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Huntington Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island is an outdoor amphitheater located on the human-made peninsula Northerly Island, in Chicago, Illinois. The venue is a temporary structure, with the summer concert season running from May or June until September or October. The amphitheater opened in June 2005.
The construction of the Playhouse (now Dunstan Playhouse), Space Theatre, and Amphitheatre followed. [ citation needed ] The whole complex was completed for A$21 million (By comparison, the Sydney Opera House , completed in 1973, cost A$102 million .). [ 18 ]
Riverbend Music Center is an outdoor amphitheater located in Cincinnati, Ohio, along the banks of the Ohio River.It has a capacity of 20,500 (6,000 reserved pavilion seats and 14,500 general admission lawn) [2] and was built for the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, to allow them to play in an outdoor venue during the summer months.
It contains an indoor concert hall and an outdoor amphitheatre. [2] It is the second indoor/outdoor concert venue in America. Modeled after its predecessor, Express Live! in Columbus, the venue features state-of-the-art lighting, acoustical systems and an innovative reversible stage. Structurally, it is divided into three independent concert ...
The park now includes an outdoor amphitheater, biking and walking trails, and historical monuments. A privately funded children's play area contains an outdoor classroom. Other features of the park are an interactive fountain, a waterfall, and several ponds, masking the park's other function, to serve as drainage for storm water, intended to ...
Caloosa Sound Amphitheater 3,000 Jacksonville: Daily's Place: 5,500 Key West: Coffee Butler Amphitheater 4,000 Miami: FPL Solar Amphitheater at Bayfront Park: 10,000 Miramar: Miramar Regional Park Amphitheater 5,000 New Port Richey: Sims Park Amphitheater 2,000 Orlando: Hollywood Hills Amphitheater – Walt Disney World Resort: 10,000 Panama ...
Focusing on the Shipyards, the plan sought to develop the space into a commercial, residential and leisure complex. Projected renderings saw the demolition of the pavilion tent and constructing a 9,000 seat outdoor amphitheater. [4] When reviewed by the city council, these plans were denied due to concerns over environmental impact.
A Thingspiel (plural Thingspiele) was a kind of multi-disciplinary outdoor theatre performance which enjoyed brief popularity in pre-war Nazi Germany during the 1930s. A Thingplatz or Thingstätte was a specially-constructed outdoor amphitheatre built for such performances. About 400 were planned, but only about 40 were built between 1933 and 1939.