The Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center
is a concert hall located in the Arts District of downtown Dallas, Texas (USA). It was designed by architect I.M. Pei and acoustician Russell Johnson's Artec Consultants, Inc. and opened in September of 1989.
The Center is named for Morton Meyerson, arts patron and business partner of Ross Perot, who provided $10 million in funds for its construction. It is the permanent home of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra and the Dallas Symphony Chorus, as well as the primary performing venue of the Dallas Wind Symphony as well as several other Dallas based musical organizations. The Meyerson Symphony Center is owned and managed by the City of Dallas Office of Cultural Affairs.
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MEYERSON SYMPHONY CENTER TICKETS
| EVENT | DATE | AVAILABILITY |
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| Ben Rector Tickets 6/11 | Jun 11, 2026 Thu, 7:30 PM |  | | Ben Rector Tickets 6/12 | Jun 12, 2026 Fri, 7:30 PM |  | | Dallas Symphony Orchestra: Jeff Tyzik & Paul Loren - Icons of the Strip: Sinatra & The Rat Pack Tickets 6/19 | Jun 19, 2026 Fri, 7:30 PM |  | | Dallas Symphony Orchestra: Jeff Tyzik & Paul Loren - Icons of the Strip: Sinatra & The Rat Pack Tickets 6/20 | Jun 20, 2026 Sat, 7:30 PM |  | | Dallas Symphony Orchestra: Jeff Tyzik & Paul Loren - Icons of the Strip: Sinatra & The Rat Pack Tickets 6/21 | Jun 21, 2026 Sun, 2:00 PM |  |
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Design
The exterior of the large pavilion and lobby is circular and constructed of glass and metal supports to contrast with the solid geometric lines of the actual hall. The concert hall, designed by Russell Johnson's firm, Artec Acoustic Consultants, is in the standard
shoebox style and seats 2,062. Acoustical canopies above the hall can be raised or lowered to reshape the auricular properties of the hall.
The Meyerson Symphony Center also is home to the C.B. Fisk Opus 100 organ, known as the Lay Family Concert Organ. While it had been Charles Fisk's dream to build a monumental concert organ (the firm unsuccessfully bid on the contract for San Francisco's Davies Hall), and despite years of planning and design, he never lived to see it built, dying in 1983. The resulting instrument, nearly unanimously hailed as a musical triumph, while building on some of his ideas, was quite different from his original designs.
The shoebox design of the main concert hall was designed to achieve acoustics performance comparable to that of the
Vienna Musikverein and the Amsterdam
Concertgebouw.
[1] [2]
The Center's basic statistics
The Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center has:
· above ground space
· below ground space
· of concrete
· of Italian travertine marble
· 22,000 pieces of Indiana limestone
· 4,535 organ pipes
· 2,062 seats
· 918 square panels of African (Makore) cherrywood
· 216 square panels of American cherrywood
· 211 glass panels (no two alike) comprising the conoid windows
· high ceiling in the concert hall
· 74 concrete reverberation chamber doors, each weighing as much as 2.5 tons
· 56 acoustical curtains
· 50 restrooms
· 4 private suites for meetings, banquets, and recitals
See also
- List of major concert halls
- List of buildings and structures in Dallas, Texas
References
- "The Acoustics of Dallas's New Concert Hall"
- "Concert Hall Acoustics and the Computer"