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The theater on Montgomery Street, built in 1983 as Fort Worth’s only IMAX, abruptly shut down in March 2020 when the pandemic began. The Star-Telegram reported in December that the nonprofit ...
The Mugar Omni is named after Stephen P. Mugar, the founder of Star Market, and his wife Marian G. Mugar. The Mugar Omni is non-profit and opened in 1987. [2] Over 900,000 visitors came in its first year. [3] It is the only domed IMAX theater in New England and is one of only 60 IMAX Theaters in the world to offer 180 degree domed viewing. The ...
Fort Worth Flyover is the name of a short IMAX film created for the Omni Theater at the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History, the first one commissioned by a specific museum. Designed to simulate flying over Fort Worth, Texas in a helicopter, the movie (and later, a 1992 update) is traditionally shown before each Omni Theater feature, in ...
The new Omni Theater will have a 78-foot diameter dome of 8K LED screens that allows for a more realistic interactive experience. The screens lining the dome will be one of a kind to Fort Worth.
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The Science Spectrum is a science and technology museum and aquarium in Lubbock, Texas.It is a 501-C3 nonprofit educational corporation and a member of the Association of Science and Technology Centers.
Omni IMAX at Fort Worth’s Museum of Science & History closed in 2020, but plans for a $20M overhaul will convert it into the world’s largest immersive digital dome in the world.
From the 1920s to the 1950s, the Omni area was a high-end shopping area with many major department stores along Biscayne Boulevard, such as Sears, Roebuck and Company (whose tower still stands at the Arsht Center), a Burdines directly to the north at the southwestern corner of Northeast 14th Street, and a Jordan Marsh at the northeastern corner of Northeast 15th Street built in 1956). [4]