extravaganza [eksˌtrævəˈɡænzə]
noun
(show) gran espectáculo (m) Estefan brings Latin rhythm to the star-studded TV extravaganza which launched eurodisney their wedding is expected to be a showbusiness extravaganza with a star-studded guest list
(film) película (f) espectacular Ridley Scott's extravaganza Christopher Colombus
(building) espectáculo (m) arquitectónico Modelled somewhat on the Pompidou Centre and the Lloyds Building in London, their new headquarters building is an extravaganza which has delighted and appalled its visitors by turns They found him /a three-bedroom extravaganza in the Trump Tower/, for eleven thousand dollars a month we became totally immersed in the visual extravaganza of what must be one of the most extraordinary buildings in the world A Volvo, however,symbolises concern for family, safety, ecology, whereas an American Art Deco extravaganza suggests exactly the opposite