The Sage is a symbol of Newcastle’s regeneration. In different lights, it can look like a chrysalis, a billowing steel cloud for a grounded airship. Inside, its stacked-up balconies suggest the decks of a cruise liner.The Times
Sage Gateshead is a regional music centre of international standing, which fills a ‘gap on the map’ for music venues in the North-East and has helped to consolidate Tyneside’s position as an arts destination. The building forms the heart of an ambitious project to regenerate Gateshead’s river frontage and lies alongside the Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art and the Tyne Bridge with its great arch, which is echoed in the form of the Sage’s roof.
Home to Northern Sinfonia and a base for Folkworks, which promotes folk, jazz and blues performances, The Sage Gateshead provides three auditoria and accommodation for the Regional Music School. The largest of the three main performance spaces is an acoustically state-of-the-art concert hall that can seat up to 1,650 people. The second hall can be arranged to suit folk, jazz and chamber performances and seats up to 400. The third space is both a rehearsal hall for Northern Sinfonia and the focus of the Music School. The school is accessible to children, schools and people of all ages, raising the profile of the region as an innovative provider of musical education.
Each auditorium was conceived as a separate enclosure but the windswept nature of the site suggested a concourse to link them along the riverfront. As a result the entire complex is sheltered beneath a roof that is ‘shrink-wrapped’ around the buildings. Containing cafés, bars, shops and box office, the concourse acts as a foyer for the auditoria and as a common room for the Music School, which is located beneath it. Back-of-house hospitality areas have been kept to a minimum to encourage performers to interact with students during the day and to mix with their audiences in the bars in the evenings. With its informal atmosphere and unrivalled views out across the Tyne, it has become one of the city’s great social spaces.
The Sage should be music to the ears of those who believe that culture has the power to lift a town’s spirits.The Guardian
Ideally proportioned for audience comfort and sound, which allows you to hear the quietest pianissimo and contains, to thrilling effect, the most ear-splitting fortissimo.The Sunday Times
The Sage is undoubtedly a great building. It is one which will be enjoyed by many people and which already contributes significantly to the extraordinary regeneration and reinvention of the Newcastle/Gateshead region.Architecture Today