Newport Odeon | |
Native Name: | Grade II listed building |
Location Town: | Barnardtown, Newport |
Location Country: | Wales |
Map Type: | Wales |
Coordinates: | 51.5915°N -2.9906°W |
Architect: | Harry Weedon |
Client: | Odeon Cinemas |
Renovation Date: | 2003 |
Completion Date: | 1938 |
Style: | Art deco architecture |
The former Newport Odeon, currently trading as The NEON, is a large Grade II listed building in the city of Newport, South Wales.
It is located at the junction of Clarence Place and Chepstow Road on the east side of Newport city centre, near Newport Bridge. The building is one of the few true examples of Art Deco architecture in Newport.
It was opened in March 1938 as an Odeon cinema,[1] designed by Harry Weedon. The cinema closed in 1981, fell derelict in the following years and faced the possibility of demolition. It was designated a Grade II listed building in 1999.
After many years of the ground floor being used as snooker hall, the building was bought by a local business-owning couple in 2003 and was transformed at a cost of over £1 million and renamed Newport City Live Arena. Features included a huge television screen to show live sporting events and a stage that hosted several famous music acts.
The building was sold, redeveloped and opened in February 2016 as a live music and vintage movie venue and named The NEON (Newport Entertains Our Nation). The name is a play on the original Odeon name (Oscar Deutsch Entertains Our Nation).[2] The business is owned and run by businessmen Ian Gilland and Andrew James Byers.[3] Then on the 29th of December 2023 the police carried out a warrant and found a cannabis farm.
In 2019, the venue sold out to over 1,000 people for a rally of the Brexit Party,[4] with figures including Nigel Farage, Ann Widdecombe, Nathan Gill and James Wells speaking to supporters ahead of the 2019 European Parliament elections.