

The Smith Center features international music, and dance companies and is the home of the Las Vegas Philharmonic and Nevada Ballet Theatre. The center features a 17-story carillon tower containing 47 bells and is the first performing arts center in the nation to be Gold LEED certified. It also shares design features with the Will Rogers Memorial Center in Fort Worth, Texas. Schwarz to echo the design elements of the Hoover Dam, just 30 miles (48 km) to the southeast. The Neo Art Deco design style was chosen by David M. The Smith Center for the Performing Arts is located in Downtown Las Vegas's 61-acre (25 ha) Symphony Park and is a 5-acre (2.0 ha) performing arts center consisting of three theaters in two buildings groundbreaking for the $470 million project was May 26, 2009. Most productions are presented “black box” style and feature general admission seating.Photo of the Smith Center for the Performing Arts in February 2012ģ6☁0′7″N 115☉′8″W / 36.16861°N 115.15222°W / 36.16861 -115.15222 The Troesh Studio Theater is a flexible 3,000 square foot space with a maximum seating capacity of 250.

This 244-seat venue is unlike any other and is ideal for jazz, cabaret and other events best seen and heard in an intimate setting.įloor tables have 4 seats per table, Mezzanine tables have 2 seats per table. Myron’s is a 3,700 square foot space, with u-shaped second tier. Reynolds Hall is our largest venue and features a magnificent 2,050-seat theater complete with stunning balconies, a dramatic stage and a full orchestra pit.Ĭhair height varies in box seating in Reynolds Hall to optimize the view of the stage. There is simply no other venue in Las Vegas that offers the same grandeur and breathtaking beauty as The Smith Center. Each theater has been meticulously designed by theater consultants Fisher Dachs Associates and acoustician firm Akustiks to provide unparalleled acoustics and sightlines.

Schwarz and crafted out of pristine Indiana limestone. The Smith Center itself was designed by world-renowned architect David M.
