The Lucas Theatre for the Arts sits at the corner of Abercorn and Congress Streets on Reynolds Square, and if you have ever tried to park a group of 20-plus people within walking distance of it on a concert night, you already know what this guide is about. Street spots in the Historic District fill up fast. The two city-owned garages nearby — Bryan Street and State Street — cap their evenings with flat-rate pricing that assumes you are driving in solo, not coordinating a crew.

And the moment the Savannah Music Festival rolls through in late March, every surface lot and metered space within four blocks turns into a premium-pricing scramble.

A Savannah charter bus rental cuts through all of that. One vehicle picks your group up at the hotel, the reunion venue, or wherever everyone is gathered, drops you steps from the Abercorn Street entrance, and waits when the curtain comes down. This guide covers exactly how that works — the drop-off logistics, the permit requirements the City of Savannah places on oversized vehicles in the Historic District, which vehicle fits your group, what the trip costs, and which events on the Lucas calendar fill the surrounding streets fastest.

Address

32 Abercorn Street at Congress Street — Reynolds Square

Capacity

1,237 seats — 86,000 sq ft Spanish Baroque landmark

Box Office

216 E. Broughton St. · (912) 525-5050

On-site parking

None — nearest city garage: 100 E. Bryan St.

Motor coach permit

Required for coaches 34+ ft in the Historic District

Busiest event windows

Savannah Music Festival (late March–early April) · SCAD Film Festival (Oct. 24–31)

The Lucas Theatre: A 1,237-Seat Historic Landmark Worth the Trip

The Lucas opened on December 26, 1921 — designed by Claude K. Howell in the Spanish Baroque Revival style, with an interior that layers Greek Revival moldings and early Art Deco detail beneath a 40-foot ceiling dome. Arthur Lucas, an Atlanta businessman who eventually controlled dozens of Georgia theaters, named it after himself. It was the first building in Savannah to install air conditioning, in 1923, a full generation before most homes and businesses got there.

The theater closed in 1976 after a sparse screening of The Exorcist and spent the next two decades quietly deteriorating on Reynolds Square. Local preservationists Emma and Lee Adler organized a nonprofit to rescue it in 1987; SCAD purchased the property in 1995 and oversaw a full restoration. In December 2000 the Lucas reopened with a showing of Gone with the Wind — almost precisely 88 years after the original film’s Atlanta premiere.

SCAD assumed ongoing management in 2002 and has operated it as a public cultural venue ever since.

Today the 1,237-seat house is the home venue of the Savannah Philharmonic Orchestra, a primary venue for the Savannah Music Festival (March 25–April 5, 2026) and the SCAD Savannah Film Festival (October 24–31, 2026), and a regular stop for touring concerts, comedy, and SCAD-curated film screenings throughout the year. The box office is at 216 E. Broughton Street, reachable at (912) 525-5050, with hours Monday–Friday 9:30 AM–5:30 PM, Saturday 10 AM–4 PM, and Sunday 1–4 PM.

Lucas Theatre for the Arts, 32 Abercorn Street at Congress Street, Reynolds Square, Savannah — 1,237 seats, zero on-site parking, and the city’s most recognizable Spanish Baroque facade.

How a Bus Drop-Off at the Lucas Theatre Actually Works

Here is the detail most guides skip entirely. The Lucas Theatre sits on Abercorn Street at the intersection with Congress Street, on the south side of Reynolds Square. There is no on-site parking, no loading dock on Abercorn that fits a full-size coach without coordination, and the Historic District’s street grid — originally laid out in the 18th century — was not designed with a 45-foot motorcoach in mind.

The practical approach: your bus drops your group at the Congress Street side of Reynolds Square, where the street is wide enough to pull to the curb directly across from the theater’s main entrance. Your group steps off, crosses Congress, and walks about 30 seconds to the Abercorn Street doors. The bus then moves on — either to the Savannah Visitor Center parking lot at 301 Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, which is the city’s designated overflow parking for oversized vehicles, or to another approved area depending on the length of your event.

For a quick drop and return, the bus circles back for post-show pickup at the same Congress Street curb.

The one-line version: your bus pulls to the Congress Street side of Reynolds Square, your group walks 30 seconds to the Abercorn entrance, and the bus waits at an approved oversized parking area until showtime ends. That sequence, confirmed in advance, is what keeps a 40-person group together and on time — instead of scattered across three parking garages searching for their cars at 11 PM.

The City of Savannah Motor Coach Permit — What You Need to Know Before You Book

This is the detail that catches first-timers completely off guard. The City of Savannah requires a motor coach permit for all vehicles longer than 34 feet that tour or travel within the Historic District — and the Lucas Theatre sits squarely inside that boundary. There are two permit types relevant to a group heading to a show:

  • Transportation Permit: issued for motor coaches entering the Historic District solely to transport passengers to and from hotels, restaurants, and destinations like the Lucas Theatre. This is the standard permit for a concert or event run.
  • Motor Coach Tour Permit: covers touring the Historic District with a registered local guide, plus the right to use designated motor coach stops. Groups combining a theater visit with a city driving tour need this one instead.

Permits are purchased through the Department of Mobility & Parking Services, Transportation office, at the Tri-Centennial Park Visitor Center, 301 Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, open Monday through Friday, 8 AM to 4:30 PM. Motor coaches entering after 4:30 PM on weekdays, weekends, or holidays must purchase permits online. The city’s motor coach page at the City of Savannah motor coach page has the current permit application and fee schedule — we recommend checking it before your event date, since rates and requirements update periodically.

When you book through Party Bus Savannah, the permit is handled as part of your reservation — you do not need to navigate the city’s permit office yourself. We confirm the correct permit type for your specific trip, so there is no scramble at a city checkpoint on the way into downtown.

Nearest Parking for Cars in Your Group

If some guests are driving in and meeting the group at the theater rather than boarding the bus, here is what they are walking into. There is no on-site parking at the Lucas Theatre. The two closest city-owned garages are:

  • Bryan Street Parking Garage (100 East Bryan Street, open 24 hours) — less than two blocks north of the theater. Evening flat rate after 5 PM Monday through Thursday: $2; Friday and Saturday evenings: $5. Daily maximum: $20.
  • State Street Parking Garage (100 East State Street, open 6 AM–1 AM) — similar pricing structure, a short walk from Reynolds Square.

On normal event nights these garages have capacity. During the Savannah Music Festival and the SCAD Film Festival, when venues across the Historic District are running shows at the same time, both garages fill earlier than guests expect. A city one-day visitor parking pass ($15) covers unlimited access to city-owned garages — worth considering for guests who prefer not to hunt for metered spots.

Street parking on meters north of Liberty Street runs a maximum of $2 per hour, enforced 8 AM to 8 PM Monday through Saturday and free on Sundays.

Which Bus Fits Your Group?

The Lucas seats 1,237 people, but most groups arriving by bus are considerably smaller — a wedding party heading to a Savannah Philharmonic performance, a corporate outing for a film festival premiere, a school group visiting a SCAD screening. The right vehicle is the one that seats everyone without making you pay for a coach three times the size you actually need.

Vehicle Typical capacity Best for Key amenities
14-passenger Sprinter limo Up to 14 Corporate VIP groups, small birthday parties, bridal parties Premium leather, USB charging, tinted privacy windows
15–35 passenger minibus 15–35 Mid-size corporate groups, school field trips, family reunions Powerful A/C, plush reclining seats, overhead storage
15–50 passenger party bus 15–50 Birthday celebrations, bachelorette parties, milestone nights out Built-in bar, LED lighting, Bluetooth sound, flat-panel TVs
40–56 passenger charter bus Up to 56 Large corporate outings, school groups, large reunions Reclining seats, climate control, WiFi, power outlets, onboard restroom, undercarriage bays

A 14-passenger Sprinter limo handles a bridal party night out — dinner on Broughton Street and then a Savannah Philharmonic concert at the Lucas — with room to breathe and a clean curbside arrival. A 35-passenger minibus is the right pick for a corporate group heading to a SCAD Film Festival premiere, with overhead storage for bags and powerful A/C for the Georgia October heat. A full-size 56-passenger charter bus is ideal for school field trips and large family reunions, with undercarriage bays for everything from instrument cases to overnight bags.

ADA-accessible vehicles are available — the Lucas Theatre’s handicapped-accessible seating is on the orchestra level (the theater has no elevator), so let us know your group’s accessibility needs when you book and we will arrange both the right vehicle and make sure arrival logistics account for that routing. Call 912-752-1890 and we will match you with the right size.

The Lucas Theatre Event Calendar: When Bus Groups Fill Downtown

Not every Lucas show creates the same street-level chaos, but several annual events push parking and rideshare demand across the entire Historic District at once. These are the dates where setting up your group’s transportation in advance matters most.

Savannah Music Festival — March 25 Through April 5, 2026

This is the single biggest transportation event on the Lucas calendar. The Savannah Music Festival runs 12 days across multiple downtown venues at the same time — the Lucas Theatre, Trustees Theater, Ships of the Sea Maritime Museum, Trinity United Methodist Church, and others — which means every parking garage and metered spot in the Historic District is competing for the same inventory across all of them at once. In 2026 the festival features artists including Pat Metheny, Robert Cray, Old Crow Medicine Show, and Lucius, with shows stacked across evenings and afternoons.

During festival evenings, the Bryan Street and State Street garages regularly reach capacity before showtime. Rideshare surge pricing on Congress Street and Abercorn Street spikes sharply around the 7:30–8 PM show windows. Groups of 15 or more who try to coordinate separate cars — or rely on rideshare to converge on Reynolds Square at the same time — frequently end up arriving in scattered waves at different times.

A Savannah charter bus rental cuts that out entirely: one vehicle, one arrival, everyone steps off together at the Congress Street curb and walks in together.

Booking urgency: Music Festival weekends are among our busiest booking windows of the year. If your group has a specific show date in mind, lock in the vehicle as soon as your tickets are confirmed — by the time late March approaches, availability thins out fast.

SCAD Savannah Film Festival — October 24 Through 31, 2026

The 29th SCAD Savannah Film Festival runs October 24 through 31, 2026, with the Lucas Theatre and Trustees Theater serving as the two flagship venues. Individual event tickets go on sale October 2, 2026. The festival offers a free circulating shuttle between select hotels and venues, but that shuttle runs a fixed one-route system that gets you close to venues — not directly to your specific show at a specific time with your entire group together.

For corporate groups hosting client entertainment during the festival, or for large family groups treating the festival as a multi-night event, a dedicated Savannah party bus rental is the cleaner answer: you set the pickup time at your hotel, the bus drops your group at the Congress Street curb, and you have a confirmed return pickup rather than waiting on a shared shuttle that may or may not have room.

October in Savannah is peak visitor season, and the Film Festival adds to the general fall crowds. Downtown hotel blocks around the Historic District fill significantly, and parking garages near Reynolds Square see elevated demand starting Thursday evenings. Book the bus when you book your tickets — both sell out.

Savannah Philharmonic — Season Runs Fall Through Spring

The Savannah Philharmonic calls the Lucas home for its full concert season, with performances running from September through May. The 2025–2026 season includes Tchaikovsky’s Fifth (January 17), Beethoven’s Eroica (February 7), and an April program featuring Borodin’s Prince Igor and Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique. Individual performances draw a largely local and regional audience rather than the citywide festival crowds, which means parking is more manageable on most Philharmonic nights — though the Bryan Street Garage still fills by curtain time on Saturday evenings.

Groups of 20 or more attending Philharmonic performances are a natural fit for a minibus: the pre-concert dinner at a Broughton Street restaurant, then the short run to Reynolds Square, then post-concert drinks somewhere on the way back. The bus handles the route; your group handles the conversation.

Year-Round SCAD Programming and Special Screenings

Beyond the flagship festivals, the Lucas runs SCAD film screenings, student and alumni showcases, and one-off special events throughout the calendar year. These smaller events rarely strain downtown parking the way the Music and Film Festivals do, but getting a group of 25 people to converge on Reynolds Square from different parts of Savannah after dinner on a weeknight is still a logistics exercise most organizers would rather not repeat. A minibus solves it: one pickup location, one arrival, no one circling Abercorn looking for the last metered space.

What Groups Typically Book for a Lucas Theatre Visit

The Lucas draws a wide range of group types, and the transportation need changes depending on the occasion. A few of the runs we set up most often for this venue:

  • Corporate client entertainment. A company hosting clients at the Savannah Music Festival or SCAD Film Festival premiere needs transportation that arrives on schedule, looks sharp at the curb, and departs on time after the show. A Sprinter limo or executive minibus handles this without requiring clients to find their own way through the Historic District grid. See our corporate event transportation service.
  • Birthday and milestone celebrations. A group celebrating a 50th birthday with dinner on River Street and a concert at the Lucas benefits from a party bus that turns both legs of the evening into the event. LED lighting, a sound system, and a bar onboard mean the celebration starts the moment you board, not when you finally find a table.
  • Wedding weekends. Out-of-town wedding guests who want to add a Savannah Philharmonic night to the long weekend frequently need coordinated transportation from hotel blocks in the Historic District to the theater and back. A minibus shuttle handles that loop cleanly, with no guest worrying about parking or navigation in an unfamiliar city.
  • School and student groups. SCAD programming and special film screenings attract student groups from schools across the region. A charter bus keeps the entire group together from campus to the Congress Street curb, with undercarriage bays for equipment and onboard restrooms for longer drives from outside Chatham County.
  • Bachelorette and bachelor parties. A Savannah weekend that combines the city’s nightlife, a restaurant crawl, and a Lucas Theatre show needs one vehicle that can handle all of it — not three separate rideshares converging on different blocks at different times. A party bus on an open itinerary keeps the night running on your schedule.

Bus vs. Parking vs. Rideshare: The Honest Comparison for a Lucas Theatre Group

For one or two people, driving and parking in the Bryan Street Garage is perfectly workable — no reason to charter a bus for a couple attending a Philharmonic concert. But the math shifts the moment a group grows past the point where one car handles everyone. Here is the honest breakdown:

Option Arrive together? Festival-night parking Post-show pickup Best for
Charter bus or party bus Yes — one vehicle Not your problem Waiting at Congress Street curb Groups of 14–56
Multiple cars, own parking No — staggered arrivals Competes for same garages Back to separate garages 1–5 people per car
Rideshare (Uber/Lyft) No — multiple trips Surge pricing on event nights Post-show wait + surge 1–4 per vehicle
SCAD Film Festival shuttle Partially — fixed route Select hotels only Fixed shuttle timing Festival attendees near route hotels

The post-show moment is where parking and rideshare fall apart for a group. When 1,237 people exit the Lucas at roughly the same time, Abercorn and Congress Streets fill with pedestrians, the Bryan Street Garage entrance backs up, and rideshare surge pricing on the Historic District grid spikes for 20–40 minutes. A chartered bus is already waiting nearby at an agreed pickup spot — your group walks out to a known address and a vehicle that was expecting you at a specific time.

No one is refreshing an app on the sidewalk at 11 PM.

What a Lucas Theatre Bus Rental Costs

Party Bus Savannah gives you all-inclusive pricing in under 30 seconds — you will know the exact number before you commit to anything. The quote depends on a handful of clear factors:

  • Vehicle size: a 14-passenger Sprinter limo and a 56-passenger charter bus are different rates. You pay for the vehicle your headcount actually needs.
  • Total hours: the block of time the vehicle is dedicated to your group — typically dinner pickup through post-show return, usually 3–5 hours for a Lucas Theatre evening.
  • Date and event: Savannah Music Festival and SCAD Film Festival dates run higher than a standard Philharmonic Tuesday, because demand across all downtown venues peaks at the same time.
  • Route and pickup location: a hotel on the riverfront is a shorter run than a pickup in the Midtown or Southside neighborhoods.

For real hourly ranges: 14-passenger Sprinter limos run $170–$344/hour; 15–20 passenger party buses run $204–$378/hour; 20–30 passenger party buses run $244–$414/hour; 35–50 passenger party buses and minibuses run $294–$490/hour; and 40–56 passenger charter buses run $150–$300/hour. A typical 4-hour Lucas Theatre evening — dinner pickup, show drop-off, post-show return — lands in a predictable range once you have your headcount and date. Split across 20, 30, or 40 people, the per-person number routinely beats coordinating the same group through separate rideshares with festival-night surge pricing.

Call 912-752-1890 for a free all-inclusive quote, or use our online tool for instant availability.

A Sample Evening: Corporate Group at the Film Festival

To put a real number behind the math: a 22-person corporate group attending a SCAD Film Festival premiere last October booked a 25-passenger minibus. Pickup at 6:30 PM from the Bohemian Hotel on River Street, dinner drop-off at a Broughton Street restaurant at 6:45 PM, theater drop-off on Congress Street at 8:15 PM for a 9 PM screening. Post-show pickup at the same Congress curb at 11:15 PM, back at the hotel by 11:30 PM.

The 5-hour all-inclusive rental: $1,470 — about $67 per person. Every attendee arrived and departed together, no one had to find a parking garage through the festival crowd, and the company brought its client group in as a single coordinated arrival rather than a scattered rideshare parade.

Getting to the Lucas from Around Savannah: Routes and Drive Times

The Lucas Theatre sits near the center of the Historic District, which means most pickup points in the Savannah metro area are a short drive away — the challenge is not the distance, it is the Historic District grid itself, which routes oversized vehicles along approved corridors rather than the most direct line.

From… Approx. distance Typical drive time
Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport (SAV) ~12 miles 20–25 minutes
River Street / Downtown Hotels <1 mile 5–10 minutes
Forsyth Park area ~1.5 miles 8–12 minutes
Midtown Savannah ~5 miles 12–18 minutes
Pooler / Westside ~15 miles 20–28 minutes
Tybee Island ~20 miles 28–38 minutes
Hilton Head Island, SC ~45 miles 50–65 minutes

The Historic District grid runs one-way streets and squares in a pattern that Savannah residents navigate intuitively and out-of-towners frequently find disorienting after dark. Reynolds Square itself is surrounded by one-way traffic, and the streets that run alongside it — Abercorn, Congress, Bryan — all have their own direction and turn restrictions. A bus approaching from Bay Street via Abercorn reaches Reynolds Square cleanly.

The return route out of downtown toward I-16 or I-95 depends on the time of night and whether festival traffic is moving north or south on the main corridors.

None of that is your problem when you book a charter bus. The route is taken care of for you — including the approach corridor the city requires for oversized vehicles entering the Historic District on event nights.

Accessibility at the Lucas Theatre: What to Know Before Arrival

The Lucas Theatre does not have an elevator. All handicapped-accessible seating is located on the orchestra level, which is street-level accessible from the Abercorn Street entrance. If your group includes guests who need accessible seating, those tickets should be arranged directly through the box office at (912) 525-5050 or 216 E. Broughton Street before the show.

Closed captioning devices are available for guests who need hearing assistance — contact the box office or email the theater staff for arrangements in advance.

ADA-accessible vehicles in our fleet are available at no extra cost — just let us know when you book, at least 48 hours before your event date, and we will confirm the right vehicle for your group’s needs. The Congress Street drop-off at Reynolds Square is level and accessible, which means guests who need step-free arrival have a straightforward path from the bus to the Abercorn entrance.

Tips for Groups Visiting the Lucas Theatre

  • There is no on-site parking. Build this into your group’s communications ahead of time so no one arrives expecting a lot behind the theater. The Bryan Street Garage (100 E. Bryan Street) is the closest for cars in your group, and it is open 24 hours.
  • Book tickets and buses simultaneously during festival windows. During the Savannah Music Festival (late March–early April) and SCAD Film Festival (late October), both premium show tickets and the right-size bus vehicles are limited. Waiting until one is confirmed and then trying to add the other is how you end up with a 56-seat charter bus for a group of 12, or no available vehicle at all.
  • Arrive 30 minutes before curtain. The Lucas box office recommends early arrival for will-call pickup and seating. For a group of 30, that timeline actually matters — add a 5-minute buffer to your bus pickup time to account for loading, so the bus reaches Congress Street with time to spare.
  • Confirm accessibility needs in advance. The theater has no elevator; all accessible seating is orchestra level. Email the theater before your visit and let us know when you book the bus so both ends are coordinated.
  • Post-show: agree on a pickup window before you go in. The bus waits nearby and returns at an agreed time. Set that pickup window at booking, not at intermission, so no one is standing on Congress Street searching for a phone number.

Before or After the Show: What Groups Do Near Reynolds Square

Reynolds Square and the blocks surrounding it put your group within easy walking distance of most of Savannah’s Historic District restaurant corridor, which is one of the genuinely useful things about a charter bus drop-off: because the bus handles the drive, the evening is not organized around parking — it is organized around dinner, the show, and whatever comes next.

A few of the stops groups pair most often with a Lucas Theatre visit:

  • Broughton Street is a five-minute walk north — the city’s main commercial corridor for pre-show dinner, with restaurants ranging from casual to reservation-required. Groups heading to an 8 PM curtain typically board the bus from Broughton around 7:40 PM for the short run to Reynolds Square.
  • River Street is about 10 minutes on foot downhill from the theater, making it a natural post-show destination for a group that wants to end the night by the water. The bus can wait at the Savannah Visitor Center lot and pick up at the Congress Street drop zone on the way back through.
  • City Market (Jefferson and Bryan Streets) is four blocks west and popular for after-show drinks and live music, with the Congress Street Extension parking garage close by if anyone in the group needs to retrieve a car.

A party bus is the right vehicle for an evening that moves through multiple stops — the built-in bar, LED lighting, and sound system mean the pre-show and post-show legs of the night are part of the event, not just the commute. Call 912-752-1890 and tell us your itinerary; we build the route around your stops.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where exactly does a charter bus drop off at Lucas Theatre?

The practical drop-off is on the Congress Street side of Reynolds Square, directly across from the theater’s main block. Your group steps off, crosses Congress, and reaches the Abercorn Street entrance in about 30 seconds. The bus then waits at an approved oversized vehicle area — typically the Savannah Visitor Center lot at 301 Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard — until your agreed post-show pickup time.

Does a charter bus need a permit to enter the Historic District for a Lucas Theatre drop-off?

Yes. The City of Savannah requires a motor coach permit for all vehicles longer than 34 feet operating in the Historic District. A Transportation Permit covers entry for the sole purpose of transporting passengers to a destination like the Lucas Theatre.

Permits are obtained through the Department of Mobility & Parking Services at 301 Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. When you book with Party Bus Savannah, permit coordination is handled as part of your reservation. Current details are at the city’s motor coach permit page.

Is there parking at the Lucas Theatre?

No on-site parking. The closest city-owned garage is the Bryan Street Parking Garage at 100 East Bryan Street (open 24 hours), less than two blocks north. The State Street Parking Garage at 100 East State Street is a similar distance.

Evening flat rates at both garages are $2 Monday–Thursday after 5 PM and $5 Friday–Saturday after 5 PM, with a $20 daily maximum. During festival weekends both garages fill before showtime.

How much does it cost to rent a bus to the Lucas Theatre?

Pricing depends on vehicle size, the number of hours, the date, and your pickup location. As a range: 14-passenger Sprinter limos run $170–$344/hour; 15–35 passenger minibuses run $294–$490/hour; and 40–56 passenger charter buses run $150–$300/hour. A typical 3–5 hour Lucas Theatre evening comes out to a predictable flat total that, split across a group, usually compares favorably to coordinating rideshares during Savannah Music Festival or SCAD Film Festival surge pricing.

Call 912-752-1890 for an all-inclusive quote in under 30 seconds.

When should I book a bus for the Savannah Music Festival or SCAD Film Festival?

As soon as your show tickets are confirmed. Both festival windows are among the busiest booking periods in Savannah. For the Savannah Music Festival (late March–April 5, 2026) and SCAD Film Festival (October 24–31, 2026), the right-size vehicles are the first to go.

Waiting until two weeks out during either festival typically means taking whatever remains rather than the vehicle that fits your group. Call 912-752-1890 when you have your tickets in hand.

Is the Lucas Theatre wheelchair accessible?

All handicapped-accessible seating is on the orchestra level, which is accessible from the Abercorn Street entrance. The theater does not have an elevator, so upper-level seating is not accessible. Closed captioning devices are available through the box office at (912) 525-5050.

Our fleet includes ADA-accessible vehicles — let us know your needs when you book so we can confirm the right vehicle and coordinate the Congress Street drop for accessibility.

Can the bus stay with us during the show?

The bus is booked as a block of hours, so it waits nearby during the show — not parked in front of the theater — and comes back for post-show pickup at the Congress Street drop zone at an agreed time. Set that window with us when you book, not at intermission, so the pickup is already sorted before you go in.

How far in advance should we book for a standard Savannah Philharmonic night?

Two to four weeks of lead time is workable for most regular-season Philharmonic performances outside of festival windows. For Saturday evening performances during peak fall and spring visitor season, a few weeks’ extra cushion improves your vehicle options. The earlier you call, the more choices you have — and the easier it is to lock in the exact size you need without paying for a larger vehicle just because it was all that remained.

Book Your Bus to Lucas Theatre for the Arts

The Lucas Theatre is one of the most distinctive rooms in the South — 1,237 seats, a 40-foot dome, and a history that runs from 1921 silent films through SCAD’s current programming calendar. Getting your group there together, on time, and without a parking-garage scramble on the back end is the part we handle. Call 912-752-1890 any time for a free, all-inclusive price quote, or use our online tool for instant availability.

Your group shows up, the show does the rest.

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