The title is the question: cities in the Rust Belt tend to have many large rental facilities that are popular sites for wedding receptions and banquets. The name for those facilities seems to vary from place to place.
No really, I’ve always heard of it referred to whatever it is - the museum, the country club, the marina, the ranch, the Botanic Gardens, the B&B, the Hot Springs Resort, etc.
Jane, these are places with no function other than doing “functions.” They don’t berth boats, exhibit art, offer golf/tennis/bowling or public dance nights. They may not be as common everywhere. What they do offer is catered meals, and often subcontracted services like music or flowers.
In downstate New York and New Jersey, they’re catering halls, but in Connecticut, they’re banquet halls. The latter also autocompletes on Google for many locations between Miami and Chicago.
I’ve spent most of my life in Chicago, and have only heard them called banquet halls. That’s not just what people call them verbally; it’s generally on the sign out front.
Just another place that serves the function of what, in urban areas north and east, is a full time business. I used to lead a band in the New York area and worked in many such places.
What they call themselves in their advertisements is not necessarily the same as what their customers call them. I’m a Clevelander, and I’d be much more likely to refer to such a place as “the hall” than as “the party center”. Like, if I were just leaving a wedding, and I needed directions to get there, I’d ask “Does anyone know how to get to the hall?”.
This is doubtless because, in my demographic, most places where wedding receptions get held do call themselves a “hall”: The church hall, or the VFW hall, or the volunteer fire hall, or what have you.
Okay. I guess according to Google it’s “Denver reception venues”. I’ve heard of ‘hall’, but usually it really is just, “Where are you holding the reception?” or “What venue are you using”? or “We’ll be at the Broadmoor”, not “The reception hall is located at 1823 2st Street”.
I’m from NYC and if I needed directions, I’d be looking for directions to the hall, too.
But if I’m booking a place to hold a wedding reception, I’m looking for a catering hall. If I’m holding a baby shower, I’m looking for a VFW hall. People have showers at catering halls, and weddings at VFW halls, but a catering hall is very different from a VFW hall.
Well, in Los Angeles, at least, such places might be listed as “wedding reception venues,” but the location itself is usually attached to something that does in fact have another function, such as a hotel, restaurant, Such-and-Such Club, etc. So it’s not going to have a big sign in front that says, “banquet hall,” or whatever, although inside the location the particular room might be labeled that way. I know I’ve seen somewhere, at some point in my life, a facility or two that are simply labeled “banquet hall,” but those are so rare I can’t even remember where they were.
So in general, if someone asks, “Where’s the reception going to be held?”, the answer will be, “At the Yacht Club,” or “At the Sportsman’s Lodge,” or something like that. For the most part, in California you’re not going to find in any community a location that’s generically referred to as “the party center,” or “the banquet hall,” with or without a proper name tied to it.
Fraternal order halls sometimes serve this purpose, too, because most of their members have died anyway, and so they often rent the facilities out for receptions, quinceañeros, etc.
When I lived in Denver, Northeastern Italian-American style banquet halls were very rare. Hotels, country clubs, and so on served a similar function. Like Doug said, though, I’m wondering about the places that do just wedding receptions and similar affairs.
in my family, it’s the bar.
But generally, just “the reception” - there’s not a specific name other than that or the place’s proper name. And I’m in Atlanta, fwiw.
Upper midwest - a dedicated reception/party facility is a banquet hall.
“Party house” sounds like a rental property in a college town, usually occupied by a group of people not yet accustomed to the responsibilities of living on their own, including keeping noise to reasonable levels, not letting guests pee in the front yard, putting empty liquor bottles in the trash rather than throwing them in the street, etc.
If it’s only business seems to be a place for wedding receptions, holiday parties, class reunions and so on, folks around St. Louis will probably call it a banquet hall.