Difference between revisions of "Building description manual"

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== 1. 1 Building ==
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= Building =
 
<p>Many different spaces have been used for the performance of theatre, from private rooms to public squares, and from churches to shopping malls, as well as purpose-made and specifically adapted buildings.</p>
 
<p>Many different spaces have been used for the performance of theatre, from private rooms to public squares, and from churches to shopping malls, as well as purpose-made and specifically adapted buildings.</p>
  
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<p>Some buildings have several performance spaces. In this case we make a separate item for a second space and give it the same name as the theatre, with addition of the name of the space. The two items can be connected with the property “is part of”.</p>
 
<p>Some buildings have several performance spaces. In this case we make a separate item for a second space and give it the same name as the theatre, with addition of the name of the space. The two items can be connected with the property “is part of”.</p>
  
== Used properties ==
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= Used properties =
 
   
 
   
  

Revision as of 09:08, 3 August 2023

Building

Many different spaces have been used for the performance of theatre, from private rooms to public squares, and from churches to shopping malls, as well as purpose-made and specifically adapted buildings.

The Canon project focuses on buildings and spaces that are intended (built or adapted) for use as a place of performance. To meet this definition, at least three of the following five criteria must be met:

  1. the name includes a theatre-word such as opera, theatre, playhouse, and so on
  2. it is mentioned in published sources as a theatre (for example, in posters, programmes, books)
  3. there is a defined stage and/or auditorium space
  4. it can accommodate a minimum audience of 200 people
  5. it has a continuous history of performance for a minimum of five years


In the side line, we also gather information of other types of spaces, when they have a meaning for the history of technical theatre.

  • workshops of theatres, when they have an added value, for example paint shops with historic paint frames.
  • Event spaces, used for theatre
  • Cinema’s used for theatre

On the other hand, temporary (open air) spaces, where, for example a medieval play was created or a festival took place are mentioned in the item of the event or performance. They are not considered theatres.

1.1.1 Additional notes

A new item for a rebuild theatre.

Sometimes it is hard to decide if a theatre that is refurbished or rebuild is a new theatre or not. Some examples can help you to make this decision:

  • The theatre is not in the same place, but has the same name. This is clearly a new item. We decide based on the building as an object, not on the name it has. Often buildings are referred to by the name of the company for example.
  • The theatre is in the same place, but has a complete different lay-out after rebuilding from scratch. This is probably a new item, because it would be difficult to describe both in one item.
  • The theatre is adapted, widened or altered, starting from the same building. (the georeferenced stays the same. We consider this as the same building. The elements that are changed are noted with different dates.

One can explain the relation between the different theatres with the property “replaces” and the inverse property “is replaced by”.

Multiple spaces

Some buildings have several performance spaces. In this case we make a separate item for a second space and give it the same name as the theatre, with addition of the name of the space. The two items can be connected with the property “is part of”.

Used properties

If a table with clearly separated values in each column with appropriate Qid is available, it could be uploaded en masse by the site administrator.

Label*

  • The name of the theatre, as used today, with between brackets the city and country code
  • We do not translate the name of a theatre, except if the theatre itself uses names in different languages. (just copy in your language)

Description

  • You can give a short (max 30 words) description of the theatre.
  • The standard phrasing is “theatre building in [city], [country]”.
  • In case of buildings with specific, important properties, these can be added.
  • This will be translated


Also known as

  • This field is used to facilitate searching.
  • When a theatre is known under a nickname, or if it was called differently earlier, you can add an alias


Location in the hierarchy

Field* P19

The [field] for an item describing a building is always “architecture”


Type of information* P11

The [type of information] is always "theatre"

If the theatre also contains a collection, a second entry [type of information] is "collection". In this case also check the chapter about collections)


Importance P20

represents the importance of the item in the whole of history. The essence is not to judge a theatre or it's qualities, but to be able to select relevant theatres for mass visualisations. The importance will by definition an arbitrary indicator.

Levels are:

Qid

Value name
Q504 No importance
Q9 Local importance
Q62 national or regional importance
Q96 international importance
Q97 turning point in history


We can use several elements to decide on the importance:

  • Representative for an era or a change or an idea (role model)
  • Uniqueness, one of a kind
  • Reputation / listing
  • Technological innovative
  • Historic equipment still in place
  • Important events have been taken place there that influence theatre history
  • Full info / research / significant sources available
  • 100 years old

The importance of a theatre can change over time, as more sources become available or new events occur. (This is also the reason that we include theatres of no importance. We can add sources if available. Moreover, on a local level these theatres add to the understanding of evolutions.)

Context P47

• Can be used to give more information about the theatre, the importance, etc. • Text length is limited, if needed add a second value. • Language is mandatory (fill the language of the text.)


General

Type of space P216

It refers to the type of performance the building was designed for. What kind of theatre space it is. Refers to the typology of the space.

  value list Q30810
Q30812 chamber theatre
Q3633 open air theater
Q25488 palace theatre
Q31695 studio theatre space

coronation theatre

opera house

aréna

circus


Existence P215

Refers to the existence of the theatre

  value list Q30810
Permanent
temporary
utopian/ideas/competition
virtual


Theatre space character P277

What nature does it have? Are theatre space and the building that comprises it identical or put differently, does the theatre space occupies the whole structur? if the answer is yes, then it is Q31274 or it is a part of larger complex then it takes one of other values.


  value list Q31308
Q31274 Theatre building space Stucture and theatre identical
Q31276 theatre hall permanent theatre in a builidng that comprises other facilites
Q31307 multipurpose hall Space well eqipped for theatre that is used mainly for other purposes as well
Q31280 outdoor theatre


Preservation state P233

State of Existence of the space So far 9 choices available

 value list Q25454

Binary choice, whether the buidling that contains a theatre exists now?

Q25455 Existing building
Q22993 Extant building


Binary choice, whether it exists today as theatre

Q25456 Exists today as theatre
Q25457 Not existing as theatre today


It may also take other related properties


Q29854 historic equipment
Q31286 stage preserved
Q31287 representative building
Q31286 stage preserved
Q31306 space preserved
Q31305 theatre hall not preserved
historic machinery

Wikidata