Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Pioneer Center for the Performing Arts

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Built
  
1967

Capacity
  
1,500

Phone
  
+1 775-686-6610

Added to NRHP
  
19 January 2005

NRHP Reference #
  
04001528

Opened
  
1967

Architectural style
  
Modern architecture

Pioneer Center for the Performing Arts

Location
  
100 S. Virginia St., Reno, Nevada

Address
  
100 S Virginia St, Reno, NV 89501, USA

Similar
  
Fleischmann Planetarium & Scienc, Wilbur D May Center, National Automobile Museum, WINGFIELD PARK, Eldorado Reno

Profiles

The Pioneer Center for the Performing Arts (originally known as Pioneer Theater Auditorium) is a theater located in Reno, Nevada. It was designed by the Oklahoma City architectural firm of Bozalis, Dickinson and Roloff as a concrete structure with a distinctive gold geodesic dome roof. The facility was completed in 1967 with 987 seats on the main level and 513 seats in a balcony. The co-founder of Temcor, the project's contractor, was Don Richter, a student of Buckminster Fuller, developer of the geodesic dome concept. Temcor had built several gold-anodized aluminum domes before the Pioneer, and was responsible for more than 5000 dome projects.

Originally to be called the Apollo Theater, the Pioneer took its name from a 1939 statue of a pioneer family by Byron S. Johnson, salvaged from the Old State Building, which was demolished to make way for the new facility. Unofficially, the dome was called the "Golden Turtle." It consists of a 500-panel aluminum shell on an inner steel frame, which is in turn supported by reinforced concrete arches. The orchestra level of the theater is depressed below ground level, allowing the roof to nearly touch the ground at the corners.

The Washoe County Fair and Recreation Board, which was responsible for the project, was particularly taken with Casa MaƱana in Fort Worth, Texas, resulting in the selection of the domed concept. The Pioneer Center was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.

References

Pioneer Center for the Performing Arts Wikipedia