Neptune
A historic 1921 theater in Seattle's University District with a nautical theme, originally built as a silent film palace and now operated by Seattle Theatre Group as a performing arts and live music venue.
History: Originally opened November 16, 1921 as the U-Neptune Theatre, a silent film palace designed by architect Henderson Ryan with a nautical theme inspired by King Neptune. Featured taupe and blue decor, sea scene murals, and Neptune-head wall sconces. Screened X-rated movies in the 1970s, then repertory and indie cinema in the 1980s-1990s, including a record-setting 14-year run of weekly midnight Rocky Horror Picture Show screenings. Closed for a $720,000 renovation in January 2011, reopened September 25, 2011 as a performing arts and music venue. The renovation saved the building from demolition for the adjacent U District Link light rail station. Designated a Seattle landmark in 2014.
Facilities
| Standing capacity | 1,000 |
|---|---|
| Seated capacity | 736 |
| Capacity notes | Reduced to 736 seated after 2011 renovation; up to 1,000 for standing events |
| Stage | Yes |
| Parking | No dedicated parking lot. Several pay lots nearby and metered street parking available (free after 8PM and on Sundays). |
| Accessibility | Wheelchair accessible seats on main floor. Sennheiser listening devices available free of charge on first-come-first-served basis. No elevators in building. Contact [email protected] or 206-682-1414 press 5 for assistance. |
Rental policies
| Alcohol | In-house |
|---|---|
| Rental info | Contact [email protected] for rate inquiries |
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