fbpx
Wikipedia

Perth Entertainment Centre

The Perth Entertainment Centre was an indoor arena and cinema complex in Perth, Western Australia, located on Wellington Street at the northern edge of the Perth central business district. It was demolished as part of the Perth City Link project in late 2011, with its replacement, Perth Arena, opening the following year.

Perth Entertainment Centre
Former namesChannel 7 Edgley Entertainment Centre (1974–75)
LocationPerth, Western Australia
Coordinates31°56′57″S 115°51′16″E / 31.9492°S 115.8544°E / -31.9492; 115.8544 (Perth Entertainment Centre)Coordinates: 31°56′57″S 115°51′16″E / 31.9492°S 115.8544°E / -31.9492; 115.8544 (Perth Entertainment Centre)
OwnerTVW Channel 7
Capacity8,200
Construction
Opened27 December 1974
Closed2002
Demolished2011–2012
Construction costA$8.3 million
(A$65.4 million in 2016 dollars[1])
Tenants
Perth Wildcats (NBL) (1990–2002)
Perth Breakers (WNBL) (1992–1995)

History

The venue was conceived and championed by the late Brian Treasure, then General Manager at Perth television station TVW 7 and theatrical entrepreneur Michael Edgley. Their interest was principally that their two organisations had mounted large stage shows which toured the country in circus tents; a process that created major logistical challenges. The venue was designed by architects Hobbs, Winning and Leighton and was forecast to cost $5 million, but its construction coincided with a period of intense industrial action. Delays and interruptions, including strike action which was timed to coincide with concrete pours, led to a cost blow-out. The final cost was $8.3 million and interest charges put immediate financial pressure on the venture.[2]

The venue opened on 27 December 1974 as the Channel 7 Edgley Entertainment Centre with the Australian debut of the second Disney on Parade show. In around 1975 the owners approached the State and Federal governments for assistance and the Government of Western Australia took ownership of the building, renaming it The Perth Entertainment Centre.[2]

With a capacity of 8003 seats, the Entertainment Centre was Perth's primary large concert venue from 1974 until its closure in 2002. It was listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as the largest purpose built regular theatre (containing a proscenium arch) in the world.[3] The venue also played host to a number of theatrical extravaganzas, as well as a range of other events including musicals, circuses, corporate functions and international beauty pageants (Miss Universe 1979).[citation needed]

The Entertainment Centre was home to NBL team Perth Wildcats from 1990 until 2002. It was also home to the Perth Breakers of the WNBL from 1988 to 1989.[4]

At the front of the Perth Entertainment Centre (west side) was "The Academy Twin Cinemas" which opened on 17 January 1975. The name changed to "Academy West End Alternative Cinemas" in June 1986. The name changed again to "Lumiere Cinema" in 1989. The "Lumiere Cinema" closed on 28 June 1996. The theatre remained empty, and was demolished along with the Perth Entertainment Centre.[5]

Concerts

List of concerts

Demolition

The venue was owned by the Seven Network and was officially closed in August 2002. In 2005, the Government of Western Australia unveiled plans for a new entertainment centre to be built on the site of the carpark for the existing centre. In 2006, the new centre was officially given the name of Perth Arena.[11] Demolition of the disused venue began on 11 May 2011 and was completed in December 2011, in preparation for the State Government's Perth City Link project and included tentative approvals for new residential and business towers on the site.[12]

References

  1. ^ "Inflation Calculator". RBA. 30 October 2015. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
  2. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 July 2008. Retrieved 21 August 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) State Records Office: A guide to cabinet papers of 1976 Accessed 7 June 2008
  3. ^ Save the Perth Entertainment Centre from the Bulldozers Archived 10 August 2007 at archive.today. Retrieved 20 July 2006.
  4. ^ "Perth Entertainment Centre". Austadiums. Retrieved 17 April 2022.
  5. ^ Lumiere Cinema. Accessed 19 March 2018
  6. ^ http://www.electrocutas.co.uk/dates/dim/040977.jpg Jethro Tull Ticket 1997
  7. ^ http://www.electrocutas.co.uk/dates/td10.htm – Jethro Tull – Tour Date History 1977
  8. ^ http://www.electrocutas.co.uk/dates/td27.htm Jethro Tull – Tour Date History 1994
  9. ^ Black, Martin (1–2 February 1986). "Last Wave Farewell". Western Mail. Western Mail Ltd. p. front.
  10. ^ "28.08.1992 Perth – Entertainment Centre (Australia)". The Cure concerts guide. Retrieved 19 April 2020.
  11. ^ Home of the new Perth Arena 19 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine.
  12. ^ Jerga, Josh (11 May 2011). "Perth begins rejuvenation project". The Sydney Morning Herald. Australian Associated Press. Retrieved 11 May 2011.

External links

  • 6000TIMES : photo series inside Perth Entertainment Centre prior to demolition
  • NorthbridgeLink.com
  • Brian Treasure
  • Perth Entertainment Centre at Austadiums
Preceded by
Centro de Convenciones de Acapulco
  Acapulco
Miss Universe venue
1979
Succeeded by

perth, entertainment, centre, indoor, arena, cinema, complex, perth, western, australia, located, wellington, street, northern, edge, perth, central, business, district, demolished, part, perth, city, link, project, late, 2011, with, replacement, perth, arena,. The Perth Entertainment Centre was an indoor arena and cinema complex in Perth Western Australia located on Wellington Street at the northern edge of the Perth central business district It was demolished as part of the Perth City Link project in late 2011 with its replacement Perth Arena opening the following year Perth Entertainment CentreFormer namesChannel 7 Edgley Entertainment Centre 1974 75 LocationPerth Western AustraliaCoordinates31 56 57 S 115 51 16 E 31 9492 S 115 8544 E 31 9492 115 8544 Perth Entertainment Centre Coordinates 31 56 57 S 115 51 16 E 31 9492 S 115 8544 E 31 9492 115 8544 Perth Entertainment Centre OwnerTVW Channel 7Capacity8 200ConstructionOpened27 December 1974Closed2002Demolished2011 2012Construction costA 8 3 million A 65 4 million in 2016 dollars 1 TenantsPerth Wildcats NBL 1990 2002 Perth Breakers WNBL 1992 1995 Contents 1 History 1 1 Concerts 2 Demolition 3 References 4 External linksHistory EditThe venue was conceived and championed by the late Brian Treasure then General Manager at Perth television station TVW 7 and theatrical entrepreneur Michael Edgley Their interest was principally that their two organisations had mounted large stage shows which toured the country in circus tents a process that created major logistical challenges The venue was designed by architects Hobbs Winning and Leighton and was forecast to cost 5 million but its construction coincided with a period of intense industrial action Delays and interruptions including strike action which was timed to coincide with concrete pours led to a cost blow out The final cost was 8 3 million and interest charges put immediate financial pressure on the venture 2 The venue opened on 27 December 1974 as the Channel 7 Edgley Entertainment Centre with the Australian debut of the second Disney on Parade show In around 1975 the owners approached the State and Federal governments for assistance and the Government of Western Australia took ownership of the building renaming it The Perth Entertainment Centre 2 With a capacity of 8003 seats the Entertainment Centre was Perth s primary large concert venue from 1974 until its closure in 2002 It was listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as the largest purpose built regular theatre containing a proscenium arch in the world 3 The venue also played host to a number of theatrical extravaganzas as well as a range of other events including musicals circuses corporate functions and international beauty pageants Miss Universe 1979 citation needed The Entertainment Centre was home to NBL team Perth Wildcats from 1990 until 2002 It was also home to the Perth Breakers of the WNBL from 1988 to 1989 4 At the front of the Perth Entertainment Centre west side was The Academy Twin Cinemas which opened on 17 January 1975 The name changed to Academy West End Alternative Cinemas in June 1986 The name changed again to Lumiere Cinema in 1989 The Lumiere Cinema closed on 28 June 1996 The theatre remained empty and was demolished along with the Perth Entertainment Centre 5 Concerts Edit List of concertsEric Clapton 28 April 1975 and 28 November 1984 The Sweet 22 August 1975 John Denver 13 14 October 1975 10 May 1983 and 1 December 1994 Status Quo 17 October 1975 with Snafu 24 November 1976 2 3 August 1978 and 16 November 2000 Wings 1 November 1975 Queen 11 April 1976 with Lucifer The Skyhooks 21 August 1976 and 7 May 1983 Rainbow 4 November 1976 with Buffalo AC DC 2 December 1976 15 February 1977 13 February 1981 1 2 February 1988 and 23 24 October 1991 The Robin Trower Band 31 January 1977 ABBA 10th 2 shows 11th 12th 2 shows March 1977 Alice Cooper 14 15 March 1977 5 September 1997 23 February 2000 and 17 April 2001 Jethro Tull 4 5 September 1977 6 7 and 14 March 1994 8 Tina Turner 10 September 1977 with Magna Carta 10cc 24 September 1977 Lou Reed 7 November 1977 Fleetwood Mac 18 19 November 1977 21 22 February 1980 with John Paul Young and 8 9 April 1990 Boz Scaggs 9 March 1978 with Dragon 17 September 1980 The Beach Boys 14 15 March 1978 Bob Dylan 25 and 27 March 1978 16 17 February 1986 with Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers 18 March 1992 and 18 March 2001 with Paul Kelly Billy Joel 1 April 1978 3 4 and 6 November 1987 and 13 14 December 1994 Bette Midler 4 November 1978 Peter Frampton 9 10 November 1978 with Cold Chisel Olivia Newton John 12 November 1978 David Bowie 14 15 November 1978 with The Angels and 4 6 November 1983 Bob Marley and the Wailers 23 April 1979 Elton John 7 December 1979 21 December 1980 7 8 April 1982 6 7 March 1984 25 26 November 1986 27 29 January 1990 and 23 24 February 1993 The Police 19 March 1980 and 26 February 1981 The Boomtown Rats 10 June 1980 Thin Lizzy 18 October 1980 Cold Chisel 24 October 1980 and 15 October 1983 KISS 8 11 November 1980 and 4 February 1995 Dire Straits 22 March 1981 24 March 1983 and 13 20 April 1986 Johnny Cash 16 June 1981 and 2 3 March 1994 The Cure 22 August 1981 28 August 1992 and 10 October 2000 The Kinks 14 February 1982 Devo 17 February 1982 Elvis Costello 21 May 1982 with The Attractions 15 December 1987 with The Confederates and 18 September 1991 with Rude 5 Madness 27 October 1982 Joan Jett and the Blackhearts 6 December 1982 Barry Manilow 14 15 May 1983 and 13 June 1996 Duran Duran 27 November 1983 The Manhattan Transfer 30 November 1983 Robert Plant 28 January 1984 Split Enz 12 February 1984 8 October 1984 INXS 24 February and 27 28 September 1984 4 5 September 1985 6 7 and 9 November 1988 with Sting 15 16 April 1991 and 20 March and 21 May 2000 U2 23 24 September 1984 with Matt Finish and 21 23 September 1989 with B B King and Weddings Parties Anything Cliff Richard 25 26 October 1984 16 17 February 1988 3 4 March 1990 9 10 November 1991 28 February and 1 March 1995 and 1 2 March 1998 Deep Purple 27 November 1984 and 5 March 2001 Tina Turner 23 24 December 1984 23 24 December 1985 23 24 February 1988 11 October 1993 29 30 October 1993 and 3 5 April 1997 Neil Young 1 March 1985 with Crazy Horse and The International Harvesters and 5 April 1989 with The Lost Dogs Phil Collins 20 April 1985 and 4 5 April 1990 The Stranglers 18 May 1985 Meat Loaf 22 June 1985 The Motels 30 August 1985 The Australian Crawl 1 February 1986 their last concert 9 The Thompson Twins 14 February 1986 Santana 5 and 7 June 1986 and 7 May 1996 with Emmylou Harris Joe Cocker 4 November 1986 30 September 1988 26 November 1992 8 September 1995 31 January 1998 Jackson Browne 2 December 1986 Genesis 5 and 6 December 1986 ZZ Top 9 10 March 1987 and 17 April 2000 Crowded House 15 July 1987 and 6 August 1988 Simply Red 29 30 August and 1 September 1987 with Sinead O Connor 19 August 1989 with Sinead O Connor 3 October 1992 with Sinead O Connor and 10 April 1996 with Sinead O Connor Midnight Oil 10 October 1987 and 11 June 1993 John Farnham 11 November 1987 George Michael 8 9 March 1988 John Mellencamp 9 10 April 1988 and 1 2 May 1992 Whitney Houston 31 October 1988 Bryan Ferry 11 November 1988 The Robert Cray Band 3 December 1988 Robert Palmer 27 February 1989 Poison 12 July 1989 The Black Sorrows 3 August 1989 Johnny Diesel amp The Injectors 5 August 1989 Jimmy Barnes 12 December 1988 27 28 October 1989 and 23 November 1990 with The Stray Cats Bon Jovi 8 November 1989 and 4 October 1993 with Jimmy Barnes and Rough Justice Simple Minds 18 November 1989 Eurythmics 28 29 November 1989 Tracy Chapman 13 February 1990 Steve Earle 18 August 1990 with The Dukes and Johnny Diesel and Nick Barker amp the Reptiles The Angels 4 September 1990 with Cheap Trick Aerosmith 15 October 1990 Kylie Minogue 13 February 1991 and 28 and 30 April 2001 Steve Winwood 18 March 1991 Diana Ross 24 October 1991 Paul Simon 5 6 November 1991 Amy Grant 16 March 1992 Rod Stewart 22 23 March 1992 George Thorogood amp The Destroyers 21 April 1992 Def Leppard 11 July 1992 The Cure 28 August 1992 and 10 October 2000 10 The Red Hot Chili Peppers 17 October 1992 10 May 1996 and 7 February 2000 Hoodoo Gurus 24 October 1992 with L7 Richard Marx 14 November 1992 Hunters and Collectors 18 December 1992 Metallica 7 8 April 1993 and 11 12 April 1998 Bobby Brown 26 April 1993 Arrested Development 29 April 1993 Faith No More 30 April 1993 with Storytime 17 August 1995 and 1 November 1997 Ugly Kid Joe 19 October 1993 Bryan Adams 25 January 1994 and 13 March 2000 Lenny Kravitz 16 February 1994 Peter Gabriel 21 February 1994 Depeche Mode 5 March 1994 East 17 27 March 1994 B B King 9 May 1994 and 10 May 1997 Culture Beat 22 May 1994 with Cut N Move and Melodie MC Cypress Hill 27 May 1994 with Ice Cube Garth Brooks 5 September 1994 The Pet Shop Boys 1 November 1994 Pantera 18 November 1994 24 September 1996 and 20 May 2001 R E M 13 14 January 1995 with Died Pretty and Grant Lee Buffalo Roxette 17 18 January 1995 Janet Jackson 23 February 1995 Pearl Jam 6 March 1995 with The Meanies and 19 20 March 1998 with Shudder to Think Foreigner 22 April 1995 Take That 4 October 1995 Tom Jones 28 November 1995 and 29 May 2000 Chris Isaak 14 February 1996 The Smashing Pumpkins 4 March 1996 Celine Dion 18 March 1996 with Human Nature Everclear 26 September 1996 with Silverchair and Jebediah Sting 19 October 1996 The Sex Pistols 24 October 1996 Bush 6 November 1996 with The Superjesus The Corrs 4 February 1997 and 4 February 1998 Live 12 May 1997 and 16 March 2000 with Sugar Ray and Rumanastone Tina Arena 22 November 1997 Silverchair 20 December 1997 with Magic Dirt and Ammonia and 8 August 1999 with Pre Shrunk and Placebo Radiohead 10 February 1998 with The Big Heavy Stuff Oasis 26 February 1998 with You Am I Van Halen 29 April 1998 with The Poor Placido Domingo 8 September 1998 with Julia Migenes The Beastie Boys 11 February 1999 with Spiderbait and B if tek The Offspring 21 June 1999 with Guttermouth and The Andy Callison Project and 17 March 2001 with 28 Days and H Block 101 Alanis Morissette 5 October 1999 with Garbage and Stellar Macy Gray 1 May 2000 Ben Harper amp The Innocent Criminals 14 June 2000 with The Wicked Beat Sound System Matchbox 20 14 November 2000 The Wiggles 5 6 December 2000 and 4 5 December 2001 Blink 182 9 April 2001 Roxy Music 19 August 2001 Robbie Williams 1 November 2001 Tool 4 May 2002 with The Melvins Youth Alive WA August 2002 the final show at the venue before closing Demolition EditThe venue was owned by the Seven Network and was officially closed in August 2002 In 2005 the Government of Western Australia unveiled plans for a new entertainment centre to be built on the site of the carpark for the existing centre In 2006 the new centre was officially given the name of Perth Arena 11 Demolition of the disused venue began on 11 May 2011 and was completed in December 2011 in preparation for the State Government s Perth City Link project and included tentative approvals for new residential and business towers on the site 12 References Edit Inflation Calculator RBA 30 October 2015 Retrieved 10 March 2017 a b Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 22 July 2008 Retrieved 21 August 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link State Records Office A guide to cabinet papers of 1976 Accessed 7 June 2008 Save the Perth Entertainment Centre from the Bulldozers Archived 10 August 2007 at archive today Retrieved 20 July 2006 Perth Entertainment Centre Austadiums Retrieved 17 April 2022 Lumiere Cinema Accessed 19 March 2018 http www electrocutas co uk dates dim 040977 jpg Jethro Tull Ticket 1997 http www electrocutas co uk dates td10 htm Jethro Tull Tour Date History 1977 http www electrocutas co uk dates td27 htm Jethro Tull Tour Date History 1994 Black Martin 1 2 February 1986 Last Wave Farewell Western Mail Western Mail Ltd p front 28 08 1992 Perth Entertainment Centre Australia The Cure concerts guide Retrieved 19 April 2020 Home of the new Perth Arena Archived 19 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine Jerga Josh 11 May 2011 Perth begins rejuvenation project The Sydney Morning Herald Australian Associated Press Retrieved 11 May 2011 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Perth Entertainment Centre 6000TIMES photo series inside Perth Entertainment Centre prior to demolition Northbridge Link NorthbridgeLink com Brian Treasure Perth Entertainment Centre at AustadiumsPreceded byCentro de Convenciones de Acapulco Acapulco Miss Universe venue1979 Succeeded bySejong Cultural Center Seoul Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Perth Entertainment Centre amp oldid 1114149835, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.