For more than a year, St. Louis concert venues operated under strict capacity limits and requirements that audience members stay masked and socially distanced. The rules were in place to prevent spread of the coronavirus among crowds.
But concert-goers shouldn鈥檛 expect everything to go back to normal at once, following Mayor Tishaura Jones鈥 Friday announcement that the city is lifting those restrictions.
Different venues plan to relax safety restrictions at different paces.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 want to end up saying, OK, you bought a ticket for this event, but we鈥檝e totally changed what that event looks like and now it鈥檚 twice as many people as we said it鈥檚 going to be,鈥 said Peter Palermo, executive director of the . 鈥淲e don鈥檛 want to put people in a position where they feel uncomfortable.鈥
The Sheldon began a series of outdoor concerts just hours after Jones鈥 announcement. Coronavirus safety measures stayed in effect, including social distanced seating. That setup will remain for the rest of the series, which runs through June 18.
Though the venue resumed indoor concerts in March with strict capacity limits, Palermo said it likely won鈥檛 return to full-capacity events until September. Without restrictions, the venue can accommodate 712 patrons.
At , an outdoor venue operated by the Kranzberg Arts Foundation, there will be a gradual transition to full-capacity events. Ticket-buyers will soon have a choice between sitting in socially distanced sections or ones that are potentially filled to pre-pandemic capacity levels. Staff members at Kranzberg venues will continue to wear masks.
鈥淲e want to ensure that we can maintain the integrity of our spaces, both for those that are ready to re-enter and be comfortable with other people around them and close to them, and also those who need more time,鈥 Kranzberg Arts Foundation Executive Director Chris Hansen said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not going to just reopen everything at full capacity and let our guard down.鈥
One change will come swiftly: Kranzberg Arts Foundation officials plan to reopen High Low, its Grand Center venue housing a coffee shop and art gallery, to the public Tuesday. The organization will no longer require individual appointments to view the gallery.
At , the 2,000-person rock club in the Delmar Loop, managing partner Pat Hagin has been eager to resume concerts to packed houses once it鈥檚 safe to do so. There are six more concerts scheduled in a limited-capacity series featuring local bands, dubbed 鈥淓ndeavor for Normalcy.鈥
Tables installed in the previously open space will remain in place to allow for limited, socially distanced audiences at these shows. The venue will return to full capacity on June 24 for a performance by nationally touring country artist Justin Moore.
In the meantime, Hagin has instructed staffers to stop asking health screen questions and giving temperature checks to patrons at the door. New signs will ask patrons who have not been vaccinated against COVID-19 to wear masks and remain socially distanced.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not pressing anyone. We鈥檙e not asking for proof of vaccination. It鈥檚 up to the individual at that point,鈥 Hagin said.
The will host the last in its spring series of local musicians Saturday, with its existing pandemic safety rules still in place.
鈥淲e have always been planning on full capacity in the fall, so that is still the direction we are headed,鈥 a spokesperson wrote in an email.
Leaders of did not rush to revise their policies last weekend for the finale of the spring season. A spokesperson said the organization has not yet determined when it will change its audience capacity.
At the Muny, leaders are still working on an updated plan to resume productions, a spokesperson said. The outdoor theater in Forest Park previously announced beginning in early July, if pandemic conditions permit.
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