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USITT Show to Feature Architecture & Theatre Student Design Competition

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FORT WORTH, TX – The finalists in the USITT 2014 Architecture & Theatre Student Design Competition will present their designs for a college theatre at USITT’s 2014 Annual Conference & Stage Expo, set for the Fort Worth Convention Center here March 26-29. Michigan-based American Seating sponsored the 2014 competition. Additional support came from San Francisco theatre consulting firm the Shalleck Collaborative.

More details from USITT (www.usitt.org)

The finalists in the USITT 2014 Architecture & Theatre Student Design Competition sponsored by American Seating will present their designs for a college theatre at USITT’s 2014 Annual Conference & Stage Expo in Fort Worth.

 The finalists include student teams from Yale University and the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, and European exchange students at Université Laval in Quebec, Canada.

 The competition is meant to challenge teams of architecture and theatre students to collaborate on designing a 400- to 600-seat theatre for their campus.

 USITT, the United States Institute for Theatre Technology, holds the contest to encourage architecture students to explore theatre design. Student teams submit entries to a professional jury of theatre architects and consultants who select three finalists to receive $1,000 awards and present at the USITT Conference.

 One team chosen there will receive the USITT Architecture Commissioner’s Award and an additional $500. The 2014 presentations take place Saturday, March 29.

 One of the finalist teams, called Urban Stages, was composed of two visiting architecture students at Université Laval, from France and Belgium, and two Laval theatre students. The university celebrated their achievement in a front-page story in the college newspaper.

 The other finalists are Skene + Theatron Design, a team of three Yale University architecture students and two Yale School of Drama students, and Performative Landscape, from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, where architecture student Bruno Silva tapped a performance workshop class as his theatre “client.”