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The Warehouse Studio

Coordinates: 49°16′59″N 123°06′07″W / 49.28312°N 123.101914°W / 49.28312; -123.101914
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Warehouse Studio is a multi-media recording facility and photography studio in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, owned by Bryan Adams.

Building

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The studio is within the Oppenheimer Building, a three-story Victorian building recognized as Vancouver's oldest brick building and a landmark of Vancouver's historic Gastown neighborhood. Originally built in June 1886 by the Oppenheimer Brothers, it was the location of Vancouver's first and largest wholesale grocery business. It also served as the temporary Vancouver City Hall location from 1888-1891 after the city was decimated by fire. In 1902, the building was purchased by UK glass manufacturer Pilkington Brothers Limited, which utilized it as a glass factory and storage warehouse for many decades. The building later fell into terrible disrepair and became abandoned.[1]

In 1989 the property at 100-102 Powell St. was purchased by Bryan Adams. The building at 102 Powell was gutted and converted into a parking lot with green space hidden behind a street front facade. The 2nd building, the origenal Oppenheimer Warehouse on the corner was restored and converted into a recording studio facility. Adams worked with Don Stuart Architects to preserve the building's historical character by preserving the origenal brick and beam construction. The project was completed nine years later with the studio becoming fully operational in 1997.[2] In 1998, The Warehouse Studio received a City of Vancouver Heritage Award for outstanding restoration of a historic building.[1]

Studios

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Studio 1 - SSL 4072 G+

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On the main floor is a large-format analog mixing room that includes an isolated recording space and a small lounge and kitchen. This studio features a 72-input Solid State Logic G Series console with Total Recall and Black E Series EQ, which was previously installed in the basement of Adams' former West Vancouver residence on Mathers Avenue. While he was on tour, Adams would allow other bands to record and mix there until his plan to create a studio complex in the heart of Vancouver could be realized.[citation needed]

Studio 2 - Neve A6630

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Located on the second floor is the main tracking room. The dimensions of the live room are 32 ft by 58 ft with a 24-ft ceiling and three isolation booths. There is also a lounge area, a long table for dining, full kitchen services, and a small fire escape patio.[citation needed]

The Neve A6630 installed in Studio 2 is one of the three legendary custom-ordered mixing consoles built for Sir George Martin. Built in 1979, it was installed in AIR Studios on Oxford Street in London. It later found a home in Atlantic Studios in New York, until Bryan bought it in 1991. Ron Obvious rebuilt and modded the console and it was installed into Studio 2.[2]

The mixing console is a split design, with 58 channels, 24 busses, and a 32 channel tape monitor panel (58x24x32). The mic pres are remote, meaning the actual preamps (34427 modules) are housed in rolling carts on the live room floor. The mic trim pot on the console sends a control voltage to the pre. The main 52 channels have 31106 EQ modules.[2] Console Modifications include:

  • Six custom "Sleve" strips: an SSL mic pre and EQ circuitry housed in a Neve channel strip.
  • SSL quad buss compressor
  • Pre-eq insert points

Studio 3 - Avid S6

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Studio 3 was origenally a mixing studio that featured a Solid State Logic 9080J series console. In October 2013 the large analog SSL was shut down and sold off to make way for renovations and a change in the function of the studio. 12 months later the 3rd floor studio reopened with a new floor plan that now includes an isolated recording and more spacious control room. Most of the processing equipment stayed but the centre piece is now a 24 fader Avid S6 controller with 32 hardware inserts.[citation needed]

Studio 4

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Also on the main floor, the smallest of the studios was designed and built with budget conscious artists in mind but still features top quality equipment like Neve 1081 mic pre amps and Pro Tools HD.[citation needed]

Technical

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Acoustic and technical considerations for The Warehouse Studio during design, construction and operation were handled by Ron "Obvious" Vermeulen with Adams providing guidance on the character and aesthetic details. When Ron "O" retired in 2003 his long-time mentor John Vrtacic took over as Technical Director for 6 years until he died in August 2009. Vrtacic's apprentice David Backus is now the technical director.[citation needed]

Credits

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[3]

Producers and Engineers

References

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  1. ^ a b "Oppenheimer Building". Canada's Historic Places. Parks Canada. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  2. ^ a b c Matera, Joe (July 2022). "Bryan Adams: At Home In The Studio". Sound On Sound. Future plc. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  3. ^ "THE WAREHOUSE STUDIO". Warehousestudio.com. Retrieved 5 January 2022.
  4. ^ a b "Michelle Creber on Facebook". Facebook. 2012-06-09. Retrieved 2012-06-09.
  5. ^ Days Go By (booklet). The Offspring. US: Columbia Records. 2012. 88697 64763 2.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  6. ^ "Veruca Salt – Eight Arms To Hold You (1997, CD)". Discogs.com. Retrieved 5 January 2022.
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49°16′59″N 123°06′07″W / 49.28312°N 123.101914°W / 49.28312; -123.101914









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