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Greg Gutfeld Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre September 15

Cobb Energy Performing Arts Heart
CEPAC-Courtyard.JPG
Address 2800 Cobb Galleria Parkway
Atlanta, Georgia
United states
Coordinates 33°53′02″Northward 84°27′29″Westward  /  33.883803°Northward 84.458063°West  / 33.883803; -84.458063 Coordinates: 33°53′02″Due north 84°27′29″W  /  33.883803°N 84.458063°Due west  / 33.883803; -84.458063
Parking yard spaces[ane]
Owner Cobb-Marietta Coliseum & Exhibit Hall Authority
Operator Cobb-Marietta Coliseum & Showroom Hall Authority
Type Performing arts center
Capacity two,750
Construction
Opened September 15, 2007
Architect Smallwood, Reynolds, Stewart, Stewart & Associates
Website
www.cobbenergycentre.com

Cobb Free energy Performing Arts Centre is a performing arts venue located in the Cumberland/Galleria edge metropolis, in northwest Atlanta, Georgia, United States. The $145 million facility celebrated its grand opening September 15, 2007, with a concert by Michael Feinstein and Linda Eder.[1] [2]

Located in Cobb County near Vinings, the venue is owned and operated by the Cobb-Marietta Coliseum & Exhibit Hall Authority, and took over two years to build.[two] The naming rights for the facility were acquired for $20 meg by Cobb Energy Direction Corp.[3] Real manor developer John A. Williams' personal donation of $10 million led to the theater itself being named in his honor.[4]

Design and construction

Cobb Energy Center is located at the e corner of Akers Mill Road and Cobb Galleria Parkway, overlooking I-75 just south of the I-285 highway interchange (the Cobb Cloverleaf).[v] It was designed by architects Smallwood, Reynolds, Stewart, Stewart & Associates,[half-dozen] and congenital by full general contractor Hardin Construction.[7]

The asymmetrical top of the building rises above the multi-story glass facade that allows views of the grand alabaster staircase and lobbies beyond when lit at dark.[half dozen] The rising waves were meant to soften the transition to the fly tower required over the stage.[5] Just inside the entrance, visitors are greeted past the deputed mural The Nine Muses past Jimmy O'Neal.[6] The chandeliers in the main foyer[five] and those in the ballroom are the Nastro designed by Tobia Scarpa and made by Andromedamurano.[6] The interior throughout the Centre makes extensive apply of traditional theater colors such red and aureate too equally dark wood finishes. The Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre is the simply performing arts centre in memory to be completed within schedule and budget.[6]

Performance and other venues

John A. Williams Theatre

This 2,750-seat theater at the core of the Centre was designed to accommodate both acoustic and amplified performances with the specific intent of attracting touring companies of Broadway shows.[5]

Within the theatre itself, seating is distributed on three levels — orchestra, mezzanine and g tier — and 14 balustrade boxes. The near distant seat in the upper level (Grand Tier) is merely 160 feet (49 m) from the phase.[5] Metallic-mesh triangular screens undulate across the ceiling to hibernate catwalks. The phase features a hydraulic lift for the 30-foot (9 thou) deep orchestra pit large enough for 84 musicians.[5] The theatre is surrounded by a 2 ft (61 cm) thick concrete wall on the perimeter for acoustic isolation.[5]

The Centre's outset resident visitor is the Atlanta Opera, which relocated from the clangorous Atlanta Civic Eye in downtown Atlanta.[viii] The Opera's first production in the new facility was Puccini'due south Turandot.[9]

Ballroom

The facility includes a ten,000 sq ft (930 m2) ballroom available for issue rental.[7]

Other facilities

The adjoining parking deck has 1,000 spaces.[1] It also has access to Cobb Community Transit, which may move its Cumberland Transfer Station over I-75 adjacent to the center if the Northwest Corridor HOV/BRT is built. (Currently there is just HOV-only half-access at this bespeak, for Akers Mill Road to 75 southbound and from 75 northbound.) The parking deck for the "coach rapid transit" station would be next to the Centre.

Events

The Eye is habitation to the ArtsBridge Foundation, The Atlanta Opera and Atlanta Ballet. In addition the venue has hosted numerous other concerts and events, including Kraftwerk, Fifth Harmony, Tori Amos, Demi Lovato, Alice Cooper, ABBA, Incognito, Melissa Etheridge, Bill Maher, Harry Connick, Jr., B.A.P, Norah Jones, Dave Koz, Eddie Izzard, and Monsta X.

The building also appeared in the first-flavour finale of the television show The Walking Dead, its exterior being used to correspond the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.[10]

The Cobb Energy Centre is too the perennial host of the SMITE World Title. The most recent edition was played January 7–xi, 2016 and included 10 teams from around the globe competing for a Usa$1,000,000 grand prize.[eleven] [12] The upcoming edition, packaged as office of the new Hi-Rez Studios Expo, is scheduled for January 5–viii, 2017, and will exist held aslope the SMITE Xbox World Championship and the Paladins 150K Invitational. Cobb Center hosted the ELeague Season 1 semi-finals and finals on July 29–30, 2016.[thirteen]

In popular culture

The Centre was used as the briefing eye for the KEN talk in the 2014 motion-picture show Dumb and Dumber To.

It was also used every bit the Center for Disease Control in AMC'southward The Walking Expressionless.[14]

It was mentioned as a location that the Barden Bella'south had performed at, in Pitch Perfect

Scenes were filmed in the theatre for the 2012 film Parental Guidance.

Gallery

References

  1. ^ a b c "Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre opens". Encore Atlanta. September 2007. Archived from the original on 2013-10-19. Retrieved 2014-02-04 .
  2. ^ a b "Cobb Free energy Center Opens". WXIA-Television set News. sixteen September 2007. Archived from the original on iv February 2015. Retrieved 2015-02-04 .
  3. ^ "Cobb Performing Arts Center naming rights sold". Atlanta Business Relate. 26 Jan 2005. Retrieved 2007-09-17 .
  4. ^ "Atlanta Performing Arts Center Receives $10 Million". Foundation Center. 25 September 2005. Retrieved 2007-09-17 .
  5. ^ a b c d due east f g Monroe, Doug (2007-09-17). "Virtuoso Performance". Georgia Trend. Archived from the original on 2007-06-18. Retrieved 2007-09-eighteen .
  6. ^ a b c d east Pull a fast one on, Catherine (ix September 2007). "Arts center concept falls short in execution". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution . Retrieved 2007-09-17 .
  7. ^ a b Opdyke, Tom (2007-09-13). "Cobb Energy Centre, $145 million facility for events large and small". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution . Retrieved 2007-09-17 . [ dead link ]
  8. ^ Mattison, Ben (eleven May 2006). "Atlanta Opera to Move to New Suburban Theater". Playbill. Retrieved 2007-10-23 .
  9. ^ Brett, Jennifer (29 September 2007). "Skeptics have to opera's new digs in Cobb". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution . Retrieved 2007-x-23 . [ dead link ]
  10. ^ King, Michael (viii December 2010). "'Walking Dead' Blows Upward Cobb Energy Centre On Screen". WXIA=Television set News. Archived from the original on x July 2013. Retrieved 2015-02-04 .
  11. ^ "SMITE World Championship". Hirez Studios. Archived from the original on 2014-10-10. Retrieved 2015-02-04 .
  12. ^ Scott, Wendell (four January 2015). "SMITE World Championship". WUPA News . Retrieved 2015-02-04 .
  13. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-08-01. Retrieved 2016-07-29 . CS1 maint: archived re-create as title (link)
  14. ^ "Hit zombie series shows CDC bravado upwards later on generators fail". @politifact . Retrieved 2015-10-13 .

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Source: https://pipiwiki.com/wiki/Cobb_Energy_Performing_Arts_Centre

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