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Local band Doc Robinson to launch tour with Columbus 'hometown party' on Oct. 4. Tickets start at $41.50 and can be purchased at the CBUSArts ticket center at the Ohio Theatre, 39 E. State St., by ...
Spring Street (IND Eighth Avenue Line) at Sixth Avenue; serving the A, C, and E trains, New York City; Spring Street (IRT Lexington Avenue Line) at Lafayette Street; serving the 4, 6, and <6> trains, New York City; Spring Street (San Diego Trolley station), California
The Great Southern Hotel & Theatre is an historic hotel and theater building in Downtown Columbus, Ohio. The building currently operates as the Westin Great Southern Columbus and the Southern Theatre. It opened on September 21, 1896 and is the oldest surviving theater in Central Ohio and one of the oldest in the state of Ohio.
The hall seats 2,000 and most of the original decor is intact. It is one of the many music venues on High Street in Columbus, and the oldest continually running venue. In the past, they have had indoor and outdoor events. Tickets are sold at the Newport box office (open at noon on show days).
The William Green Building is a 530-foot (160 m), 33-floor skyscraper [2] in Columbus, Ohio, United States. It was constructed from 1987 to 1990, and was topped out on June 8, 1988. It is the third-tallest building in Columbus, the tallest constructed in 1990s and the eighth-tallest building in Ohio. [2]
Outside of Columbus, CAPA managed the historic Chicago Theatre from 1998 to 2003, [2] and took over operations of the Shubert Theatre in New Haven, Connecticut in 2001. [ 3 ] CAPA was responsible for overseeing the 2009 $13.5 million renovation of the Lincoln Theatre in Columbus's historic King-Lincoln neighborhood.
The South High Commercial Historic District is a historic district on High Street in Downtown Columbus, Ohio. The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983 and the Columbus Register of Historic Properties in 1987. [1] The district includes 11 contributing commercial buildings, spanning two city blocks.
Businessman and former New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner, an Ohio native who studied at Ohio State at one point and who coached in Columbus, was a big Ohio State football fan and donor to the university, having contributed for the construction of the band facility at the renovated Ohio Stadium, which bears his family's name. [27]