Description

Hello! Welcome to my collection for my leisure growables!



When we got After Dark I was very excited about having a real leisure district. A place where our Cims could go out and have fun! Full of neon lights, clubs, theaters and bars. The quality of the buildings we got however, was a bit of a dissapointment. Weird bars, clubs with open roofs and gaming halls. Not very visual appealing. If you go to New York and visit 42nd and 43rd street you can see what I had in mind. That's why I started crafting a real leisure district, visually appealing buildings in classic or beaux arts style.



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Update 12-07-2016



I added a mini update with:





The Majestic Theater

The Majestic Theatre is a performing arts theater in the City Center District of Downtown Dallas. It is the last remnant of Theater Row, the city's historic entertainment center on Elm Street, and is a contributing property in the Harwood Historic District. The structure is a Dallas Landmark and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.



The BAM Harvey Theater

Harvey Theater, with 874 seats, formerly known as the Majestic Theater, named in Lichtenstein's honor in 1999. A renovation by architect Hugh Hardy left the interior unpainted and with often exposed stonework, giving theater a unique feel of a "modern ruin". In April 2014, CNN named the BAM Harvey as one of the "15 of the World's Most Spectacular Theaters." [4] Today, the BAM Harvey has become the first choice of venues at BAM among directors and actors for presenting traditional theater.



The Boston Fire Museum

The Congress Street Fire Station, now known as the Boston Fire Museum, is an historic fire station at 344 Congress Street in Boston, Massachusetts.



The Romanesque style station was designed by Harrison H. Atwood, then the city architect, and constructed in 1891. It is distinctive for its early use, within this style, of light-colored brick, and features a rusticated ground level and progressively more refined detailing as it rises.



The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1987 and was included in the Fort Point Channel Historic District in 2004. It now serves as the Boston Fire Museum.

