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Brooklyn Expo Center; Buffalo Niagara Convention Center ; The Dome Center ; Empire Expo Center ; Jacob K. Javits Convention Center ; Joseph A. Floreano Rochester Riverside Convention Center ; Madison Square Garden (Manhattan) Madison Square Garden (1890) (demolished) (Manhattan)
The Minneapolis Convention Center is a large convention center located in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota that opened in 1990. [1] It is located one block away from Nicollet Mall near Orchestra Hall. The Minneapolis Convention Center has a quadruple-domed roof and because of its volume can host multiple events on the same day.
Anaheim Convention Center Arena 7,500 2012 Performing Arts Center: Arcadia: 1,163 2003 The Clark Center for the Performing Arts-Forbes Hall Arroyo Grande: 617 1962 Mechanics Bank Theater: Bakersfield: 3,000 2007 Spectrum Amphitheatre: 4,000 October 1, 1998 Mechanics Bank Arena: 10,400 unknown Icardo Center: 3,500 December 25, 1930 Fox Theater ...
The Buffalo Convention Center (formerly Buffalo Niagara Convention Center) [2] is a convention center in downtown Buffalo, New York. Opened in 1978 at 64,410 square feet, the convention center underwent an expansion in 2010. [3] The center holds events such as job fairs, food events, comic cons, and the World's Largest Disco.
This is a list of seating capacities for sports and entertainment arenas in the United States with at least 1,000 seats. The list is composed mostly of arenas that house sports teams (basketball, ice hockey, arena soccer and arena football) and serve as indoor venues for concerts and expositions.
The club has also become an important venue for national and international touring acts. Japanese indie-rock band Shonen Knife played its 1,000th show at the Turf Club. [2] The Turf Club was sold to the owners of First Avenue in late 2013. The venue has a capacity of about 350. [3]
Simpson's final show was on August 4, 2001. ... Minneapolis: Target Center: August 1, 2001 ... Buffalo, New York Buffalo Niagara Convention Center
It was the home arena of the Minneapolis Lakers of the NBA (now the Los Angeles Lakers) during the 1959–1960 season and part-time home from 1947 through 1959. The armory held 8,000 people for basketball [5]. Later used as a parking facility, the armory underwent renovations and was turned into an 8,400-person events center and concert venue. [6]