Most room acoustic parameters are calculated with data from omni-directional or figure-of-eight microphones. Using a spherical microphone array to record room impulse responses can yield more information about the spatial characteristics of the sound field, including spatial uniformity and the directions of individual reflections. In this research a spherical array was use to measure room impulse responses in a wide variety of concert halls throughout New York State, both on stage and in the audience, with both the microphone array and a dummy head. The results were analyzed using beamforming techniques to determine spatial information about the sound field, and compared to the results of geometrical acoustics and binaural localization models. Of particular interest was how the spatial data can help to differentiate between different spaces or listener positions that exhibit similar values for conventional metrics. Auralizations were created using both headphone playback and second-order ambisonic playback via a loudspeaker array. These systems were evaluated objectively to compare the reproduction systems with the measured data. Subjects were recruited for listening tests using each reproduction method, and asked to evaluate the halls on both objective measures and subjective preference, and the results of binaural and ambisonic playback were compared.