Who owns Melbourne Arts Centre?
Victorian Arts Centre Trust
Arts Centre Melbourne is located by the Yarra River and along St Kilda Road, one of the city’s main thoroughfares, and extends into the Melbourne Arts Precinct….
| Arts Centre Melbourne | |
|---|---|
| Owner | Victorian Arts Centre Trust |
| Height | 162 m (531 ft) (was 115 m (377 ft) with original spire) |
| Design and construction |
When was the art Centre spire built?
Completed on 12 January 1996, the Spire now reaches 162 metres above street level and is topped by a 10-metre mast. The total weight of steel in the Spire and mast is 97.7 tonnes. The new design included a network of dramatic night-time lighting that includes: 6,600 metres of fibre-optic tubing.
Who owns the Theatres in Melbourne?
David Marriner
David Marriner, the Colac-born head of a development empire, snapped up the Princess Theatre, Comedy Theatre and Forum Theatre across the span of a decade starting in 1986. He also funded a substantial refurbishment of the Regent Theatre, which is now among the four major theatres managed by his son Jason Marriner.
What did Melbourne Central used to be called?
Museum
Melbourne Central railway station
| Melbourne Central | |
|---|---|
| Previous names | Museum (1981-1997) |
| Passengers | |
| 2008-2009 | 14.916 million |
| 2009-2010 | 14.511 million 2.71% |
When was art Centre Melbourne built?
1973Arts Centre Melbourne / Construction started
When did Hamer Hall open?
1982Hamer Hall / Opened
The venue opened as the “Melbourne Concert Hall” on 6 November 1982 and quickly became the premier venue for orchestral performance in Melbourne.
Who owns the Regent theatre Melbourne?
Marriner Group
Regent Theatre, Melbourne
| Owner | Marriner Group |
| Designation | National Trust of Australia, Victorian Heritage Register |
| Capacity | 1,573 (Intimate) 1,751 (Musical) 2,262 (Concert) |
| Current use | musicals, opera |
| Construction |
|---|
What year did Melbourne Central Open?
1991
In the years leading up to its 1991 opening, Melbourne Central was marketed as “the life of the city”. When it first opened to the public, the centre offered 160 specialty shops and 30 cafes and food outlets, with Japanese department store Daimaru taking up six floors.
When was Melbourne Art Centre built?
https://www.youtube.com/c/theArtsCentreMelb