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'''Colston Hall''' is a [[concert hall]] situated on Colston Street, [[Bristol]], England. A popular venue catering for a variety of different entertainers, it seats approximately 2,075 and provides a licensed bar.<ref name="col-hall-specs">[http://www.colstonhall.org/resources/documents/TechnicalInfo.pdf ''Colston Hall Technical Information'', Official Web Site]</ref> An education programme, coupled with a local organisation, [[REMIX (Organisation)|REMIX]], has been established to promote music across Bristol. |
'''Colston Hall''' is a [[concert hall]] situated on Colston Street, [[Bristol]], [[England]]. A popular venue catering for a variety of different entertainers, it seats approximately 2,075 and provides a licensed bar.<ref name="col-hall-specs">[http://www.colstonhall.org/resources/documents/TechnicalInfo.pdf ''Colston Hall Technical Information'', Official Web Site]</ref> An education programme, coupled with a local organisation, [[REMIX (Organisation)|REMIX]], has been established to promote music across Bristol. |
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== History == |
== History == |
Revision as of 21:14, 26 March 2008
Colston Hall | |
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General information | |
Town or city | Bristol |
Country | England |
Completed | 1860s |
Client | Corporation of Bristol |
Colston Hall is a concert hall situated on Colston Street, Bristol, England. A popular venue catering for a variety of different entertainers, it seats approximately 2,075 and provides a licensed bar.[1] An education programme, coupled with a local organisation, REMIX, has been established to promote music across Bristol.
History
The site has been occupied by four buildings named as such since the 1860s.[2] Prior to this, the location held a large Tudor-era mansion known as the Great House, used by Queen Elizabeth I in 1574 on a visit to the city. In 1707, Edward Colston established the Colston Boys' School in this building, which was acquired by the Colston Hall Company in 1861. Colston Hall opened as a concert venue on September 20 1867.[2] The architects were the prolific Bristol firm of Foster & Wood working in the Bristol Byzantine style.[3] It has been designated by English Heritage as a grade II listed building.[4]
Most of the building was damaged during a fire on September 1, 1898; the auditorium suffered immense structural damage, and the interior was more or less destroyed. The second hall opened in 1901,[5] and in 1919, the Corporation of Bristol purchased it from the Colston Hall Company. The City Council continues to manage the hall. The second hall was closed for remodelling in 1935.
In December 1936, the third hall was opened.[5] This survived the Luftwaffe air raids of the Second World War, but was burned down in 1945 after a discarded cigarette started a fire.[6] The hall was rebuilt once more, and the fourth reopened in 1951 to mark the Festival of Britain.[7] The first computerised booking system was installed in February 1983,[8] and a £500,000 modernisation programme was conducted at the start of the 1990s, which included extensive rewiring, and various backstage improvements.[9] The installation of removable seating in the front half of the stalls in 1999[9] improved the hall as a venue for pop concerts, providing space for fans to move around and dance in front of the stage; it also increased the overall capacity of the auditorium.
The hall is currently undergoing extensive refurbishment.
References
- ^ Colston Hall Technical Information, Official Web Site
- ^ a b History of Colston Hall (1200s-1800s), Official Web Site
- ^ "The Colston Hall". Philharmonic Orchestra. Retrieved 2007-05-19.
- ^ "The Colston Hall". Images of England. Retrieved 2007-03-13.
- ^ a b History of Colston Hall (1900s-1930s), Official Web Site
- ^ History of Colston Hall (1940s), Official Web Site
- ^ History of Colston Hall (1950s), Official Web Site
- ^ History of Colston Hall (1980s), Official Web Site
- ^ a b History of Colston Hall (1990s), Official Web Site