Busan Opera House
A New Cultural Horizon

2012–2026

Architecture, Landscape Architecture, Interior Architecture

Introduction

Following an international design competition, Snøhetta was commissioned in 2012 to design the Busan Opera House. Conceived as a shift away from the opera as an exclusive institution, the project reimagines performance architecture as an open, interactive, and democratic space—one that invites collective experience and everyday use. As the first opera house in South Korea’s second-largest city, the project is set to become a defining cultural landmark, extending its relevance far beyond the stage.

Construction has advanced rapidly in recent months. ​ With the primary structure and façade framework now in place, the focus has shifted to façade installation, interior works, and landscaping. The major construction is set to be completed in late 2026 and open in 2027.

Technical details

Typologies
Destination, Performance Space, Public Space
Status
Under Construction
Location
Busan
Client

Busan Metropolitan City Government

Collaborators

Ilshin Architects

Size
48,000 m2

StudioSZ Photo | Justin Szeremeta

Located on reclaimed land along Busan’s North Port waterfront, the new opera house converts a historically industrial area into a lively and inclusive public realm. The inviting building announces a new chapter in contemporary architecture in South Korea, reflecting values of openness, accessibility, and civic generosity. With a soft wrapping, a publicly accessible rooftop and entrances from both the park and seaside, the Opera House establish a continuous architectural gesture that welcomes the city in. At a scale of 48,000 square meters, the Busan Opera House will host an 1,800-seat grand auditorium, a 300-seat multipurpose theater, rehearsal spaces, and public plazas.

The geometry of the Busan Opera House is defined by two opposing, continuous curves. The lower, arching plane anchors the building to the ground, bridging the site and connecting city to sea. Above it, a second surface opens upward, embracing the sky. The opera house emerges within the tension and dialogue between these two planes—where earth meets sky, and mountains meet water.

The four corners of the building extend toward the sea, physically and visually linking the city to its maritime edge. Two opposing corners are lifted to create distinct entrances: one from the urban side and one from the waterfront. These entry points are connected by a fluid public promenade that wraps around the building and extends into the surrounding plaza. The upper plane is lifted on the opposite diagonal to accommodate the programmatic volume and to create an exterior plane that both arches down to the city and the sea at the same time as it peels upwards to meet the sea and the sky.

At ground level, the opera house is conceived as an open and permeable civic space. The main foyer wraps around two sides of the building, orienting the interior toward the sea and blurring the boundary between inside and out. This level houses the primary front-of-house functions, including the main foyer, restaurant, and public access to the parterre.

At the heart of the building, the opera hall is designed as a finely tuned musical instrument. Its form is meticulously engineered to support world-class operatic acoustics, with solid cherry wood panels shaping the interior and enhancing resonance, warmth, and sonic clarity.

Gently sloping visitors are lead through an oculus to a second public realm atop the building, returning the footprint of the opera house to the city through a walkable rooftop landscape. Designed as a plane of reflection and contemplation, the rooftop is a stark contrast to the bustle of the ground. Open and accessible to all, the roof level enjoys unrivalled views to the mountains and ocean.

A soft, flowing skin spans the two public planes while also enveloping the public functions. This flowing envelope mediates between transparency and protection, visually and spatially linking the two public levels in a single, uninterrupted movement—an architectural expression of openness, continuity, and civic life.

Snøhetta and Tegmark

Snøhetta and Tegmark

Snøhetta and Tegmark

Snøhetta and Tegmark

Snøhetta and MIR

Snøhetta and Tegmark