In 1970, American actor and director
Sam Wanamaker founded the Shakespeare Globe Trust and the International Shakespeare Globe Centre, with the objective of building a faithful recreation of Shakespeare's Globe close to its original location at
Bankside, Southwark. This inspired the founding of a number of
Shakespeare's Globe Centres around the world, an activity in which Wanamaker also participated. Many people maintained that a faithful Globe reconstruction was impossible to achieve due to the complications in the 16th-century design and modern fire safety requirements; however, Wanamaker and his associate
Diana Devlin persevered in their vision for over 20 years to create the theatre. A new Globe theatre was eventually built according to a design based on the research of historical adviser
John Orrell. It was Wanamaker's wish that the new building recreate the Globe as it existed during most of Shakespeare's time there; that is, the 1599 building rather than its 1614 replacement. A study was made of what was known of the construction of
The Theatre, the building from which the 1599 Globe obtained much of its timber, as a starting point for the modern building's design. To this were added: examinations of other surviving London buildings from the latter part of the 16th century; comparisons with other theatres of the period (particularly the
Fortune Playhouse, for which the building contract survives); and contemporary drawings and descriptions of the first Globe. For practical reasons, some features of the 1614 rebuilding were incorporated into the modern design, such as the external staircases. The design team consisted of architect
Theo Crosby of
Pentagram, structural and services engineer
Buro Happold, and quantity surveyors from Boyden & Co. The construction, building research and historic design details were undertaken by McCurdy & Co. In 1994, the name "Globe Theatre" was used by one of the theatres in
Shaftesbury Avenue; to make the name available and to avoid confusion, that year it was renamed as the
Gielgud Theatre. The theatre opened in 1997 under the name "Shakespeare's Globe Theatre", and has staged plays every summer. The Globe Theatre, Panorama Innenraum, London.jpg Shakespeare's Globe Theatre - panoramio (1).jpg Shakespeare's Globe (39593823381).jpg Shakespeare's Globe Theatre - panoramio (2).jpg Shakespeare's Globe (27816935889).jpg ==Personnel==