Amway Center
Former names | Orlando Events Center (planning) |
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Location |
400 West Church Street Orlando, Florida 32801 |
Coordinates | 28°32′21″N 81°23′1″W / 28.53917°N 81.38361°WCoordinates: 28°32′21″N 81°23′1″W / 28.53917°N 81.38361°W |
Public transit | SunRail Church Street Station |
Owner | City of Orlando |
Operator | Orlando Venues |
Capacity |
18,846 (NBA) 17,030 (center stage concert) 16,486 (end stage concert) 20,000 (NCAA basketball) 17,192 (arena football) 17,353 (ice hockey) 17,200 (WWE)[1] |
Construction | |
Broke ground | July 25, 2008 |
Opened | October 1, 2010 |
Construction cost |
$480 million ($521 million in 2016 dollars[2]) |
Architect |
Populous[3] C.T. Hsu + Associates Baker Barrios Architects, Inc. |
Project manager | Turner Construction[4] |
Structural engineer | Walter P. Moore |
Services engineer | Smith Seckman Reid, Inc. |
General contractor | Hunt Construction in association with Rey Group, R.L. Burns, HZ Construction and Albu & Associates[4] |
Tenants | |
Orlando Magic (NBA) (2010–present) Orlando Predators (AFL) (2011–2013, 2015-present) Orlando Solar Bears (ECHL) (2012–present) |
The Amway Center is a sports and entertainment venue in Orlando, Florida, located in the Downtown area. It is part of Downtown Orlando Master Plan 3: a plan that also involves improvements to the Citrus Bowl and a new performing arts center.[5] The arena is home to the Orlando Magic of the NBA, the Orlando Predators of the Arena Football League, the Orlando Solar Bears of the ECHL,[6] and hosted the 2012 NBA All-Star Game, plus the 2015 ECHL All-Star Game.
Amway Center hosted the second and third round games of the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Tournament in 2014.[7] On January 14, 2013, the Arena Football League's Board of Directors voted to award ArenaBowl XXVI to Orlando in the summer of 2013.[8] It hosted UFC on Fox: dos Anjos vs. Cerrone 2 on December 19, 2015, and held the 2016 Royal Rumble on January 24.
The road to approval
Prior to Downtown Master Plan 3, the Orlando Magic's ownership, led by billionaire Amway founder Richard DeVos and son-in-law Bob Vander Weide, had been pressing the City of Orlando for a new arena for nearly ten years. Amway Arena was built in 1989, prior to the recent era of technologically advanced entertainment arenas. With the rush to build new venues in the NBA (and sports in general), it quickly became one of the oldest arenas in the league.
On September 29, 2006, after years of on-and-off negotiations, Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer, Orange County Mayor Richard Crotty, and the Orlando Magic announced an agreement on a new arena in downtown Orlando, located at the southwest corner of Church Street and Hughey Avenue. The arena itself cost around $380 million, with an additional $100 million for land and infrastructure, for a total cost of $480 million (as of March 8, 2011 the arena was expected to be within $10 million of the estimated cost[9]). It is part of a $1.05-billion plan to redo the Orlando Centroplex with a new arena, a new $375-million performing arts center, and a $175-million expansion of the Citrus Bowl (Later, declining economic conditions led the improvements to the Citrus Bowl to be delayed until at least 2020). When it was announced in the media on September 29, it was referred to as the "Triple Crown for Downtown".
As part of Amway's naming rights to the old Amway Arena, the company received right of first refusal for naming rights to the new venue,[10] and exercised those rights, announcing a 10-year, $40-million naming deal to name the venue the Amway Center on August 3, 2009.[11]
Financing
The details of the agreement were finalized on December 22, 2006. In the agreement, the City of Orlando will take ownership of the new arena, while the Magic will control the planning and construction of the facility so long as contracting procedures are done in the same public manner as governments advertise contracts. In addition, the City will be paid a part of naming rights and corporate suite sales, a share estimated to be worth $1.75 million the first year of the arena's opening. The Magic will receive all proceeds from ticket sales for Magic games, while the City will receive all proceeds from ticket sales to all other events.[12] The Orlando Magic will contribute at least $50 million in cash up-front, pick up any cost overruns, and pay rent of $1 million per year for 30 years. The City of Orlando will pay for the land and infrastructure. The remaining money will come from bonds which will be paid off by part of the Orange County, Florida, Tourist Development Tax, collected as a surcharge on hotel stays, which was raised to 6% in 2006. The Magic will guarantee $100 million of these bonds.
The Orlando City Council approved several operating agreements connected with the arena plans on May 22, 2007.[13] The City Council approved the plan officially, 6-1, on July 23.[14] The Venue plan received final approval by the Orange County Board of County Commissioners, 5-2, in late evening of July 26 after a long day of public hearings.[15] Amendments were made by the County Commission which were approved on August 6 by the City Council, 6-1, sealing the deal once and for all. On December 1, 2007, the City and the Magic came to an agreement on nearly $8.5 million in compensation to three owners of the land where the arena is planned to be built. An eminent domain hearing confirmed the agreement and finalized the sale.[16]
Debt problems
On April 3, 2010 it was reported that Fitch Rating Agency had downgraded the bonds used to finance the new arena to "junk" status and further warned the arena's debt holders that in as soon as 30 months the new Amway Center could be faced with a default unless finances are corrected. The city and county were quick to assure local media that in no way would Fitch's downgrade delay construction and that all necessary funds were on hand to complete the center. However, because of the Fitch downgrade, the interest rate on the debt payments would increase the "payoff" cost of the Amway Center over time and the Orlando Sentinel pointed out that it would be harder to seek lending for the other phases of the project such as the "$425 million Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts and the $175 million renovation of the Florida Citrus Bowl stadium." [17]
The downgrade to "junk" of the Amway Center's debt—although reversible—signals that unless local government either expands tax revenue or drastically reduces both Amway Center and non-center expenses, creditors could in just a short few years seek bankruptcy relief in the form of repossession or auctioning off the new center. Such a move would probably not threaten the Magic's status as tenant in the venue.
Design
Populous (formerly HOK Sport) was named the Architect of Record on August 3, 2007, with Smith Seckman Reid and Walter P Moore Engineers and Consultants as planning partners.[18]
California-based art curator Sports and the Arts assembled the Amway Center Art Collection. The collection includes more than 340 works of art, including about 200 museum-quality photographs. Fourteen of the 21 artists housed in the collection represent Central Florida. The Amway Center Art Collection includes over 140 pieces of fine art paintings and mixed media originals, over 200 photographs, and graphic wall treatments highlighting both the Orlando Magic and the spirit of Orlando and Central Florida.
Responsive to a challenging 876,000 SF program, the design intention of the Amway Events Center was to mediate its disparate context of elevated highways, central business district and low-rise housing. The simple, planar form of precast, aluminum and glass presents a timeless civic quality. The solidity of the precast and aluminum skin is punctured in carefully considered locations with expansive areas of glass including a crystalline entry lobby facing historic Church Street, blurring the boundary of inside and outside.
The elevated I-4 freeway bordering the east side of the site posed a distinct challenge, threatening to disconnect the arena both physically and psychologically from the downtown core. In response, the corner of the arena is anchored by a diaphanous feature tower bathed in color changing LED lighting that reveals the color and pageantry of sporting and entertainment activities within while marking the facility within the flat topography of downtown Orlando. This tower is both architectural and occupied – housing the Orlando Magic Team Store, hospitality space, Gentleman Jack Terrace and rooftop Sky Bar. The latter two are exterior spaces that take full advantage of the warm Orlando climate, commanding views to the plaza below and the greater community beyond. Further city connection is achieved via a 40’ × 60’ LED video feature that addresses downtown from an elevated façade position above the highway.
The heart of the facility is anchored by a complex and varied seating bowl. Designed with long-term flexibility and changeability in mind, it responds to definitive design goals posed by the team.
Amway Center is one of the most technologically advanced venues in the world. Inside the building, a unique centerhung installation, manufactured by Daktronics of Brookings, South Dakota, is the tallest in any NBA venue.[19] It maximizes creative programming options by using high resolution, 6mm-pixel technology on each of the 18 displays, including two digital ring displays and four tapered corners. Additional displays include approximately 2,100 feet (640 m) of digital ribbon boards, the largest of which is a 360-degree, 1,100 feet (340 m) display surrounding the entire seating bowl. These displays have the ability to display exciting motion graphics and real time content, such as in-game statistics, out-of-town scores, and closed captioning information.[20] Outside the building, a large display utilizes more than 5,000 Daktronics ProPixel LED sticks, each a meter long, which make up a 46 feet (14 m) by 53 feet (16 m) video display. This display will reach millions of motorists traveling by the Amway Center on Interstate 4.[20]
Comparison to Amway Arena
Amway Center has an assortment of mid-level luxury seats and club seating, located below the upper bowl.[21] This contrasts Amway Arena's design as its luxury boxes are above all seats and suspended from the ceiling. The arena's design was unveiled at Amway Arena on December 10, 2007, with an official press release the next day.[22] The floor of Amway Center is designed with arena football in mind, as it features more retractable sections that will permit squared end zone corners, a feature previously not possible for Orlando Predators games.
Amway Center | Amway Arena | |
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Capacity Ice Hockey Arena Football NBA NCAA basketball End stage concert Center stage concert |
17,353 17,192 18,846 20,000 16,486 17,030 | 15,948 17,461 17,283 12,592 18,039 |
Square Footage | 875,000[24] | 367,000 |
Suites[25] | 32 Founders Suites 28 Presidents Suites 68 Loge Boxes 2 Legends Suites(161 seats in each suite) 14 MVP Tables 4 Silver Suites 6 IOA Hardwood Suites 2 All-Star Decks 1 Southwest Flight Deck 1 Kia Deck 3 Club Hospitality Rooms |
26 Skyboxes (suspended from ceiling) |
Club Seats | 1,428 | 0 |
Concourses | 5 concourses, average 35' width | 1 concourse, average 20' width |
Public Restrooms | 18 men’s, 19 women’s | 4 men’s, 4 women’s |
Retail Stores | 3 | 0 (4 fixed stands) |
Concession Points of Sale | 1:150 spectators | 1:215 spectators |
Construction of Amway Center
-
2 August 2009 -
24 August 2009 -
8 January 2010
Complete Construction Project [26]
Grand opening
The official ribbon cutting ceremony and dedication took place on September 29, 2010 at 10:01 AM. The general public was invited to enter the building where Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer gave his annual State of Downtown address. The first ticketed event was a Vicente Fernández concert on October 8. The Orlando Magic hosted their first preseason game at Amway Center on October 10 against the New Orleans Hornets when they won by a historic margin of 54 points, while the 2010-11 regular season home opener took place on October 28 against the Washington Wizards.
Concerts
- Vicente Fernández – October 8, 2010, with Edith Márquez
- The Eagles – October 26, 2010 and November 23, 2013, with JD & The Straight Shot
- Chayanne – November 20, 2010
- The Johann Strauss Orchestra – December 11, 2010, with Béla Mavrák and March 7, 2013
- The Trans-Siberian Orchestra – December 12, 2010 (2 shows), December 11, 2011 (2 shows), December 16, 2012 (2 shows), November 30, 2013 (2 shows) and December 14, 2014 (2 shows)
- The Gaither Homecoming – December 18, 2010
- Barry Manilow – January 20, 2011 and January 18, 2014
- Celtic Woman – February 5, 2011
- Brad Paisley & The Drama Kings – February 24, 2011, with Darius Rucker and Jerrod Niemann and January 25, 2014, with Chris Young and Danielle Bradbery
- Lil Wayne – April 6, 2011, with Rick Ross, Nicki Minaj, Travis Barker and Mix Master Mike
- Ricky Martin – April 8, 2011
- Lady Gaga – April 15, 2011, with Semi Precious Weapons
- Usher – April 28, 2011, with Akon, Dev and The Cataracs and December 12, 2014, with August Alsina and DJ Cassidy
- Tim McGraw – May 1, 2011, with Luke Bryan and The Band Perry
- Bon Jovi – May 15, 2011
- Taylor Swift – June 11, 2011, with NEEDTOBREATHE and Frankie Ballard and April 11–12, 2013, with Ed Sheeran and Brett Eldredge
- WMMO 98.9's Concert Series – June 12 and October 8, 2011
- Rubén Blades – June 17, 2011, with Gilberto Santa Rosa
- Maná – July 9, 2011
- Sade – July 17, 2011, with John Legend
- Britney Spears – July 20, 2011, with Nicki Minaj, NERVO and Jessie & The Toy Boys
- NKOTBSB – July 22, 2011, with Matthew Morrison and Midnight Red
- American Idol Live! – July 24, 2011, August 2, 2012 and August 1, 2013
- Marc Anthony – September 18, 2011, August 5, 2012, with Chayanne and Marco Antonio Solís, August 25, 2013 and October 5, 2014
- Marco Antonio Solís – September 25, 2011, with Ana Gabriel
- Sugarland – October 20, 2011, with Sara Bareilles
- Enrique Iglesias – October 21, 2011, with Pitbull and Prince Royce and October 28, 2014, with Pitbull and J Balvin
- Guns N' Roses – October 28, 2011, with Buckcherry
- Josh Groban – October 29, 2011 and November 9, 2013, with Judith Hill
- Jason Aldean – January 22, 2012, with Luke Bryan and Lauren Alaina
- Jimmy Buffett & The Coral Reefer Band – February 4, 2012
- George Strait & The Ace in the Hole Band – February 11, 2012, with Martina McBride
- Andrea Bocelli – February 12, 2012
- Michael Jackson: The Immortal – February 28–29, 2012
- Romeo Santos – March 2, 2012, March 28, 2013 and May 30, 2014
- Elton John – March 10, 2012 and March 7, 2015
- The Red Hot Chili Peppers – March 31, 2012, with Santigold
- Van Halen – April 14, 2012, with Kool & the Gang
- Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers – May 3, 2012, with Regina Spektor
- Nickelback – May 4, 2012, with Bush, Seether and My Darkest Days
- Roger Waters & The Bleeding Heart Band – June 16, 2012
- LMFAO – June 23, 2012, with The Far East Movement, Sidney Samson and Natalia Kills
- One Direction – June 30, 2012, with Olly Murs and Manika
- The Fresh Music Festival – July 3, 2012
- Rod Stewart – August 3, 2012, with Stevie Nicks
- Big Time Rush – August 28, 2012, with Cody Simpson and Rachel Crow
- The Zac Brown Band – October 27, 2012, with Levi Lowrey
- The Who – November 3, 2012, with Vintage Trouble
- Carrie Underwood – December 21, 2012, with Hunter Hayes
- Justin Bieber – January 25, 2013, with Carly Rae Jepsen and Cody Simpson
- Luke Bryan – January 26, 2013, with Thompson Square and Florida Georgia Line and February 19 and 21, 2015, with Randy Houser and Dustin Lynch
- P!nk – February 24, 2013, with The Hives
- Muse – February 25, 2013, with Dead Sara
- Three Days Grace – March 9, 2013, with Shinedown and P.O.D.
- Maroon 5 – March 30, 2013, with The Neon Trees and Owl City
- Rush – April 28, 2013
- Paul McCartney – May 18–19, 2013
- New Kids on the Block – June 21, 2013, with Boyz II Men and 98 Degrees
- Carlos Vives – July 12, 2013
- KISS – August 16, 2013, with LEOGUN
- Bruno Mars & The Hooligans – August 27, 2013, with Fitz and The Tantrums
- Il Volo – September 22, 2013, with Nikki Yanofsky
- Sarah Brightman – October 8, 2013
- Avenged Sevenfold – October 16, 2013, with The Deftones and Ghost B.C.
- Michael Bublé – October 30, 2013, with Naturally 7
- Nine Inch Nails – October 31, 2013, with Gary Numan
- John Mayer – December 9, 2013, with Phillip Phillips
- The Fresh Beat Band – December 15, 2013
- Justin Timberlake – December 19, 2013
- Paul Simon – March 16, 2014, with Sting
- Miley Cyrus – March 24, 2014, with Icona Pop and Sky Ferreira
- Cher – May 16, 2014, with Cyndi Lauper
- Blake Shelton – August 30, 2014, with Neal McCoy, The Band Perry and Dan + Shay
- The Super Freestyle Explosion Concert – September 12, 2014
- Demi Lovato – September 15, 2014, with Christina Perri and MKTO
- Varekai – September 17–21, 2014
- James Taylor – November 18, 2014
- The Black Keys – December 17, 2014, with St. Vincent
- Linkin Park – January 15, 2015, with Rise Against and Of Mice & Men
- Juan Gabriel – February 15, 2015
- Fleetwood Mac – March 23, 2015
- Ariana Grande – March 26, 2015, with Rixton and Cashmere Cat
- Janet Jackson – September 23, 2015
- Demi Lovato and Nick Jonas – June 25, 2016
References
- 1 2 Amway Center 2012 Production Guide, page 24
- ↑ "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
- ↑ Amway Center architect: Populous
- 1 2 Muret, Don (November 8, 2010). "Magic's Kingdom". SportsBusiness Journal. Retrieved September 15, 2011.
- ↑ City of Orlando Community Venues
- ↑ "ECHL Approves Orlando for Hockey Franchise". Orlando Sentinel. November 1, 2011. Retrieved November 1, 2011.
- ↑ "BHSN: NCAA Basketball Tournament coming to Amway Center in 2014". Brighthouse Sports Network. November 12, 2012. Retrieved November 12, 2012.
- ↑ "Amway Center to host Arena Bowl XXVI this summer". CFN13. Retrieved 30 January 2013.
- ↑ Damron, David; Schlueb, Mark (March 8, 2011). "Amway Center Construction Ends Up Over Budget". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved March 29, 2011.
- ↑ Topic Galleries - OrlandoSentinel.com
- ↑ Robbins, Josh (August 3, 2009). "So What's in a Name? $40 Million When It Comes to New Amway Center". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved August 3, 2009.
- ↑ Damron, David (December 23, 2006). "Orlando, Magic Reach 'Fair' Deal on Arena Details". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved December 8, 2012.
- ↑ Damron, David (May 22, 2007). "Orlando Council OKs $1.1B Spending Plan". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved May 22, 2007.
- ↑ Schlueb, Mark (July 24, 2007). "Orlando OKs Venues; Big Hurdle Awaits". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved January 27, 2013.
- ↑ Topic Galleries. Orlando Sentinel
- ↑ Schlueb, Mark (December 1, 2007). "Land for Venues in Reach". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved December 1, 2007.
- ↑ Schlueb, Mark; Damron, David (April 3, 2010). "Orlando Risks Default on Magic Arena Bonds, Analysts Warn". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved April 3, 2010.
- ↑ HOK Sport - Selected To Design New Orlando Events Center
- ↑ "Daktronics Helps Orlando Magic Open Amway Center".
- 1 2 "Amway Center to Feature Daktronics Integrated Super System".
- ↑ Topic Galleries. Orlando Sentinel
- ↑ MAGIC: Orlando Events Center Design Unveiled
- ↑ http://www.nba.com/magic/orlandoeventscenter/arena_comparison.html
- ↑ http://www.nba.com/magic/news/geico_joins_magic_champions_of_community_083010.html
- ↑ http://amwaycenter.com/premium-seating
- ↑ http://www.earthcam.net/timelapse/demo.php?cam=sports3&related=6
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Amway Center. |
- Amway Center Official Website on nba.com
- Official site
- photos
- Amway Center Visitor Reviews
Events and tenants | ||
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Preceded by Amway Arena |
Home of the Orlando Magic 2010 – present |
Succeeded by - |
Preceded by Amway Arena |
Home of the Orlando Predators 2011 – 2013 |
Succeeded by CFE Arena |
Preceded by CFE Arena |
Home of the Orlando Predators 2015 – present |
Succeeded by Current arena |
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