TivoliVredenburg
The TivoliVredenburg is a contemporary music complex located in Utrecht, Netherlands. The venue consists of five halls designed acoustically for a specific music genre. Along with its hall, the venue also features an "amateur stage" and a cafe.
It opened in 2014 as a merger of the former Tivoli Oudegracht and Muziekcentrum Vredenburg. It averages around 1.3 million visitors per year.
Construction
The venue was a part of, an urban redevelopment project for the city of Utrecht. Designer Herman Hertzberger wanted to combine the atmosphere of the Tivoli Oudegracht and Muziekcentrum Vredenburg. Design work began in 2005 with fellow architects Jo Coenen and. All plans were approved by the city in 2010 and the Muziekcentrum Vredenburg was demolished in 2011 to make way for the new music venue, which was originally given the name Muziekpaleis Utrecht. In October 2012, it was announced that the venue would be named TivoliVredenburg, because both Tivoli and Vredenburg were nationally well known names in the pop and classical music worlds, respectively. The decision was unanimously approved by the Muziekpaleis Foundation.The statue "Schele Maagd", formerly located in front of life insurance company De Utrecht's building until it was demolished in 1974, was moved to the roof of TivoliVredenburg.
History and opening
The first event, an art exhibition, took place on 2 April 2014. The first concert was held in the Pandora hall on 5 April 2014 featuring: Adept, Tommy Four Seven, Pfirter and Abstract Division. Official opening ceremonies began on 27 June 2014, with the venue being inaugurated by King Willem-Alexander on 3 July 2014.In June 2015, the venue fixed complaints of sound bleed between the Ronda and Hertz halls with the placement of rubber suspension in the building's support pillars and sound-insulating plates in the Ronda's roof. An investigation was also started into sound bleed between the Cloud Nine and Hertz halls.
After its opening, the venue faced a multi-million dollar budget deficit, caused by higher costs for personnel, production, catering and decreasing subsidies and lower revenues from sponsorship. However, annual visitor numbers were greater than expected. In May 2016, the municipality of Utrecht decided to invest extra in TivoliVredenburg, with an annual rent reduction of €1.9 million and a one-off subsidy of €400,000 to strengthen commercial activities and attract more major artists. This helped the venue become financially stable. For example, in 2024, TivoliVredenburg received €40 million of revenue with an additional €10 million from the municipality.
In March 2020, the venue shut its doors and postponed hundreds of concerts because of the COVID-19 pandemic. It reopened in February 2022, after two years of limited hours and restrictions.
In November 2023, a fatal stabbing took place in TivoliVredenburg. The suspect was a cleaner who killed his coworker after a fight.
Renovations for the Grote Zaal's foyers began in April 2024 after the building raised €102,455 from 1925 donors. The Grote Zaal was given a new entrance on the Vredenburgplein.