The Zacharia Paliashvili
Georgian National Opera and Ballet Theater
|
|
---|---|
საქართველოს სახელმწიფო ოპერის თეატრი |
|
Theater before renovation
|
|
Former names | The Tiflis Imperial Theater |
General information | |
Type | Performance venue |
Architectural style | Moorish Revival |
Address | 25 Shota Rustaveli Ave. |
Town or city | Tbilisi, Georgia |
Named for | Zacharia Paliashvili (1937) |
Groundbreaking | 15 April 1847 |
Completed | 1851 |
Opened | 12 April 1851 |
Inaugurated | 9 November 1851 |
Renovated | 1896; 2016 |
Owner | Municipality of Tbilisi |
Design and construction | |
Architect | Antonio Scudieri (original), Viktor Schröter (rebuild) |
Website | |
opera |
Coordinates: 41°42′4.7″N 44°47′46.2″E / 41.701306°N 44.796167°E
The Georgian National Opera and Ballet Theater of Tbilisi (Georgian: თბილისის ოპერისა და ბალეტის სახელმწიფო აკადემიური თეატრი), formerly known as the Tiflis Imperial Theater, is an opera house situated on Rustaveli Avenue in Tbilisi, Georgia. Founded in 1851, Tbilisi Opera is the main opera house of Georgia and one of the oldest such establishments in eastern Europe.
Since 1896, the theater has resided in an exotic neo-Moorish edifice originally constructed by Victor Johann Gottlieb Schröter, a prominent architect of Baltic German origin. Although definitively Oriental in its decorations and style, the building's layout, foyers and the main hall are that of a typical European opera house. Since its foundation, the theater has been damaged by several fires and underwent major rehabilitation works under Soviet and Georgian leadership; the most recent restoration effort concluded in January 2016, having taken six years and costing approximately 40 million U.S. dollars, donated by a Georgian business foundation.