Apollo Theater (Miranda de Ebro) explained

Native Name:Salón Apolo Theatre
Native Name Lang:es
Address:Pza. Santa María s/n
City:Miranda de Ebro
Country:Spain
Built:1921
Architect:Original building: Fermín Álamo (1920); Rebuilt: Miguel Verdú Belmonte (2015)

The Apollo Theater (also Teatro Salón Apolo) is the main theater of Miranda de Ebro, (Burgos), Spain. It is located in the historic center of the city, next to the church of Santa María. Built in 1921 and in a state of ruin since 1987, it was rehabilitated and reopened in 2015.[1]

History

Where the theater is today, there was a recreational society and a small palace that burned to the ground on December 28, 1918. The owner of the estate, Doña Dolores Ángel-Zorrilla de Velasco, decided to build a new building dedicated to leisure. The new building was designed in 1920 by Fermín Álamo, an architect from La Rioja, and it was inaugurated on October 4, 1921.

The stage has an area of, and the room has a capacity of 473 spectators distributed between the stalls and the boxes. It was built in the Italian style.[2] [3]

It is a case of Neoclassical architecture.

References

  1. Web site: Ayuntamiento de Miranda de Ebro. Tickets. . entradas.tourmiranda.es . 2018-08-25.
  2. Web site: El teatro Apolo cierra su proyecto y espera completar la rehabilitación en tres años. El Correo . El Correo . 2018-08-25.
  3. Web site: Aprobada la rehabilitación del Apolo y el proceso de contratación de las obras. El Correo . El Correo . 2018-08-25.