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  2. International Festival of Arts & Ideas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Festival_of...

    The International Festival of Arts & Ideas is a 15-day festival that takes place in New Haven, Connecticut. The festival presents performing arts, lectures, and conversations that celebrate influential artists and thinkers from around the world. The Festival's free headliner concerts on the New Haven Green attracts thousands of spectators.

  3. Long Wharf Theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_Wharf_Theatre

    Long Wharf Theatre is a nonprofit institution in New Haven, Connecticut, a pioneer in the not-for-profit regional theatre movement, the originator of several prominent plays, and a venue where many internationally known actors have appeared. Founded in 1965, the theatre is committed to the creation of new works and the reexamination of classic ...

  4. Tweed New Haven Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tweed_New_Haven_Airport

    Tweed-New Haven Regional Airport [4] (IATA: HVN, ICAO: KHVN, FAA LID: HVN) is a public airport located three miles southeast of downtown New Haven, in New Haven County, Connecticut, United States. [5] New Haven Airport is partly located in the City of New Haven (which owns the airport) and partly in the Town of East Haven.

  5. List of airports in Connecticut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../List_of_airports_in_Connecticut

    Bradley International Airport: P-M 2,884,843 New Haven: HVN HVN KHVN Tweed-New Haven Airport: P-N 372,000 Reliever airports: Danbury: DXR DXR KDXR Danbury Municipal Airport: R 27 Hartford: HFD HFD KHFD Hartford–Brainard Airport: R 19 Plainville: 4B8 Robertson Field: R 0 General aviation airports: Bridgeport: BDR BDR KBDR Igor I. Sikorsky ...

  6. CT Transit New Haven - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CT_Transit_New_Haven

    CT New Haven [1] is the second largest division of Connecticut Transit, providing service on 24 routes in 19 towns within the Greater New Haven and Lower Naugatuck River Valley areas, with connections to other CT Transit routes in Waterbury and Meriden, as well as connections to systems in Milford and Bridgeport at the Connecticut Post Mall.

  7. Bay Theater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bay_Theater

    The theater opened in 1945 as the Beach Theatre. A year later it became a Fox West Coast theater and was renamed the Bay Theatre. [1] Richard Loderhose purchased the theater in 1975. After removing some of the seats, Loderhose installed a 1928-built Wurlitzer organ that he had purchased in the early 1960s from New York City's Paramount Theater.

  8. Shubert Theatre (New Haven) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shubert_Theatre_(New_Haven)

    Originally opened in 1914 by The Shubert Organization, it was designed by Albert Swazey, a New York architect and built by the H.E. Murdock Construction Company. The theater struggled financially in the 1970's and closed in 1976. The theater building was subsequently acquired by the City of New Haven, and the interior was restored.

  9. Merchants Limited - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merchants_Limited

    The trains departed New York and Boston at 5 PM and made the trip between the two cities in five hours. This schedule would be reduced to 4 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours in 1935, 4 + 1 ⁄ 4 hours in 1940, and finally 4 hours flat in 1949. This proved unsustainable as conditions deteriorated on the New Haven and would be raised to 4 + 1 ⁄ 4 hours in 1956. [1]