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Wolverhampton Civic Centre is a municipal building in the City of Wolverhampton, West Midlands, England. The building houses a council chamber for City of Wolverhampton Council . History
The council meets and has its main offices at Wolverhampton Civic Centre, in St Peter's Square in the city centre. [39] The building was purpose-built for the council and opened in 1979. [40] [41] Prior to 1979 the council had met at the Town Hall on North Street, which had been completed in 1871 for the old borough council. [42]
The Midland Box Office is the primary sales point for most of Wolverhampton's venues and is situated in Queen Square. The city's main choral groups include the City of Wolverhampton Choir, [162] (a choral society founded as the Wolverhampton Civic Choir in 1947) and the Choir of St. Peter's Collegiate Church.
List of box office score data with date, city, venue, attendance, gross [22] Date (1976) City Venue Attendance Gross 1 June Nashville, United States Nashville Municipal Auditorium: 9,050 $50,800 2 June Birmingham, United States Boutwell Auditorium: 5,000 / 5,000 $30,000 6 June Huntsville, United States Von Braun Civic Center: 4,900 $28,100 8 June
4.1 Box office score data. 5 Critical response. ... City Country Venue Australia [12] ... Wolverhampton: Wolverhampton Civic Hall: April 20, 2013 Manchester:
It is part of a complex branded as University of Wolverhampton at The Halls, Wolverhampton including University of Wolverhampton at The Civic Hall, University of Wolverhampton at Wulfrun Hall and the Slade Rooms (previously known as The Little Civic). The complex is owned by City of Wolverhampton Council, operated by AEG Presents and is a Grade ...
The city centre includes the main shopping centres: the Mander Centre (named after the Mander family whose paint factory once stood on the site) and Wulfrun Centre), the Civic Centre (the headquarters of the city council), the main campus of the University of Wolverhampton and the terminus of the West Midlands Metro.
The Queen Mother visited the town hall and met with civic leaders on 3 June 1969. [9] [10] Following the implementation of re-organisation associated with the Local Government Act 1972, the building briefly became the headquarters of Wolverhampton Metropolitan Borough Council, until the council moved to Wolverhampton Civic Centre in 1978. [2]