View from City Park Live, Bradford Live, Birmingham, West Midlands. (Photo courtesty: Tim Ronalds Architects)
NEC Group, Birmingham, England, will invest £2 million (US $2.63 million) to transform the historic Odeon in Bradford into a live entertainment venue by 2020.
NEC Group, which also operates Arena Birmingham, West Midlands, Genting Arena, Birmingham, West Midlands, and the National Exhibition Center, Marston Green, Birmingham, West Midlands, took a 30-year lease on the building, which, besides a main auditorium, also contains a 1930 art deco ballroom.
View of the auditorium, Bradford Live, Birmingham, West Midlands. (Photo courtesy: Tim Ronalds Architects)
Each will be fully restored “to its original splendor to host weddings, banquets, corporate and conferencing events and other live performances,” according to a group statement. The new Odeon will hold 4,000 people, and complement Bradford’s Alhambra Theatre (1,400 capacity) and St George’s Hall (1,500 capacity).
NEC Group International, the consultancy and management arm of NEC Group, will operate the venue, which is expected to open in 2020. By “bringing live music, comedy, Bollywood shows, and other live performances to the biggest ‘mid-size’ venue in the country outside London,” NECGI aims to put “Bradford firmly back on the national live music touring circuit.”
Phil Mead, the managing director of NEC Group’s arenas, commented: “Bradford Odeon, once restored, will breathe new life into an historic building which has played a pivotal role in the city’s past. The redeveloped venue, as part of the ongoing regeneration of Bradford city centre anchored around City Park, will deliver jobs and investment and transform the live event and entertainment offer of the city.”
The Kaiser Chiefs, who “played a lot of great old theatre venues,” said: “Beautiful old buildings are perfect for rock ‘n’ roll shows – it can make a real difference performing in these characterful rooms compared to plain black-box type venues.”
Francis Rossi of Status Quo, said: “What the country needs is more places that can host concerts, so that people can get out and hear great live music. We’ve toured up and down the country more than most, and we know that places like this are essential. The Bradford Odeon has a great history and should be brought back into service.”
The Odeon originally opened in 1930 in the heart of Bradford as a 3,318-seat art deco cinema and theatre, one of the largest in the UK at the time. From 1969 to 2000 it operated as a two-auditoria cinema.
According to NEC Group, “Bradford has the youngest, fastest growing population outside of London [and is] home to 20,000 students. The total population is to reach an estimated 560,000 by 2022.”