Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Kansas City Convention Center, originally Bartle Hall Convention Center or Bartle Hall, is a major convention center in Downtown Kansas City, Missouri, USA. It was named for Harold Roe Bartle , a prominent, two-term mayor of Kansas City in the 1950s and early-1960s.
Sacramento Convention Center; San Diego Convention Center; ... Bartle Hall Convention Center: Kansas City: Missouri: 388,000 sq ft (36,000 m 2) [27]
Convention Hall in a 1908 postcard Convention Hall was a convention center in Kansas City, Missouri that hosted the 1900 Democratic National Convention and 1928 Republican National Convention . Construction, burning, and reconstruction
The San Diego Convention Center is the primary convention center of San Diego, California, United States. It is located in the Marina district in downtown San Diego , near the Gaslamp Quarter . The center is managed by the San Diego Convention Center Corporation, a public-benefit nonprofit corporation created by the City of San Diego.
Seating includes 1,666 pit seats, 6,076 general seats, 4,135 lawn seats, 1,502 premium seats, 432 premium boxes, 410 premium group sales and 786 premium lawn seats. The theater will have about ...
Downtown Kansas City skyline, looking northwest. The list of tallest buildings in Kansas City, Missouri focuses on the boom of higher residential occupancy downtown. The modernization of the skyline includes the Kansas City Power and Light Building, Municipal Auditorium, and the Kansas City Convention Center pylons.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, the entire hall was converted into a homeless shelter. [17] It currently provides over one-third of San Diego's available temporary shelter beds, with over 500 residents. In March 2023, the city announced that Golden Hall would be closed, as the structure was never intended for long term habitation.
Municipal Auditorium was the first building built as part of the "Ten-Year Plan", a bond program that passed by a 4 to 1 margin in 1931. The campaign was run by the Civic Improvement Committee chaired by Conrad H. Mann. Other buildings in the plan included the Kansas City City Hall and the Kansas City branch of the Jackson County Courthouse.