Deftones played the Fillmore Detroit
on the eve of its official rebranding |
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Former names | State Theatre Palms Theatre |
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Location | 2115 Woodward Avenue Detroit, Michigan |
Coordinates | 42°20′15″N 83°3′7″W / 42.33750°N 83.05194°WCoordinates: 42°20′15″N 83°3′7″W / 42.33750°N 83.05194°W |
Type | Concert venue |
Capacity | 2,888 |
Construction | |
Opened | 1925 |
Renovated | 2007 |
Website | |
Francis Palms Building & State Theater
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Location | 2111 Woodward Avenue Detroit, Michigan |
Coordinates | 42°20′16″N 83°3′7″W / 42.33778°N 83.05194°W |
Built | 1925 |
Architect | C. Howard Crane |
Architectural style | Beaux Arts |
NRHP Reference # | 82000551 |
Added to NRHP | November 24, 1982 |
The Fillmore Detroit is a multi-use entertainment venue operated by Live Nation. Built in 1925, the Fillmore Detroit was known for most of its history as the State Theatre, and prior to that as the Palms Theatre. It is located near the larger Fox Theatre in the Detroit Theatre District along Woodward Avenue across from Comerica Park and Grand Circus Park. The Fillmore Detroit features a theatre with a Grand Lobby and three levels of seating, as well as the State Bar & Grill which has a separate entrance and is open when the theatre is not hosting events. The Detroit Music Awards are held annually at The Fillmore Detroit in April. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.
The site of the Fillmore was previously home to an earlier theatre known as the Central and then, from 1913-1923, as the Grand Circus Theatre. This theatre was demolished to make way for the 1925 construction of what was then called the Francis Palms Building. The building was named for Francis Palms, a Belgian native who moved to Detroit in 1832 and made his fortune in real estate development. Palms' descendants continued in real estate as the Palms Realty Company, and constructed this building at a time when Detroit's population and the popularity of movies was booming.
The Fillmore Detroit was constructed in 1925 as a movie house in the Renaissance Revival style of architecture. C. Howard Crane was the original architect, and the building is still called the Francis Palms Building.
The theatre was originally called the State Theatre when it opened in 1925. It was renamed the Palms-State Theatre in 1937. In 1949 it was renamed the Palms Theatre. In 1982 it was renamed back to the State Theatre. And in 2007 (as a national re-branding) it was renamed, this time the Fillmore Theatre.
The building is twelve stories high and covered with terra cotta, with an eight-story auditorium extending to the rear of the building. The office tower has elaborate Beaux-Arts Italian Renaissance decorations on all but the ground floor, which was modernized in about 1960.