Richmond Coliseum

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Richmond Coliseum
Location 601 East Leigh St.
Richmond, Virginia, 23219
Broke ground 1969
Opened August 21, 1971
Owner City of Richmond, Virginia
Operator SMG
Construction cost $24 million
($153 million in 2014 dollars[ 1])
Architect Vincent G. Kling and Associates[1]
Capacity 13,553 (concerts)
11,992 (basketball)
11,088 (hockey)
Tenants
Virginia Squires (ABA) (1970–1976)
Richmond Robins (AHL) (1971–1976)
VCU Rams (CAA) (1971–1999)
Richmond Rifles (EHL) (1979–1981)
Richmond Renegades (ECHL) (1990–2003)
Richmond Speed (AF2) (2000–2003)
Richmond RiverDogs (UHL) (2003–2006)
Richmond Bandits (AIFL) (2005–2006)
Richmond Renegades (SPHL) (2006–2009)
Richmond Raiders (AIFA)/(SIFL) (2010-present)

Richmond Coliseum is an arena in Richmond, Virginia, where the SPHL Richmond Renegades played until the 2008–2009 season and the SIFL Richmond Raiders play starting with the 2010 season. It is also the venue for various large concerts. The arena opened in 1971 and holds 13,500 people. The Jacksons performed at Richmond Coliseum on August 4, 1981 during their Triumph Tour.[2] A small fire occurred there in 1997, shutting it down for repairs. It is managed by SMG.

About

Interior of arena, 2010

The Richmond Coliseum was also the former part-time home of the Virginia Squires of the American Basketball Association. The Squires played there in addition to Roanoke Civic Center, Norfolk Scope and Hampton Coliseum (all within the Commonwealth of Virginia) from 1970 until just before the ABA–NBA merger in 1976. The Coliseum also hosted the Southern Conference men's basketball tournaments in 1973 and 1974.

The Sun Belt Conference men's basketball tournament was held there in 1988. The Colonial Athletic Association men's (NCAA) collegiate basketball tournament has been contested at the Richmond Coliseum since 1990. On March 1, 2006, a deal was signed to keep the tournament in Richmond until 2012. The Coliseum served as the primary home for the MEAC Men's Basketball Tournament between 1998 and 2005, with some games played at the Arthur Ashe Athletic Center.

Until John Paul Jones Arena opened in 2006, the Richmond Coliseum was the largest sports arena in Virginia. The Virginia Commonwealth University Rams men's basketball team played in the arena until the 7,500-seat Siegel Center opened on the VCU campus in 1999.

In 1994, the Coliseum hosted the Women's NCAA Division I Basketball Championship. Charlotte Smith of the University of North Carolina sank a buzzer-beating three-pointer to defeat Louisiana Tech, 60–59, in the final. The Richmond Coliseum also held the men's NCAA Tournament 1st and second rounds there in 1990 and 1996.

It has been a regular stop for professional wrestling promotions through the years, including the old NWA (Jim Crockett Promotions) Mid-Atlantic territory, and more recently, WWE. In recent years, it hosted the fifteenth WWF In Your House 15: A Cold Day in Hell pay-per-view in 1997, WWE Armageddon on December 17, 2006, and hosted the televised portion of the 2010 WWE Draft. It held WWE Friday Night SmackDown on November 16, 2010. It held WWE Raw on Monday, June 6, 2011 featuring WWE Hall of Famer Steve Austin to announce the winner of WWE Tough Enough. It also held Monday Night Raw again May 21, 2012, immediately following Over the Limit in which John Cena lost a match against John Laurinaitis, with Laurinaitis only winning after The Big Show intervened. It also held WWE Friday Night SmackDown on December 30, 2012, the final WWE event of the year. It Will Host The Final WWE Raw Of 2013 on December 30th, 2013

The Coliseum has also been a site for the Professional Bull Riders. In 1998 and 1999, a Built Ford Tough Series Bud Light Cup event known as the Lane Frost Memorial was held in the Coliseum; the PBR returned in 2007 to host minor-league tour stops sponsored by former bull rider Greg Potter.

On October 22, 2008, it hosted a rally for presidential candidate Barack Obama, drawing over 13,000 people. A similar crowd was drawn for the 2009 Republican Party of Virginia convention.

Preliminary planning for a new arena with seating up to 15,000 and an estimated cost of $147,100,000 fell short because of money issues.[citation needed] People want a new arena in Richmond because the Richmond Coliseum is outdated and needs numerous repairs.

Layout

The Richmond Coliseum is laid out on 6 levels. In order from lowest to highest they are the event level, the mezzanine, the lower concourse, the upper concourse, the 300 level and the ring. The event level is where the event floor (and ice rink) is located, as well as all the support rooms for events and the building. Team locker rooms, star dressing rooms, Exhibition halls, the Coliseum Club and the kitchens are located on the event level. The Clay Street tunnel, one of the innovative features of the coliseum, is on the event level and allows vehicles, including tractor trailers and monster trucks, to pull into the coliseum. It is accessed at the intersection of Clay Street and Eighth Street. The tunnel provides storage for shows and parking for coliseum personnel. The mezzanine is where the administrative offices for the coliseum are located. The Leigh Street entrance is on this level. The lower concourse is the access for all lower level seating and suites. The Fifth Street and Sixth Street entrances are located on this level, as well as exits to the areas above Clay Street and Leigh Street. The upper concourse is the access for all upper level seating and the 300 level is access to the highest seats on either radius of the coliseum. The ring is where the spotlights are operated and is the access to the catwalk.

References

External links

Coordinates: 37°32′41″N 77°26′04″W / 37.544705°N 77.434484°W / 37.544705; -77.434484

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