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The arena is also used for trade shows and conventions (33,800 sq ft [3,140 m 2]) of exhibit space plus 5,000 sq ft (460 m 2) of meeting space). On November 14, 2008, the arena hosted the Mississippi State Bulldogs club hockey team in a game against the Loyola University New Orleans club in the arena's first venture into ice hockey since the T ...
The Cadence Bank Amphitheatre (originally known as North Fulton Park Amphitheatre and formerly Chastain Park Amphitheater) is an outdoor amphitheatre within historic Chastain Park in Atlanta, Georgia. The venue, designed by Nelson Brackin, opened in 1944 and is decreed "Atlanta’s Oldest Outdoor Music Venue".
The Cadence Bank Center is a 6,559-seat multi-purpose arena, in Belton, Texas. It was formerly the home of the Texas Bullets , the CenTex Barracudas , the Central Texas Stampede and the Central Texas Blackhawks (and later Central Texas Marshalls). The arena opened in 1987.
Lawn and seating 5,000 LifeAustin Amphitheatre 1,500 Beaumont: Ford Pavilion [13] Square enclosure facing 6,300 seats under cover and 8,000 lawn seats 14,300 College Station: Wolf Pen Creek Amphitheater 7,000 Corpus Christi: Concrete Street Amphitheatre 3,000 Dallas: Dos Equis Pavilion: 20,000 Houston: Miller Outdoor Theatre: Covered 6,200 New ...
The amphitheatre seats 18,920 [1] (7,000 seated; 12,000 on the lawn). It was designed to offer a state-of-the-art musical experience for both music fans and artists. The venue was built specifically for popular music.
In 2002, following Firstar's merger with U.S. Bank, the arena took on the name U.S. Bank Arena and kept that name until 2019. The arena seats 17,556 people and is the largest indoor arena in the Greater Cincinnati region with 346,100 square feet (32,150 m 2) of space. The arena underwent a $14 million renovation project in 1997.
The 53,000 square feet (4,900 m 2) theater consists of two tiers.The floor area is flat, unlike similar venues, such as the Tabernacle, that slope upward.Upstairs is a permanent seating area that consists of 800 seats.
With a seating capacity of up to 14,000 for concerts, [3] CFG Bank Arena is owned by the City of Baltimore and managed by the Oak View Group, a global sports and entertainment company. [3] The venue officially opened on October 23, 1962, as the Baltimore Civic Center. [4]