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740 Water St SW, Washington, DC 20024: Location: ... Capacity: 450 [2 ... piers, as well as other music venues (including The Anthem and Pearl Street Warehouse). ...
The Wharf features multiple live music venues, including The Anthem, a 6,000-seat concert hall, [25] as well as the club venues Union Stage and Pearl Street Warehouse. [26] The waterfront also features year-round street performers and musical acts that perform on a floating barge stage. [27]
The 57,000-square-foot venue, which cost $60 million , has a movable stage and backdrop that allows capacity to vary from 2,500 to 6,000. [3] [1] Balconies are closer to the stage than most venues. [3] The venue is operated by I.M.P., which also manages Washington's 9:30 Club and Lincoln Theatre and Maryland's Merriweather Post Pavilion. [1]
The club opened on May 31, 1980, on the ground floor rear room of the Atlantic Building at 930 F Street NW, in Downtown Washington, D.C. [4] with a legal standing capacity of 199. [ 2 ] [ 5 ] In 1996, the club moved to a larger location at its current location at 815 V Street NW, [ 2 ] [ 4 ] where it anchors the eastern end of the U Street ...
U Street: 2008 150 Sitar Arts Center Adams Morgan: 2001 0 Studio 1469 Columbia Heights: Studio Theatre: Mead Theater 4th Street: 1978 218 Studio Theatre Metheny Theater 4th Street: 1978 200 Studio Theatre Milton Theater 4th Street: 1978 187 Studio Theatre Stage 4 4th Street: 1978 120 Warner Theatre: Penn Quarter: 1992 (built 1924) 1847
The D.C. Armory is an armory and a 10,000-seat multi-purpose arena in the eastern United States, located in Washington, D.C., east of the U.S. Capitol building. Managed by the Washington Convention and Sports Authority, the Armory was constructed [3] and opened in 1941, as the headquarters, [4] armory, and training facility [3] for the District of Columbia National Guard.
The project, near the intersection of East South Street and Monocacy Boulevard, will have two one-story buildings with 192,975 square feet of office and warehouse space.
As of 2015, Washington had over 6,200 registered taxis, [6] making it the third-largest concentration of taxis in the United States, after New York City and Chicago. Regardless of company operating the taxi service, all taxis operating in the city share a uniform design, as mandated by the DC Taxicab Commission.