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Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre
Red Rocks Amphitheater is an outdoors amphitheater incorporated into a stone design in the western United States, close to Morrison, Colorado, ten miles (16 km) west of Denver. There is a huge, shifted, plate molded stone behind the stage, a tremendous vertical stone calculated outwards from stage right, a few enormous outcrops calculated outwards from stage left and a seating region for up to 9,525.
In 1927, the City of Denver bought the space of Red Rocks; development of the amphitheater started in 1936, and was opened to people in general in June 1941. From that point forward, numerous outstanding exhibitions and accounts for film and TV have occurred there. In June 2015, the Colorado Music Hall of Fame opened in the Trading Post at Red Rocks.
The rise of the amphitheater's top line is around 6,450 feet (1,965 m) above ocean level, and the encompassing Red Rocks Park covers 868 sections of land (1.4 sq mi; 3.5 km2). The amphitheater is possessed and worked by the City and County of Denver and is situated in Red Rocks Park, part of the Denver Mountain Parks. The crowd points toward the east-upper east, toward southern Denver, with the horizon of downtown noticeable to one side.
After Pollstar magazine granted Red Rocks the yearly honor of best little outside scene for the 11th time, this driving show industry magazine chose to name the broadly pined for honor the Red Rocks Award—and eliminate Red Rocks from the running. Additionally, in 1957, the American Institute of Architects chose Red Rocks to be Colorado's entrance at the National Gallery of Art for the AIA's Centennial Exhibition.
Development started in October 2020 to supplant the current stage rooftop and design.