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Pine Bluff Transit is the primary provider of mass transportation in Pine Bluff, Arkansas with eight routes serving the region. As of 2019, the system provided 60,572 rides over 16,038 annual vehicle revenue hours with 4 buses and 2 paratransit vehicles.
Pine Bluff is the largest city in a three-county MSA as defined by the U.S. Census Bureau including Jefferson, Cleveland, and Lincoln counties. The Pine Bluff MSA population in 2000 was 107,341 people. The Pine Bluff MSA population in 2007 dropped to 101,484. Pine Bluff was the fastest-declining Arkansas MSA from 2000 to 2007.
An 8,500-seat multi-purpose arena featuring 22,984 square feet (2,135.3 m 2) of space and a 40-foot (12 m) ceiling height.The arena hosts local concerts and sporting events, including boxing, basketball, auto racing, wrestling, and rodeos, as well as conventions, trade shows, circuses, dances and banquets for the area.
The Arts and Science Center for Southeast Arkansas is a 22,000-square-foot (2,000 m 2) art and science museum located at 701 Main Street in Pine Bluff, Arkansas.It includes four galleries, a 232-seat theatre, classroom space, administrative offices, vault and adequate preparatory and conservation space for the Center's current programming efforts.
Missouri’s game against Arkansas-Pine Bluff will begin at 4 p.m. Sunday at Mizzou Arena. Tickets for the game in Columbia are currently available on StubHub for as low as $1.
The first section of the casino, the 15,000-square-foot (1,400 m 2) Saracen Casino Annex and Q-Store, opened in September 2019, and contains 300 slot machines. [4]A second section, the 200,000-square-foot (19,000 m 2) Saracen Casino Resort, opened across the street in 2020, and is built on a former soybean field.
Oceans Calling will have big names descending on Ocean City. Last year’s inaugural edition of Oceans Calling (after a planned 2022 launch was rained out) drew an estimated 55,000 music fans per day.
The University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff was authorized in 1873 by the Reconstruction-era legislature as the Branch Normal College and opened in 1875 with Joseph Carter Corbin principal. A historically black college, it was nominally part of the "normal" (education) department of Arkansas Industrial University, later the University of Arkansas.