Former names | Saskatchewan Place (1988–2004) Credit Union Centre (2004–2014) |
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Location | 3315 Thatcher Avenue Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7R 1C4 |
Coordinates | 52°11′20″N 106°40′44″W / 52.189°N 106.679°WCoordinates: 52°11′20″N 106°40′44″W / 52.189°N 106.679°W |
Owner | City of Saskatoon |
Executive suites | 51 |
Capacity | 15,100 |
Record attendance | 15,800 Garth Brooks World Tour, June 9, 2016 |
Surface | Ice, Turf |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 11 September 1986 |
Opened | 9 February 1988 |
Expanded | 1990, 2009 |
Construction cost |
$24.8 million ($47.9 million in 2017 dollars) $6.7 million (2009 expansion) ($7.45 million in 2017 dollars) |
Architect | Thomas Ferguson Architect, Ltd PBK Architects, Inc. |
Structural engineer | Cochrane Lavalin Consulting Engineers |
General contractor | Carlson Constructors, Ltd. |
Tenants | |
Saskatoon Blades (WHL) (1988–present) Saskatchewan Rush (NLL) (2016–present) Saskatchewan Storm (WBL) (1990–1992) Saskatoon Slam (NBL) (1992–1993) Saskatchewan Hawks (IBA/CBA) (1999–2001) Saskatoon Accelerators (CMISL) (2007–2009) Saskatoon Sirens (LFL Canada) (2012) |
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Website | |
www |
SaskTel Centre (formerly Credit Union Centre, and originally Saskatchewan Place; informally also known as Sask Place) is an arena located in the Agriplace Industrial Park, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. Situated near the city's northern entrance, the facility opened in February 1988 with a seating capacity of around 7,800. It was expanded to 11,330 for the World Junior Hockey Championships in 1990. More additional permanent seating was added in 2008 and 2009. The current capacity is now 15,190 for hockey. It is the home venue of the Saskatoon Blades of the Western Hockey League and the Saskatchewan Rush of the National Lacrosse League.
SaskPlace was constructed as a replacement for the Saskatoon Arena, a concrete building constructed in Saskatoon's downtown core in the 1930s, and which was in use until 1988, hosting its final hockey game only a week before SaskPlace opened. Nicknamed "The Barn", the facility had outlived its usefulness some 20 years earlier and had become infamous for leaky roofs and substandard amenities, yet Saskatonians were hesitant to lose the landmark and a number of years passed between the 1970s proposal to replace the structure and the eventual demolition of the Arena and the opening of SaskPlace.
In 1982, Bill Hunter, a local sports promoter, attempted to purchase the St. Louis Blues NHL team and bring it to Saskatoon. Part of his plan included building an 18,000-seat arena. Two locations were suggested: the site of a decommissioned power plant downtown, just west of the then-present Saskatoon Arena, and another site east of the city's airport in the North Industrial area. Despite Hunter's best efforts, the NHL rejected his offer and Hunter's plans to relocate an NHL team and build a new arena collapsed.