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The O2 Academy may refer to one of a number of Academy Music Group venues in the United Kingdom (in alphabetical order): O2 Academy Birmingham; O2 Academy Bournemouth;
Like the former Academy venue, the new venue has a multi-room operation with the main room having a capacity of 3,009 (of which there is a dedicated 600 capacity seated area) and two other rooms, the O 2 Academy 2 with 600 and O 2 Academy 3 with 250. However, in an improvement to the Dale End site, the new venue was designed to allow all three ...
O 2 Academy Bournemouth is a live entertainment venue in Bournemouth, Dorset, England. It is a grade-II listed building. It is a grade-II listed building. The building at 568–578 Christchurch Road, Bournemouth, was opened as a theatre on 27 May 1895, named the Grand Pavilion Theatre.
The O 2 Academy Liverpool (formerly the L2 and Carling Academy Liverpool) is a music venue in Hotham Street, Liverpool, England, that is run by the Academy Music Group. The main building consists of performance areas. O 2 Academy1 can hold 1,200 (900 floor/300 balcony) people while O 2 Academy2 can hold 500.
O 2 Academy. The O 2 Academy Islington, formerly known as the Carling Academy Islington, is an indoor music venue situated in the N1 Shopping Centre accessible via Upper Street and Liverpool Road, in the London Borough of Islington. It is run by the Academy Music Group. The main venue has a capacity of 800, and the adjacent O 2 Academy 2 holds ...
Brixton Academy (originally known as the Astoria Variety Cinema, previously known as Carling Academy Brixton, currently named O 2 Academy Brixton as part of a sponsorship deal with the O 2 brand) is a mid-sized concert venue located in South London, in the Lambeth district of Brixton.
The O2 Academy Oxford is a night club and live music venue in Oxford, England, operated by Academy Music Group. [ 1 ] Its previous names include the Coop Hall, the Oxford Venue, the Zodiac and the Carling Academy Oxford.
The venue for the Leeds Academy on Cookridge Street in the city was originally opened in 1885 by Prince Albert [3] and is a grade II listed Gothic building. [4] [5] In the nineteenth century there was a legal dispute with the Sunday Lecture Society that met here as they were accused of disturbing the sabbath.