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In March 2010, the venue removed its corporate prefix ("Verizon Wireless") for the first time in its 14-year history, to be known simply as "Virginia Beach Amphitheater". [3] In February 2011, the amphitheater was renamed "Farm Bureau Live at Virginia Beach", with naming rights coming from Virginia Farm Bureau Insurance. [ 4 ]
The Sandler Center for the Performing Arts is a $47.5 million [1] performing arts theater with 1,308 seats located in Virginia Beach, Virginia, United States in Town Center. Commonly known as the Sandler Center, the building opened on November 3, 2007. [2] It has been operated by Spectra Venue Management since its opening.
Indiana, Louisa, Michigan, New York, and Ohio Aves., Middle, Roselynn, and West Lns., Oceana, Southern, and Virginia Beach Boulevards 36°50′28″N 76°00′54″W / 36.841111°N 76.015000°W / 36.841111; -76.015000 ( Oceana Neighborhood Historic
Gray Gables was an estate in Bourne, Massachusetts, owned by President Grover Cleveland that served as his Summer White House from 1893 to 1896. It was later converted into the Gray Gables Ocean House hotel, which was destroyed in a fire in 1973.
Virginia Beach Convention Center; Address: 1000 19th Street, Virginia Beach, VA 23451: Location: Virginia Beach, Virginia: Owner: City of Virginia Beach: Operator: Virginia Beach Convention and Visitors Bureau: Architect: Skidmore, Owings and Merrill: Opened: July 2005 (Phase One) January 2007 (Phase Two)
The developer contended that many major events currently bypass Hampton Roads because existing indoor venues, with lower seating capacities, are too small and lack the necessary staging capabilities for large-scale performances. The proposed Virginia Beach Arena would have been the largest in Virginia capable of staging these events.
Since November 2006, it serves as the home to the Virginia Cavaliers men's and women's basketball teams, as well as for concerts and other events. With seating for 14,623 fans (nearly twice the capacity of its predecessor, University Hall ) John Paul Jones Arena is the largest indoor arena in Virginia and the biggest Atlantic Coast Conference ...
The original venue opened in 1922 [5] as a 2,000-seat motion picture and live entertainment theater. It continued as a movie theater into the 1970s. The building served as home to the Downtown Athletic Club from 1980 until 1998. [6] The NorVa reopened as a concert venue on April 28, 2000, with James Brown performing the inaugural show. [7]