Conexus Arts Centre
Conexus Arts Centre | |
Location |
200A Lakeshore Drive Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada |
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Coordinates | 50°25′42.01″N 104°35′52.41″W / 50.4283361°N 104.5978917°WCoordinates: 50°25′42.01″N 104°35′52.41″W / 50.4283361°N 104.5978917°W |
Type | Performing arts center |
Opened | August 24, 1970 |
Former name(s) | Saskatchewan Centre of the Arts |
Capacity | 2031 |
Website | www.conexusartscentre.ca |
The Conexus Arts Centre, known from 1970 till 2006 (and still largely known) as the Saskatchewan Centre of the Arts, is a theatre complex located within Wascana Centre in Regina, Saskatchewan, which largely replaces former theatres downtown and Darke Hall on the original campus of Regina College, also in Wascana Centre but north of Wascana Lake. Naming of the auditorium as a whole as with facilities within have been similar to those of the Saskatoon Centennial Auditorium. The latter was opened April 1, 1968 and built with the same rationale and similar funding as the Saskatchewan Centre of the Arts but in 2006 was renamed TCU Place Arts & Convention Centre in acknowledgment of corporate funding by TCU Financial Group.
Planning and building
The building was meant as a Canadian centennial project but construction ceased after the steel frame was up and was not opened until August 24, 1970 at a cost of $7.7 million, with considerable reduction in the quality and cost of the material for building. Rising construction costs and a lack of additional finances left the unfinished steel structure stalled for almost two years. Engineering students at the nearby Regina Campus of the University of Saskatchewan (which became a separate university in 1974) dubbed it the "world's largest monkey bars".[2] It was completed after cutbacks were made to the original plans, including the exterior cladding.[3] Maintenance and renovation in subsequent decades have substantially brought the appearance of the building substantially closer to the original intention than was initially possible.
Facilities
Activities in the Centre of the Arts
From the time it first opened the Centre of the Arts accommodated world-renowned travelling performers — as diverse as Monty Python's Flying Circus and Van Cliburn among many others in its first years — who might have been thought unlikely to visit a small city far from metropolises. As well as serving as theatre and concert hall for both local and travelling performers and graduation ceremonies of the immediately adjacent University of Regina, it has often been used as a private facility for social functions such as wedding receptions.
It was renamed the Conexus Arts Centre on January 5, 2006 when the Conexus Credit Union (formerly the Sherwood Credit Union) took over the underwriting of part of its operating budget.[2]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Mills, Isabelle. "Saskatchewan Centre of the Arts". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Dominion Institute. Retrieved 2013-05-16.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "10 entertainment landmarks in Regina". Leader-Post (Postmedia Network). 2013-04-22. Retrieved 2013-05-16.
- ↑ "History". Conexus Arts Centre. Retrieved 2013-05-16.
- ↑ "History". Globe Theatre. Retrieved 2011-09-06.
- ↑ See Regina's historic buildings and precincts.