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Aberdeen Exhibition and Conference Centre

Convention centre in Aberdeen, Scotland

Aberdeen Exhibition and Conference Centre

Summary

Convention centre in Aberdeen, Scotland

FieldValue
nameAberdeen Exhibition and Conference Centre
imageAberdeen Exhibition & Conference Centre.jpg
image_captionEntrance to main building (December 2005)
addressBridge of Don
Aberdeen AB23 8BL
Scotland
coordinates
ownerAberdeen City Council
opened1985
renovated2003
expanded2003
closedJune 2019
demolished2020 (arena)
classroom_cap440 (Fleming Auditorium)
banquets685 (Gordon Suite)
533 (Crombie Suite)
244 (Forbes Suite)
theatre8,500 (BHGE Arena)
2,000 (Boyd Orr Hall)
total_space9849 m2
exhibit7300 m2
breakout1033 m2

Aberdeen AB23 8BL Scotland 533 (Crombie Suite) 244 (Forbes Suite) 2,000 (Boyd Orr Hall)

The Aberdeen Exhibition and Conference Centre (also known as the General Electric Exhibition Centre and often shortened to the AECC) was a large exhibition and conference complex, in the suburb of Bridge of Don, in Aberdeen, Scotland. The complex is home to a Holiday Inn and Holiday Inn Express hotel, conference facilities and multi-purpose arena which hosted concerts and local sporting events, including the Aberdeen Cup tennis event.

The BHGE Arena (formerly the AECC Arena (1985–2002), Press & Journal Arena (2002–2012), and the GE Oil and Gas Arena (2012–2017)) was an indoor arena with a standing capacity of 8,500 and 4,750 seated for concerts and up to 8,000 for other events. The sponsorship lasted until 2019 when the arena was closed and replaced with a new arena at TECA.

History

The [[observation tower]] (December 2005)

In 2003, the AECC underwent a major refurbishment, with the conference facilities being completely re-built. As part of the redevelopment, a large viewing tower was constructed and is one of the tallest structures in Aberdeen.

Events

West entrance to arena (July 2010)
The main entrance in July 2011

Oasis have played several times over the years – their first being two performances on the 19–20 September 1997. They returned for another two gigs on the 9–10 September 2002 and once more on 12 December 2005. They performed their most recent, and probably last concerts at the venue on the 1–2 November 2008. All these gigs were sold out in a matter of minutes. Noel Gallagher returned to the venue on 14 February 2012 as part of his High Flying Birds Tour. The concert was a sell-out.

Iron Maiden, Neil Young and AC/DC are some the biggest acts in its history when AC/DC played in 1996, Young in 2009 and Iron Maiden in 2011, 2017 and 2018

On the start of the national 8-city UK tour in 1998, the first UK performance of Barney's Big Surprise featuring Barney, Baby Bop, and BJ was held here.

On 15 June 2014, American country star Dolly Parton performed a sold-out concert at the venue. The concert sold out in less than 10 minutes from going on sale.

Within the last decade it has hosted major international acts including the likes of Westlife, Steps, Kylie Minogue, blink-182, Rihanna, The Prodigy, Fall Out Boy, My Chemical Romance, Foo Fighters, Jay-Z, 50 Cent, The Killers, Hey Ocean, Katy Perry and Paramore, as well as comedians such as Frankie Boyle, Ricky Tomlinson, Peter Kay, Michael McIntyre and Russell Howard.

One Direction have also played the AECC as part of The X Factor Live Tour 2011.

Since 2006, it has played host to the Premier League Darts.

The arena has also played host to WWE wrestling events, Torville and Dean, Disney on Ice, World Snooker's Grand Prix Championship, The X Factor Live Tour and The Britain's Got Talent Live Tour.

The AECC also hosted many trade conference and exhibitions the largest of which is the biennial SPE Offshore Europe the oil and gas exhibition and conference that which place on alternate years in September.

The final event ever held at the AECC was an outdoor performance by Rod Stewart on July 15, 2019. The performance was originally scheduled for June 12, 2019, but this was cancelled due to dangerous weather conditions.

Replacement centre

Main article: P&J Live

The Event Complex Aberdeen (TECA) opened in August 2019, replacing the AECC.

Post-closure

Demolition of the arena began in March 2020. Part of the centre, facing on to Ellon Road, was purchased by a church in September for £1.8 million. In October 2021, it was reported that the land where the arena once stood would be redeveloped for housing.

References

References

  1. "BDS Sponsorship is proud to announce brokering new AECC Arena title sponsorship with GE Oil & Gas – BDS Sponsorship & Commercialisation". sponsorship.co.uk.
  2. (February 2022). "Aberdeen Exhibition and Conference Centre". mrtarchitects.com}}{{Dead link.
  3. (30 September 2014). "Oasisarchive – VIDEO: Oasis Aberdeen 1997".
  4. "Oasis Setlist at Aberdeen Exhibition and Conference Centre, Aberdeen".
  5. "Oasis Setlist at Aberdeen Exhibition and Conference Centre, Aberdeen".
  6. "Oasis brothers stay in separate hotels after Aberdeen gig".
  7. "Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds add Aberdeen date".
  8. "Dolly Parton @ Aberdeen AECC".
  9. "Dolly Parton's Aberdeen gig sells out in minutes - Showbiz / News / Evening Express".
  10. Munro, Craig. "End of an era as AECC arena torn down".
  11. (2020-09-29). "Church buys part of former Aberdeen exhibition centre for £1.79m". BBC News.
  12. (6 October 2021). "Former AECC site launched to market with permission for 500 new homes".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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