Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum

Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum is a 14,870-seat multi-purpose indoor arena in Phoenix, Arizona, located at the Arizona State Fairgrounds. It hosted the Phoenix Suns of the National Basketball Association from 1968 to 1992, as well as indoor soccer, roller derby and major and minor league ice hockey teams.

Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum
"The Madhouse on McDowell"
Location1826 West McDowell Road, Phoenix, Arizona 85007
Coordinates33°28′10″N 112°5′48″W
OwnerArizona Exposition and State Fair Board
OperatorArizona Exposition and State Fair Board
CapacityBasketball: 14,870
Ice hockey: 13,730
Construction
Broke groundAugust 11, 1964[1]
OpenedNovember 3, 1965
Construction costUS$7 million
ArchitectLescher & Mahoney
Place & Place
Structural engineerT. Y. Lin International
General contractorManhattan–Dickman
Tenants
Phoenix Roadrunners (WHL) (19671974)
Phoenix Suns (NBA) (1968–1992)
Phoenix Roadrunners (WHA) (1974–1977)
Phoenix Racquets (WTT) (19751978)
Phoenix Roadrunners (CHL) (1977)
Phoenix Roadrunners (PHL) (19771979)
Phoenix Inferno (MISL) (1980–1984)
Phoenix Roadrunners (IHL) (19891997)
Phoenix Cobras (RHI) (19941995)
Phoenix Mustangs (WCHL) (1997–2001)
Arizona Thunder (WISL) (1998–2000)
Phoenix Eclipse (ABA) (20012002)
Phoenix Flame (IBL) (2007)
Arizona Derby Dames (2009–present)
Phoenix Mercury (WNBA) (2020)

History

Newspaper reports state that The Arizona State Fair Commission began planning for an "Arizona State Fairgrounds Exposition Center" as early as the fall of 1962. The Commission envisioned an indoor facility which could be used during the State Fair as well as year-round. In 1964, Phoenix architect Leslie Mahoney, of the Lescher and Mahoney firm (designers of the Orpheum Theatre in downtown Phoenix among others) presented the commission with the final plans, and construction began that summer.[2] Tucson architect Lew Place (son of University of Arizona chief campus architect Roy Place, and who later took over his father's firm) was also involved in the design. The structural engineering firm was T. Y. Lin International.[3]

The unique saddle-shaped, tension-cable roof, supporting over 1,000 precast concrete panels, was considered innovative architectural engineering at the time. It may have been at least partially influenced by the equally innovative Dorton Arena at the North Carolina State Fair in Raleigh, completed in 1952. Veterans Memorial Coliseum also contains a series of murals by Phoenix artist Paul Coze. The design influenced later arenas' architecture, including the now-defunct Capital Centre in Landover, Maryland, and the Scotiabank Saddledome in Calgary, Alberta.

The Coliseum in 2007

In April 1965, the name was officially changed to honor Arizona's war veterans. There was an early controversy over whether alcohol would be served at the new facility, but legislation was signed in April 1965 by Governor Sam Goddard providing for limited liquor sales. The Coliseum opened November 3, 1965, with a production of Ice Follies.[4] The final cost was estimated at $7 million, all privately funded.

The Coliseum suffers from a leaky roof dating back to at least its first anniversary, when management put a 25-foot (7.6 m) candle on the roof to celebrate the building's first birthday. The candle broke the roof's seal, which caused a number of leaks over the years.[4][5]

Concerts

On January 21, 1967, The Monkees performed their first ever live concert at the Coliseum, which was filmed and portions used in episode 4753 The Monkees on Tour. The episode first aired on NBC, April 24, 1967. The episode also included some footage of the band's stay at Mountain Shadows Resort.[6] On September 9, 1970, Elvis Presley kicked off his first tour after returning to live performing, here in front of a sell-out crowd of 13,000 as he did his first tour of 1973 on April 22 in front of 15,000. On October 18, 1993, Nirvana kicked off their In Utero world tour with a sold-out concert at the Coliseum.

Basketball

The arena hosted the Phoenix Suns of the NBA from 1968 to 1992. During the Suns' tenure there, the Coliseum was affectionately referred to as "The Madhouse on McDowell", (named for McDowell Road, the street on which the arena is located) by both fans and the local media.[7] Ironically, it was Lakers broadcaster Chick Hearn that gave the Suns' home the nickname during the 1970 playoffs.[8]

A preseason game against the Portland Trail Blazers had to be canceled on October 6, 1974, after a leaky roof caused an unsuitable playing surface.[4][5]

The Coliseum hosted the 1975 NBA All-Star Game, and the Boston Celtics won the NBA championship in the building in 1976.

Due to renovations at the Talking Stick Resort Arena, the WNBA's Phoenix Mercury was to play at the Coliseum for the 2020 season; however, as the COVID-19 pandemic was to blame, their games will be played in Bradenton, Florida.[9]

Seating capacity

Seating capacity for basketball went as followed:[10]

Years Capacity
1965–1971
12,371
1971–1975
12,534
1975–1976
13,036
1976–1977
13,274
1977–1981
12,660
1981–1985
14,660
1985–1987
14,519
1987–1989
14,471
1989–1991
14,487
1991–1992
14,496

Tenants

This distinctive arena seats 13,730 for ice hockey and 14,870 for basketball. In addition to the Suns, the Coliseum hosted the Phoenix Roadrunners of the Western Hockey League from 1967 to 1974 and the WHA from 1974 to 1977 and of the now-defunct International Hockey League from 1989 to 1997, the Phoenix Racquets of World Team Tennis from 1975 to 1978, the Arizona Thunder of the World Indoor Soccer League from 1998 to 2000, and the Phoenix Mustangs of the now-defunct WCHL from 1997 to 2001. The Coliseum was again home to pro sports starting in 2006, when the IBL's Phoenix Flame played home games there until their move to Grand Canyon University.

The Coliseum hosted the Arizona Derby Dames banked track roller derby league from 2008 to 2015.

The arena hosted truck pulling sanctioned by USHRA in the late 1980s. It was frequently featured on USHRA's truck pulling series on ESPN.

The Coliseum also housed the Phoenix Inferno (also known as the Phoenix Pride) of the MISL from 1980 to 1984.

The Coliseum also hosted a Saturday Night's Main Event taping on Feb. 15, 1986 (shown on NBC on March 1, 1986), when King Kong Bundy attacked Hulk Hogan at the end of his title defense versus Magnificent Muraco. Hogan suffered (kayfabe) rib injuries, setting up their steel cage main event match at Wrestlemania 2.

It hosted the WCW WrestleWar 1991. The Coliseum was also host to the Phoenix Mustangs hockey team as part of the West Coast Hockey League and the Phoenix Eclipse ABA basketball team.

The arena remains open for some events, even though the Suns left in 1992 for the America West Arena (now Talking Stick Resort Arena). The Arizona State Fair schedules concerts, comedy shows and other events in the Coliseum during the Fair's annual season (which begins each October). For several years, it hosted portions of Arizona's high school basketball championships; those were moved to the newer Gila River Arena in 2005 and returned to the Coliseum for 2020.[11]

In the fall of 2005, the Coliseum sheltered up to 2,500 evacuees from New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. The evacuees were relocated to other housing in time for the opening of the Fair that October.

The Coliseum most recently hosted Sam Smith on his In The Lonely Hour Tour in the summer of 2015. The Phoenix Suns would also return to the Veterans Memorial Coliseum for a pre-season scrimmage on October 3, 2015, as a part of their "We Are PHX" movement, as well as unveiled signs commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Coliseum's existence.[12][13]

gollark: So how *do* you make it work?
gollark: Not a fair comparison.
gollark: They don't occur in equal numbers, though.
gollark: I don't think the majority of work can magically be done online, and mental health is a Hard Problem which everyone being at home makes somewhat worse.
gollark: > businesses can move online mental heath crisis is a problem that has other ways to fix it and people don't just abuse their children because of lockdown if they are there were already other problems thereTo some extent. This isn't all easily fixable.

See also

References

Sources

  • The Arizona Republic: May 28, 1964; April 20, 1965
  • The Phoenix Gazette: April 24, 1963; March 27, 1965; October 28, 1966
  • Arizona Journal: November 14, 1962
Events and tenants
Preceded by
first arena
Home of the
Phoenix Suns

1968-1992
Succeeded by
Talking Stick Resort Arena
Preceded by
Seattle Center Coliseum
Host of the
NBA All-Star Game

1975
Succeeded by
The Spectrum
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