- Starwood Amphitheatre
Starwood Amphitheatre was the primary outdoor music venue in the
Nashville, Tennessee area from 1985 to 2006. It was owned byLive Nation and had a capacity of 17,137. It had previously been owned bySFX Entertainment andClear Channel Worldwide , both predecessors of Live Nation.Venue information
Located in the Nashville
suburb of Antioch, theamphitheatre featured one large stage, a covered pavilion with reserved box seating, and an open-air grassy area for general admission seating. A much smaller stage was located near the venue's north entrance and usually featured local bands entertaining audiences as they entered the venue. For larger music festivals, a temporary third stage would be erected in a fenced-in area normally used as a parking lot.Starwood regularly hosted most of Nashville's summer concerts featuring A-list artists from all genres of music. The typical season, which generally ran from April to October, featured 20 to 25 events.
Starwood was criticized for the lack of sufficient road infrastructure in the area. Though within two miles (3 km) of
Interstate 24 , Starwood was located alongTennessee State Route 171 (Old Hickory Blvd ), a two-lane road in a primarily residential and industrial neighborhood. It was also located alongU.S. Route 41 (Murfreesboro Road), a four-lane highway that does not directly connect to a freeway in the immediate area. Therefore, larger crowds would result in major traffic problems both before and after events.Starwood Amphitheatre was not affiliated with
Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide .Naming rights
After opening as "Starwood Amphitheatre" in 1985, the venue went through several name changes in its later years. Prior to the 1999 season, naming rights were sold to locally-based
First American National Bank for five years, and the venue was renamed First American Music Center. That October, First American National Bank merged intoAlabama -basedAmSouth Bancorporation . AmSouth agreed to assume the naming rights upon the merger, and after just one season with its new name, the venue was renamed AmSouth Amphitheatre in 2000. AmSouth declined to extend the naming rights agreement past the initial five-year deal, and without a new suitor, the venue reverted to its original name in 2004.Closing
On February 13, 2007, Live Nation announced its intention to close Starwood Amphitheatre and cancel the 2007 season in anticipation of a potential sale, despite an earlier statement that the 2007 season would take place as scheduled. [ [http://www.wkrn.com/node/77454 Live Nation Closes Starwood Amphitheatre | WKRN.COM ] ]
Entertainment industry insiders blame the closing on Starwood's age and size, calling it a "first-generation" outdoor venue that was only about two-thirds the size of the ones being built today and one that lacked now-standard amenities for both patrons and performers, therefore not able to attract the top-tier artists who demand larger, more modern performance venues. [ [http://www.wkrn.com/nashville/news/live-nation-closes-starwood-amphitheatre/77454.htm Live Nation Closes Starwood Amphitheatre | WKRN.COM ] ]
Starwood grossed only $4.6 million in ticket sales during the 2006 season and was one of four underperforming venues that Live Nation put up for sale following the season. Only two events were scheduled for 2007 before the announcement to close the venue:
The Charlie Daniels Band 's annualVolunteer Jam , and aBrad Paisley /Kellie Pickler show. [http://tennessean.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070214/ENTERTAINMENT01/702140430]The last act to perform at Starwood was
Aerosmith , a band who had played there several times over the years, on October 19, 2006.Demolition and beyond
The Starwood offices and concession areas were demolished during the last half of September 2007, culminating with the dynamite demolition of the stage, seating area, and dressing rooms on September 29, 2007.
Live Nation announced on April 30, 2007 that the buyer of the Starwood property is
Vastland Realty Group . [http://www.tennessean.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070430/BUSINESS01/70430067] Plans for the site were revealed the following November, when Vastland announced a $100 million mixed-use residential and commercial development named "Starwood Commons" that will feature convert|350000|sqft|m2 of retail space and 250 multi-level townhomes [ [http://tennessean.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071108/NEWS05/711080387/1001 Starwood enters new phase | www.tennessean.com | ] ] .tarwood logos
ee also
*
List of contemporary amphitheatres References
External links
* [http://www.starwoodamphitheatre.com/ Official website]
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