Toyota Center (Kennewick)

Further information: Toyota Center (disambiguation)
Toyota Center-Kennewick
The Coliseum, Windermere Theatre

October 2006
Former names Three Rivers Coliseum
(2004–2005)
Tri-Cities Coliseum
(1988–2004)
Location 7016 W. Grandridge Blvd.
Kennewick, Washington
Owner City of Kennewick
Operator VenuWorks
Capacity 7,715 (concerts)
6,000 (hockey)
2,099 (theatre)[1]
Surface Multi-surface
Construction
Broke ground 1987
Opened November 19, 1988[2]
Construction cost $10 million[3]
($20 million in 2016 dollars[4])
Architect PBK Architects, Inc.[5]
Tenants
Tri-City Americans (WHL) (1988–present)
Tri-Cities Fever (IFL) (2005–present)
Tri-City Chinook (CBA) (1988–1995) [6]
Website
www.yourtoyotacenter.com
Toyota Center
Location in the United States
Toyota Center
Location in Washington

The Toyota Center is a multi-purpose arena in the northwest United States, located in Kennewick, Washington.

The arena opened 28 years ago in 1988 as the Tri-Cities Coliseum; the name was changed in 2004 to the Three Rivers Coliseum to match the Three Rivers Convention Center, which was built next door in the same year. In October 2005, a deal was reached between the city of Kennewick and Toyota, which agreed to pay $2 million over ten years for naming rights. The city uses the funds for needed improvements and upgrades to the facility. A smaller facility next door, built by the city in 1998, was named "Toyota Arena." In 2016 the Kennewick Public Facilities District will put to the voters an expansion of what is now know as the Three Rivers Complex. This expansion is called The Link. The Link is an ambitious project, a $35 million dollar project that would build a 2,300 seat theater, add 50,000 square feet of convention space, and renovate the Toyota Center. [7]

Sports

The Toyota Center is home to the Western Hockey League's Tri-City Americans hockey team and the Tri-Cities Fever of the Indoor Football League.[8] The center was formerly the home of the Tri-City Chinook of the Continental Basketball Association.[6] During the 1990 Goodwill Games in Seattle, the venue was used for ice hockey, since the Kingdome was in use by the Mariners.[9] It has also hosted the state championships for high school volleyball, held in November.

Concerts and shows

It is also used for concerts (capacity 7,715), banquets, ice shows, circuses, and trade shows (27,132 square feet (2,520 m2) of space). The seating capacity for hockey is about 6,000. Recently, the theatre configuration of the facility has been named "Windermere Theatre," licensed to Seattle-based Windermere Real Estate, and the facility now hosts Broadway shows. It also hosted acts such as Alice Cooper, Rob Zombie, Slipknot, and Avenged Sevenfold who to date holds the record for largest attendance for any event held, with a sellout of 6,842, based on the configuration for the concert. The legendary rock band KISS is scheduled to perform on July 10, 2016, and is expected to be the highest grossing and biggest concert ever held at the Toyota Center. [10] A concert by Shinedown was filmed at the Toyota Center, and aired on Palladia with the title Madness from Washington State.

Other events

The Toyota Center has also hosted yearly Jehovah's Witnesses conventions during the month of July. The arena has held numerous WWE house shows when WWE is taping Monday Night Raw or Friday Night Smackdown or a PPV event in the nearby cities of Spokane, Yakima, Seattle, and Portland, Oregon. The Toyota Center also host children's programming, such as Sesame Street Live! Make a Friend! making the venue an attraction for all ages.[11]

See also

References

  1. Kennewick and the Kennewick Public Facilities District announce new Windermere Theatre for the Toyota Center
  2. Kathleen Knutson (20 November 1988). "A Dream Fulfilled - Developer sees state-of-the-art building as first of many". Tri-City Herald. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
  3. Jim Riley (21 November 1988). "Tri-Cities steps into the big-time with Coliseum". Tri-City Herald. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
  4. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
  5. "Sports & Entertainment - complete project list" (PDF). PBK Architects, Inc. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
  6. 1 2 "Tri-City Chinook fold". Spokesman-Review (Spokane, Washington). wire services. March 21, 1995. p. C2.
  7. The Link is an ambitious project, a $35 million dollar project that would build a 2,300 seat theater, add 50,000 square feet of convention space, and renovate the Toyota Center
  8. Dial, Tracci (March 7, 2014). "Time Lapse: Toyota Center Changeover From Ice to Turf to Court". Tri-Cities, WA: KNDU. Retrieved March 8, 2014.
  9. "Tri-Cities Coliseum gets Games' hockey, skating". Spokesman-Review (Spokane, Washington). Associated Press. March 16, 1989. p. D5.
  10. http://www.tri-cityherald.com/latest-news/article70685562.html
  11. http://sesamestreetlive.com/

External links

Coordinates: 46°13′12″N 119°13′01″W / 46.220°N 119.217°W / 46.220; -119.217

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, May 05, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.