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Harris Theater (Pittsburgh) (current) Harry Williams' Academy of Music; Hartwood Theatre on the Green; Hazlett Theater (also known as Allegheny Theater within the Carnegie Free Library of Allegheny)
The Northeast Texas Rural Heritage Center and Museum is a museum in Pittsburg, Texas. It consists of two separate facilities, the Depot Museum and the Farmstead Museum. [1] [2] The Depot Museum is located in a former Cotton Belt railroad depot that was built in 1901.
The Manchester Craftsmen's Guild at 1815 Metropolitan St. in Pittsburgh. The organization was conceived by Bill Strickland. In 1987, he expanded MCG with a $7.5 million capital campaign to construct a 62,000-square-foot (5,800 m 2) vocational education and arts center. It includes a 350-seat concert hall, an art gallery, classrooms, and workshops.
The Benedum Center for the Performing Arts (formerly the Stanley Theatre) is a theater and concert hall located at 237 7th Street in the Cultural District of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Designed by the Philadelphia architectural firm Hoffman-Henon , it was built in 1928 as the Stanley Theatre.
3901 Butler Street Lawrenceville 2001 Art Institute of Pittsburgh (formerly the Equitable Gas Company Building) 1924–25 J. F. Kuntz 420 Boulevard of the Allies Downtown 1995 Arthurs-Johnson House: 1873 6925 Ohio River Boulevard Ben Avon 1981 Aspinwall: 1893 (incorporated)
The Byham Theater, a landmark building at 101 Sixth Street in Downtown Pittsburgh, was the second major theater venue restoration project of the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust. Built in 1903, the then called Gayety Theater was a stage and Vaudeville house, and it featured stars such as Ethel Barrymore, Gertrude Lawrence, and Helen Hayes. It was ...
Heinz Hall is a performing arts center and concert hall located at 600 Penn Avenue in the Cultural District of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.Home to the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra (PSO) and the Pittsburgh Youth Symphony Orchestra, the 2,676 seat hall presents about 200 performances each year.
Built as Art Cinema, it was the first Pittsburgh venue to show only "art movies". During the 1960s, it featured pornographic films at a time when Liberty Avenue was a red-light district . The Pittsburgh Cultural Trust purchased and refurbished the theater as part of its plan for the Cultural District.