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Tacoma Arts Live is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization located in the historic Theater District (901 Broadway) of downtown Tacoma, Washington. Encompassing the Pantages, Rialto, and Theatre on the Square, Tacoma Arts Live manages the largest complex of theaters between Seattle, Washington and Portland, Oregon .
The latter party declined to renew their contract and through a bidding process, multinational corporation ASM Global was chosen as the new management company. ASM signed a $2.4 million 11-year contract with the City of Tacoma. [19] As of 2024, the Pantages theater is still an active performing arts center for the City of Tacoma.
The tallest building in Tacoma is the 338-foot (103 m) 1201 Pacific (formerly Wells Fargo Plaza). Tacoma is the 3rd largest city in Washington and part of the Seattle metropolitan area; its buildings rank below those in Seattle and Bellevue. The city has two buildings that are over 240 feet (73 m) in height. [1]
The center offers youth, mental health, business-and-community and cultural programs. Tacoma center serves 2,000 people daily. It’s moved while building new $18.5M facility
This neighborhood is suddenly a new center for glass art in Tacoma. Craig Sailor. June 19, 2024 at 5:00 AM. ... Tacoma Glass Gallery and Fusing Studio. 2621 N. Proctor St., Tacoma.
Tacoma Town Center’s Building 2, 409 S. 23rd St., includes Jefferson Yards Apartments and ground-floor commercial spaces. It was completed in March 2021.
The Blue Mouse Theatre (1923) (originally known as Blue Mouse Jr.) is a small second-run movie theater located in the Proctor District in the north end of Tacoma, Washington. It is Washington's oldest continuously operating theater (a few blocks from the state's oldest bowling center), [1] [3] opened November 13, 1923. [1]
A Tacoma Link car passing the east façade of the convention center, on Commerce Street. The Greater Tacoma Convention Center, is a convention center in downtown Tacoma, in the U.S. state of Washington. It opened in November 2004 [1] and has been described as the "second largest meeting and event facility in Western Washington". [2]