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The center was developed by the Vestar Development Company (who is its owner and operator) and opened on September 28, 2007. [1] The center covers nearly 1,300,000 square feet (120,000 m 2) of retail space on 130 acres (0.53 km 2) of land that was once a landfill considered so toxic it was put on the U.S. E.P.A. Superfund List in 1983. [2]
The College Theatre – built in 1933 and located at 505-509 S. Mill Ave.. The theatre, now named the Valley Art Theatre, is Arizona's oldest and longest operating movie theatre. Designed and constructed by Red Harkins at the age of 25. Listed in the Tempe Historic Property Register.
In 2003, a newer version of the Cine Capri theater opened at the Scottsdale 101 14 multiplex. [19] Harkins Theatres also built Cine Capri auditoriums at its Bricktown 16 (Oklahoma City, OK), Northfield 18 , [20] Southlake 14 (Southlake, TX) and Tempe Marketplace 16 (Tempe, AZ) locations. [21] The Southlake 14 location would close in 2020. [22]
Tempe Marketplace, a large open air mall featuring live music and water and laser shows, is located just southeast of Tempe Town Lake. Tempe can boast an array of wholesalers and manufacturers. Mill Avenue, located just west of Hayden Butte, is a shopping and entertainment area in the city popular with pedestrians and students. With the ...
The Center Stage at the Herberger seats 800, Stage West seats 320 and the Performance Outreach Theater (Kax Stage) seats 120 in a versatile 'black box' space. [5] More than 40 different performances hit the stage annually at the Herberger Theater Center. [1] Every year, the theater hosts 175,000 patrons and 30,000 school children. [2]
Glendale Arizona's Westgate Entertainment District is a 223-acre (0.90 km 2), mixed-used development that was originally proposed to include 8,000,000 square feet (740,000 m 2) of shopping, dining, entertainment, high-end condominiums, parks, and office space.
The Fort Worth Museum of Science and History confirmed Monday that it will proceed with a $21 million overhaul of its shuttered Omni Theater IMAX to convert the dome into an immersive 8K LED venue.
Arizona Science Center, formerly the Arizona Museum of Science & Technology, was conceived in 1980 as a pilot science center by the Junior League of Phoenix. [1] The Science Center opened its doors to the public in 1984 as a small 10,000-square-foot (930 m 2) storefront exhibition space located in the parking garage level of the downtown Phoenix Hyatt.