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Trinity Episcopal Church (Toledo, Ohio)

19th-century Episcopal church buildingsChurches completed in 1863Churches in Toledo, OhioChurches on the National Register of Historic Places in OhioEpiscopal churches in Ohio
Gothic Revival church buildings in OhioNational Register of Historic Places in Lucas County, OhioNorthwest Ohio Registered Historic Place stubsOhio church stubs
Trinity Episcopal Church, Toledo
Trinity Episcopal Church, Toledo

Trinity Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church at 316 Adams Street in Toledo, Ohio. It was built in 1863 in a Gothic Revival style. The building was added to the National Register in 1983.In 1910 the Skinner Organ Company installed a new pipe organ in the church. At a cost of $17,000, it was the largest organ in Toledo.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Trinity Episcopal Church (Toledo, Ohio) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Trinity Episcopal Church (Toledo, Ohio)
North Saint Clair Street, Toledo

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N 41.6525 ° E -83.533333333333 °
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Trinity Episcopal Church

North Saint Clair Street
43604 Toledo
Ohio, United States
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Trinity Episcopal Church, Toledo
Trinity Episcopal Church, Toledo
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Glass City Center
Glass City Center

The Glass City Center is a performing arts and convention center located in downtown Toledo, Ohio. Opened on March 27, 1987, as the SeaGate Convention Centre, the center's exhibit hall measures 74,520 square feet (207 feet by 360 feet) of space and seats up to 5,100 for a banquet, 9,000 for a meeting, and 4,000 in a classroom configuration. It can be divided into three smaller halls, and when used for concerts with a 60 foot by 40 foot stage, can seat 2,000 (in one of the smaller halls), 3,000 (in two of the smaller halls), or 5,900 (in the entire hall) for concerts, stage shows, and other shows, this so that there are no bad seats in the house. Many of those seats used for concerts are in telescopic risers; there are 18 telescopic units at the arena, set up in sections of six; as a result, there are six sections of riser seating and a total of 3,216 in the risers (536 per section). The center also features 17,552 square feet (1,631 m2) of meeting space. The facility was the host to the following notable events: Gathering of the Juggalos 2001 (July 13–15, 2001) Mid-American Conference men's basketball tournament (1996-1999, annually) Toledo Ice (ABA) (partial 2005–2006 season) Glass City Rollers (WFTDA) (current tenant) The center was the site of the annual Jehovah's Witnesses beginning in 2005. The group canceled its 2020 meeting due to the COVID-19 pandemic.The Park Inn by Radisson hotel attached to the center closed permanently in April 2020. In July, Lucas County Commissioners announced the structure would be renovated to house a 216-room Hilton Garden Inn and 93-room Homewood Suites. They also announced the demolition of the adjacent SeaGate Hotel which has been vacant since 2009.In February 2022, it was announced that the SeaGate Centre would be renamed as the Glass City Center as part of their renovations to the facility. It features a new, 16,000-square-foot ballroom, along with a redesigned exterior and interior of the building.