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San Diego Convention Center; San Jose Convention Center; ... Alameda County Fairgrounds: Pleasanton: California: 62,600 sq ft (5,820 m 2) 98,080 sq ft (9,112 m 2)
The San Diego Civic Theatre is a performing arts venue in downtown San Diego, California. It opened in 1965. [ 1 ] It is the performing home of the San Diego Opera and hosts other entertainment events such as concerts and musicals.
The Alameda One-Stop Career Center is a collaboration between the California Employment Development Department and the College of Alameda. Located on the College of Alameda campus, the One-Stop provides a variety of free job seeker and employer services, including vocational counseling, a resource library, job fairs, onsite recruitment, and ...
The theater in October 2024 (100th anniversary) The Balboa Theatre is a historic movie and vaudeville theatre in downtown San Diego, California, US.It was built in 1924. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996, the Balboa was refurbished (beginning in 2005) and reopened as a performing arts venue in
The San Diego Convention Center is the primary convention center of San Diego, California, United States. It is located in the Marina district in downtown San Diego , near the Gaslamp Quarter . The center is managed by the San Diego Convention Center Corporation, a public-benefit nonprofit corporation created by the City of San Diego.
The Rady Shell at Jacobs Park is an open-air music venue in San Diego, California. It first opened in 2021, and is operated by the San Diego Symphony on the grounds of Embarcadero Marina Park South, which the symphony leases from the Port of San Diego. [1] The site is located on San Diego Bay in the Marina district of downtown San Diego.
From August 2009 to December 2012, if you bought shares in companies when Donald E. Felsinger joined the board, and sold them when he left, you would have a -9.9 percent return on your investment, compared to a 42.3 percent return from the S&P 500.
The Alameda Theatre is an Art Deco movie theatre built in 1932 in Alameda, California. It opened with a seating capacity of 2,168. It was designed by architect Timothy L. Pflueger and was the last grand movie palace built in the San Francisco Bay Area. It closed in the 1980s as a triplex theatre and was later used as a gymnastics studio.