The studios were built between 1934 and 1940 according to plans by the architects and . The interior was by
Alexander Bodon, who, among other things, designed the seats in the orchestra hall. The smaller studio 1 is located below studio 2, separated by Melkpad street. Studio 1 from 1936 (with an added
gatehouse, coffee room and office wing from 1940) and Studio 2 from 1940 have been protected as
national monuments since 2002. Both studios are connected by an
underground tunnel. The last extension of the studies was carried out from 1968 to 1972 with the so-called TV-Flat and was converted into a medical center, which opened in November 2012. Following the sale by AVRO in 2004, the television production company Blue Circle (the Dutch subsidiary of the media company
FremantleMedia) resided in Studio 2 before moving to Amsterdam. In 2000, AVRO,
KRO and
NCRV moved into new premises, the building. In July 2002, the two studio complexes were registered as
Rijksmonument (No. 522700 and No. 522701) because they are “functional buildings with an expressionist design” and “are exemplary for their construction period”. The AVRO studio complex has been recreated in miniature (scale 1 to 25) in the
miniature city of
Madurodam in
The Hague. ==Concert organ==