Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Cox Business Convention Center (CBCC) was originally named Tulsa Assembly Center. It was later renamed Maxwell Convention Center after former mayor James L. Maxwell. [1] In February 2013, Cox Communications acquired the naming rights to the facility and renamed it the Cox Business Center. [1] In 2020, "Convention" was added to the name. [2]
It would retain this status for 30 years until the opening of the Ford Center (now the Paycom Center) in 2002 directly across the street. As the Cox Convention Center, the facility received another upgrade, budgeted at $4.5 million, to accommodate the Edmonton Oilers' top farm team, the Oklahoma City Barons, which began play in the 2010–11 ...
The site of the new arena has not been chosen, but one possible location is already owned by the city. It is the current site of Prairie Surf Studios (formerly Cox Convention Center and Myriad Convention Center), and it is located across the street from the current arena. In December 2023 the city notified Prairie Surf Studios that its lease ...
The Myriad Convention Center was really just a 13,500-seat arena opened in 1971. It had no restaurants and no suites. The Myriad did come with a leaking roof and a design that was flawed from the ...
Oklahoma City is preparing to tear down the former Cox Convention Center to make way for construction of a $1 billion arena.
The Grand Concourse of McCormick Place in Chicago, Illinois The Orange County Convention Center in Orlando, Florida The New Orleans Morial Convention Center in New Orleans, Louisiana The Anaheim Convention Center in Anaheim, California. This is a list of convention centers in the United States by state or insular area.
Cox Center may refer to: Cox Business Convention Center, multi-purpose arena in Tulsa, Oklahoma; Cox Convention Center, former name of Prairie Surf Studios, multi-purpose arena in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; Frederick K. Cox International Law Center, research center at Case Western Reserve University School of Law
From left: Alan Ruck, Brian Cox, Jeremy Strong, Sarah Snook and Nicholas Braun at the season 4 premiere of "Succession" held at Jazz at Lincoln Center on March 20, 2023 in New York City