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・ Civic Center (Cleveland)
・ Civic Center (disambiguation)
・ Civic Center (MARTA station)
・ Civic Center (San Diego Trolley station)
・ Civic Center (St. Louis MetroLink)
・ Civic Center (VTA)
・ Civic Center / UN Plaza Station
・ Civic Center Drive
・ Civic Center Financial District
・ Civic Center Historic District
・ Civic Center Historic District (Des Moines, Iowa)
・ Civic Center Historic District (Kenosha, Wisconsin)
・ Civic Center Mall
・ Civic Center Music Hall
・ Civic Center of Anderson
Civic Center of Greater Des Moines
・ Civic Center Station
・ Civic Center station (Miami)
・ Civic Center Station (Shenzhen)
・ Civic Center Station (Wuxi)
・ Civic Center, Bakersfield
・ Civic Center, Denver
・ Civic Center, Houston
・ Civic Center, Los Angeles
・ Civic Center, Manhattan
・ Civic Center, Oakland, California
・ Civic Center, San Francisco
・ Civic Center-Vista (NCTD station)
・ Civic Center/Grand Park (Los Angeles Metro station)
・ Civic Chamber of the Russian Federation


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Civic Center of Greater Des Moines : ウィキペディア英語版
Civic Center of Greater Des Moines

The Des Moines Civic Center is a 2,744-seat performing arts center belonging to Des Moines Performing Arts located in Des Moines, Iowa. It has been Iowa's largest theater since it opened on June 10, 1979, and is used for concerts, Broadway shows, ballets, and other special events.
The Civic Center building is also home to the 200-seat Stoner Theater, used for smaller theatrical shows and lectures, located on street level.
Cowles Commons, formerly Nollen Plaza, is the one square block space located west of the Civic Center. Cowles Commons is currently under renovation and is slated to open late 2014.〔http://www.desmoinesperformingarts.org/news/cowles-commons-announced-76.php〕
Together with the Stoner Theater, Cowles Commons, and the nearby Temple for the Performing Arts, the Civic Center is part of the Des Moines Performing Arts.
==History==
In 1972, the KRNT Theater closed. The loss of the 45-year-old theater left downtown Des Moines without a major cultural venue. A group of community leaders attempted to pass a referendum to construct a theater in 1974, but, needing 60% approval, it received only 54% and failed.〔http://www.desmoinesperformingarts.org/discover-des-moines-performing-arts/history.php〕 After the narrow defeat, Des Moines business leaders decided to form a privately held, not-for-profit corporation to build and run a performing arts facility. The city's largest fundraising effort at the time raised $9.3 million to build the Civic Center in fewer than 90 days.
After an introductory open house on June 10, 1979, the first public performance was by the Des Moines Ballet on June 14. The Civic Center is noted for its acoustics, and is handicapped-accessible. In addition, no seat is more than away from the stage. All seats are on one level.
The stage is high and wide. Backstage there are ten dressing rooms. The theater has two lobbies, each of which has a ceiling height of , skylights, glass walls, and skywalks connecting the theater with most of downtown Des Moines.
In 1997, a staging of ''The Phantom of the Opera'' welcomed more than 100,000 visitors during a five-week run, proving to many that Des Moines could support bigger shows.〔http://www.desmoinesregister.com/article/20130106/BUSINESS/301060017/Civic-Center-of-Greater-Des-Moines-getting-a-new-name?Frontpage〕
The 2012-13 Broadway series sold over 133,000 tickets.〔http://blogs.desmoinesregister.com/dmr/index.php/2013/07/22/broadway-series-in-des-moines-generates-26-million-economic-impact/article〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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