
TOPSTOPS PACIFIC NORTHWEST Ranked by tickets sold. Based on data from concerts and events in Alberta, Alaska, British Columbia, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington and Wyoming Nov. 1, 2019-Oct. 31, 2020, as reported to Pollstar. Data updated as of Dec. 1. RANK VENUE TICKETS SOLD CAPACITY GROSS SHOWS MORE THAN 15,000 1 Tacoma (Wash.) Dome 205,875 21,500 $8,748,413 33 2 Moda Center, Portland, Ore. 153,797 19,000 $9,624,100 20 3 Rogers Place, Edmonton, Alberta 11,776 18,982 $490,178 2 4 Rogers Arena, Vancouver, B.C. 11,383 20,763 $841,450 1 5 P.N.E. Pacific Coliseum, Vancouver, B.C. 9,822 16,500 $644,070 2 10,001-15,000 CAPACITY 1 Spokane (Wash.) Arena 29,825 12,500 $1,854,089 3 2 ExtraMile Arena, Boise, Idaho 18,807 12,808 $860,333 3 3 Ford Idaho Center Arena, Nampa 1,907 12,279 $93,074 1 5,001-10,000 CAPACITY 1 WaMu Theater, Seattle 28,029 9,000 $1,275,311 4 2 Accesso ShoWare Center, Kent, Wash. 26,366 7,800 $1,849,883 5 3 Abbotsford (B.C.) Centre 25,373 7,940 $1,202,914 6 4 Veterans Memorial Coliseum, Portland, Ore. 20,115 9,000 $821,401 7 5 Toyota Center Tri Cities, Kennewick, Wash. 12,959 7,200 $706,936 3 2,001-5,000 CAPACITY 1 Paramount Theatre, Seattle 171,694 2,807 $12,111,724 76 2 Velma V. Morrison Center for the Performing Arts, Boise, Idaho 77,733 2,037 $4,463,799 50 3 Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland, Ore. 13,601 2,776 $797,911 6 4 P.N.E. Forum, Vancouver, B.C. 11,721 3,950 $512,199 3 5 Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium, Calgary, Alberta 9,619 2,535 $607,105 6 2,000 OR LESS CAPACITY 1 The Neptune, Seattle 58,483 1,000 $1,900,417 83 2 Moore Theatre, Seattle 54,127 1,804 $2,543,055 45 3 McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland, Ore. 37,104 1,500 $1,245,474 38 4 Knitting Factory Concert House, Boise, Idaho 28,641 999 $747,740 42 5 Roseland Theater, Portland, Ore. 28,047 1,410 $785,905 26 POTATOES TO GO: Washington farmers gave away more than , because our digital signage We were moving to things 200,000 pounds of potatoes at part of responding to the pan- like cashless entry, clear bags, the Tacoma Dome in May to fight demic and coming back to work that sort of thing. We were mov- hunger during the pandemic. is going to be communicating ing toward those, So those kinds to our guests how to keep them of things I think we would have safe, so we were able to tuck that eventually gotten to. But things in. So we’ll be able to reopen with like all the disinfecting things, even further ways to wow our which are things we had never guests. We’ve ripped apart all really heard of before, are great. the concessions and we’ll rebuild They’re great for our guests and them so they can provide better we probably should have been and quicker service and more doing them so that we even could variety. We never would have have avoided the annual flu and had the opportunity to do any of everything. So those things aren’t those things because who gets going away once COVID goes COURTESY VENUE COURTESY downtime? away. JANUARY 2021 27.
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