Edward Jones Dome

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Edward Jones Dome


Location 701 Convention Plaza
St. Louis, Missouri 63101
Opened November 12, 1995
Owner St. Louis Regional Sports Authority
Operator St. Louis Convention/Visitors Bureau
Surface FieldTurf (AstroTurf 1995-2005)
Construction cost $280 million
Architect HOK Sport
Former names
Trans World Dome (1995-2001)
Dome at America's Center (2001-2002)
Russell Athletic Field (December 18, 2006)
Tenants
St. Louis Rams (NFL) (1995-present)
Seats
66,000

The Edward Jones Dome is a 66,000 seat football stadium in St. Louis, Missouri, and home of the St. Louis Rams of the NFL. It was constructed largely to lure an NFL team back to St. Louis, and to serve as a convention center. Completed in 1995, it was known as the Trans World Dome, after Trans World Airlines, until 2001, when TWA was acquired by American Airlines. The facility was then briefly known as the Dome at America's Center (America's Center being the adjacent convention facility) until the naming rights were acquired on January 25, 2002 by Edward Jones Investments, a brokerage house based in St. Louis.

The Edward Jones Dome became the site of the biggest indoor gathering in United States history in 1999 when Pope John Paul II held mass in the stadium. Over 104,000 people attended the service. Interestingly enough, that same year it also hosted WCW Slamboree.

In April 2005, the Edward Jones Dome hosted the 2005 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament Final Four where the University of Louisville, the University of Illinois, Michigan State University, and the University of North Carolina faced off, with UNC winning the National Championship game against the University of Illinois. It will host the NCAA Men's Basketball St. Louis Regional for the 2007 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament and the Women's Final Four for the 2009 NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Tournament. The dome was the site of the 1996 and 1998 Big 12 football conference championship games.

Starting in 2006, Edward Jones Dome will become the home of the Urbana missions conference run by InterVarsity Christian Fellowship; because the event outgrew its former home on the University of Illinois campus.

In May 2005, the St. Louis Rams football team announced that the dome would use FieldTurf instead of the antiquated, 10-year old AstroTurf. The surface is a one-year plan until a more flexible surface can be made with access to the power outlets on the dome's concrete floor. After the 2005 season the Rams announced that the current FieldTurf would be torn up and be replaced with another temporary FieldTurf surface for the 2006 season.

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Preceded by
Busch Stadium
September 10-October 22, 1995
Home of the
St. Louis Rams
November 12, 1995–present
Succeeded by
current

Coordinates: 38°37′58.71″N, 90°11′18.77″W

Saint Louis Rams
The ClubHistoryPlayersSeasonsStatistics
Edward Jones DomeThe Greatest Show on TurfFearsome Foursome
League Championships (3)
194519511999


Current Stadiums in the National Football League
American Football Conference National Football Conference
Alltel Stadium | Arrowhead Stadium | Cleveland Browns Stadium | Dolphin Stadium | Giants Stadium | Gillette Stadium | Heinz Field | INVESCO Field at Mile High | LP Field | M&T Bank Stadium | McAfee Coliseum | Paul Brown Stadium | Qualcomm Stadium | Ralph Wilson Stadium | RCA Dome | Reliant Stadium Bank of America Stadium | Edward Jones Dome | FedExField | Ford Field | Georgia Dome | Giants Stadium | Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome | Lambeau Field | Lincoln Financial Field | Louisiana Superdome | Monster Park | Qwest Field | Raymond James Stadium | Soldier Field | Texas Stadium | University of Phoenix Stadium
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