Toyota Amphitheatre is an outdoor amphitheater, located near Plumas Lake and Wheatland, California in unincorporated Yuba County. It has a capacity of 18,500, with 8,000 reserved seats and 10,500 unreserved lawn seats.
It is used for concerts, stage shows and other special events.
Amphitheatre corporate-sponsor is Toyota. Live Nation owns the venue; it is a live-events company based in Beverly Hills, CA.
Video Toyota Amphitheatre
History
Toyota Amphitheatre (previously called Sacramento Valley Amphitheater and Sleep Train Amphitheatre) is a $25 million state-of-the-art concert facility serving the greater Sacramento Valley and all of northern California. The amphitheatre is an open-air music center, with 8,000 reserved seats directly in front of the stage and room for another 10,500 on the spacious Festival Lawn. Currently, the seating capacity is 18,500 people. In the future, the amphitheater will be able to seat up to 20,000 people.
Toyota Amphitheatre was constructed and opened in 2000 as a 20,000 capacity amphitheatre called Sacramento Valley Amphitheatre on 90 acres in Yuba County. Measure R, the public initiative that allowed the Amphitheatre to be built passed with 85% of the vote in 1999.
Due to County concerns capacity was reduced to 18,500 pending completion of a highway off-ramp on nearby Interstate 70. The seating is divided between fixed (approximately 8,000 fans); stadium-style seats and the balance (approximately 10,500 fans) open lawn seating. The lower fixed seating area is divided into three primary seating sections, often referred to as the 100, 200 and Pit sections.
Toyota Amphitheatre was constructed by Bill Graham Presents/SFX. When finished, STA featured several notable improvements on the Shoreline model including removable seats in the "pit" area, improved sightlines, and high sound quality. Originally, Toyota Amphitheatre was to share the location with a NASCAR-style racetrack, the Yuba County Motorplex.
The Toyota Amphitheatre opened in June 2000 with a sold-out concert featuring Stone Temple Pilots and Papa Roach. Since then Toyota Amphitheatre has featured more than 100 concerts and welcomed more than 2 million guests.
Maps Toyota Amphitheatre
See also
- List of contemporary amphitheatres
References
External links
- Toyota Amphitheatre
- Sleep Train Amphitheatre
- Seating Chart
Source of the article : Wikipedia