Hall, and insulation layer installation began.
By November 2013, brick facade installation was complete, and the surrounding area was being landscaped with trees and small architectural elements. Interior finishing included balcony installation in the Great Concert Hall, ceiling and plafond completion, and wall and ceiling cladding in the Chamber Hall, with approximately 500 workers involved.
By August 2014, construction neared completion with the final equipment installation and acoustic testing in the Great Concert Hall. Construction concluded in August 2014, and the building was handed over to the orchestra on 25 August 2014, following acoustic tests.
The total cost of the project, including construction, design documentation, supervision, acoustic work, tree planting, utility relocations, drainage, and hall equipment, was 333,160,737.84 PLN.
The grand opening took place on 1 October 2014, coinciding with International Music Day. The inaugural concert featured works by composers associated with the orchestra, including Witold Lutosà Âawski, Krzysztof Penderecki, Henryk Górecki, and Wojciech Kilar, with a performance by Polish pianist Krystian Zimerman in the second half. It was the first new facility to open in the Culture Zone.
The new headquarters has become a popular venue, attracting visitors with its architecture and diverse events. In 2014, season ticket sales increased by 300% compared to the old venue. Its varied programming draws audiences from Katowice, the Silesian Voivodeship, and beyond.
The venue has hosted numerous events, including the , the Fryderyk Awards Gala for Classical Music, the project, and the Polish Contemporary Music Premieres Festival. Renowned orchestras such as the Vienna Philharmonic and London Symphony Orchestra, ensembles like , Take 6, and SBB, and artists such as Bruce Liu, Andrea Bocelli, , Krystian Zimerman, Piotr Beczaà Âa, and Piotr Anderszewski have performed here.
Other events include the Business Centre Club gala and the 2022/23 Inter-University Academic Year Inauguration.
In 2019, the NOSPR hall joined the European Concert Hall Organisation, becoming the only Polish concert hall in the group alongside 20 other European venues. In July 2021, construction began on a 13-metre-high, 6-metre-wide pipe organ in the Great Concert Hall, designed since 2017 and replacing a mock-up instrument. The organ, built by à  krabl, was completed in September 2022.
The Headquarters of the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra is Poland's largest concert and recording complex, primarily designed for classical music but adaptable for other genres. Built on a rectangular plan, it measures 115 metres long (including the technical building), 61.6 metres wide, and 28 metres high. The total area is 35,059 mò, with a usable area of 25,782 mò, a built-up area of 7,874 mò, and a volume of 181,610 mó. The structure comprises three parts: a five-storey main building, a seven-storey Great Concert Hall, and a two-storey technical section.
The architectural design was led by of Konior Studio, with installations and structural design by Buro Happold Engineering. The building is connected to medium-voltage electricity (20kV), water, sewage, and technological heating networks, and features systems for electricity, structured cabling, fire alarms, sound warning, security, BMS, rainwater and sanitary sewage, condensate drainage, domestic hot and cold water, hydrants, central heating, technological heat, chilled water, glycol heat recovery, ventilation, smoke extraction, stairwell pressurization, and freon-based split-unit air conditioning.
Tomasz Konior designed the building with a monumental yet simple form, reflecting its status as the region's main concert hall. The exterior facade draws inspiration from the windows of familok buildings in the Nikiszowiec workers' estate, evoking musical associations. The facade features brick-covered pillars, with smooth red bricks in recesses and rough bricks on walls. A total of 611,000 bricks, fired in a 19th-century Hoffman kiln at the Patoka brickworks in Panoszów, were used. Technical installations are concealed within 80 external brick chimneys, interspersed with variably sized window slits. The clinker brick facade covers 11,750 mò, with 2,300 mò of glazing.
The facade's appearance varies by time of day: sunlight creates bright lines on the black concert hall walls during the day, while at night, interior light reflects between the facade pillars. The building has two entrances: the main one on the west at Wojciech Kilar Square and a secondary entrance on the east. In September 2015, a neon sign reading "Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra" with the orchestra's logo was installed on the facade.
The building includes the Great Concert Hall with 1,666 fixed seats and 128 additional seats, a Chamber Hall with 283 seats, 31 dressing rooms, four sectional rehearsal rooms, a recording studio, 37 public restrooms, a restaurant with a kitchen, an atrium with ticket offices and two cloakrooms, and administrative offices. The building contains 419 rooms in total.
At the centre is a monumental, tinted concrete structure housing the Great Concert Hall, accessible via 14 public entrances. The hall combines a traditional stage-auditorium layout with a vineyard-style arrangement, seating the audience around the orchestra for uniform sound distribution. It can accommodate a 120-member orchestra and a 100-member choir. A platform system allows flexible stage configuration. The hall's organ casing houses one of Europe's largest concert organs, completed in September 2022, with over one million parts, 105 stops, and two consoles (a four-manual stationary and a five-manual mobile).
The hall's birch wood balcony railings create a flowing line around the stage and lower levels. Seats in both halls are made of plywood and burl wood veneer, with silver-grey upholstery reflecting the hall's shimmering, undulating walls.
The Great Concert Hall is encircled by an outer building ring, creating an atrium between them. This public passageway is open during the building's operating hours. The interior design reflects Upper Silesian heritage, with the concert hall's graphite-black, rough concrete walls, bearing formwork traces, evoking coal or its seams, contrasting with the white-walled atrium. Minimalist furniture, lamps, and chandeliers enhance the modern aesthetic. Lighting includes 670 points to soften interior elements and 500 spotlights for concert visual effects.
The basement houses storage, prop rooms, workshops, technical facilities, and a 112-car parking garage. 13 staircases (five open) and seven elevators, including accessible ones, facilitate movement, with support systems for the hearing impaired.
The building features acoustics and soundproofing, allowing simultaneous recordings in both halls. Dressing rooms are acoustically tailored to different instrument groups. The Great Concert Hall, a standalone structure within the brick building, is built with thick black concrete walls to block external noise.
Acoustics were developed by Wrocà Âaw-based from the post-competition concept stage, with Yasuhisa Toyota of Nagata Acoustics as the consultant for the Great Concert Hall's fixed acoustics. Toyota, which worked on halls like the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, Calderwood Performance Hall in Boston, and Danish Radio Concert Hall in Copenhagen, was involved due to Krystian Zimerman's advocacy.
Acoustic design utilized computer simulations and a 1:10 scale model built in Aleksandrów à Âódzki, displayed in Katowice in June 2011. Calculations accounted for audience and material impacts with audibility and visibility tests for every seat. Reverberation is managed with curtains, aided by the stage canopy and undulating concrete walls. Sound insulation used 8,000 mò of mineral wool for floors, roofs, and external walls.
The site spans 40,000 mò, with the building positioned in one corner to create distinct functional zones: an entrance square, the building, and a sensory garden with a fountain, sound toys, and an amphitheatre.
The entrance square, named after Wojciech Kilar, features tree clusters and a large elliptical fountain, 9 cm deep with a 65 cm basin, made of Padang Dark granite blocks and slabs, equipped with nozzles and lighting. The eastern square's fountain covers 94.7 mò, with a reinforced concrete basin, pavement tiles, nozzles, and lighting.
Another feature is a plant labyrinth replicating Katowice's 1926 urban layout, using hornbeam saplings suggested by Krzysztof Penderecki. The surrounding park includes about 100 trees â plane trees, Himalayan birches, and wild cherries â with plane trees framing the cherries and birches, the former echoing the facade's brick colour. An Austrian pine grows on the amphitheatre mound. Underground irrigation, fertilization, and aeration system supports the trees, with no shrubs or flowerbeds to maintain a minimalist lawn.