Adams Avenue Theater at 3325 Adams Ave is a 6,100-square-foot event venue in Normal Heights, San Diego, housed inside a building with over a century of performance history on the corridor. The structure operated as a movie palace during the city's early cinema era, later became a punk and rock concert hall that hosted Black Flag, The Cramps, and Iggy Pop, and then spent years as a fabric store before a full renovation returned it to live performance use. The current iteration reopened in November 2022 as a veteran-owned and women-owned event space, with the original Art Deco façade, functioning marquee, and terrazzo flooring preserved intact. Stand-up and sketch comedy programming runs through the same Adams Avenue performing-arts pipeline that feeds Comedy Heights across Normal Heights. The 6,100-square-foot open floor plan configures for candlelight concerts, comedy nights, film screenings, weddings, bat mitzvahs, corporate mixers, and community events, with 30 designated parking spots supplementing street parking in the 92116 ZIP. An upstairs condo sleeps up to eight guests and operates as an overnight rental attached to the venue, giving wedding parties and touring performers accommodations directly above the stage. Outside catering is permitted, and the open floor plan accepts vendor buildouts for tradeshows, workshops, and seated dinners. The venue sits directly on the annual Adams Avenue Street Fair route, and the marquee serves as a visual anchor during the festival's two-day, seven-stage music lineup each September. Pre-show and post-show traffic flows into the Adams Avenue bar corridor, with Rosie O'Grady's operating two blocks east as a long-running neighborhood pub that absorbs concert and comedy crowds. Balboa Park's performing-arts venues sit a short drive south through University Heights, and the theater draws audiences from the same cultural circuit that connects museum events in the park to independent stages on Adams Avenue.