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Denver Coliseum

Denver Coliseum
Denver-Coliseum-Logo.png
DenverColiseum.JPG
Location 4600 Humboldt Street
Denver, Colorado 80216
Coordinates 39°46′45″N 104°58′15″W / 39.7791279°N 104.9707305°W / 39.7791279; -104.9707305Coordinates: 39°46′45″N 104°58′15″W / 39.7791279°N 104.9707305°W / 39.7791279; -104.9707305
Owner City and County of Denver
Operator Division of Theatres and Arenas
Capacity Concert: 10,500
Basketball: 9,340
Hockey: 8,140
Field size 122,400 square feet
Surface Multi-surface
Construction
Broke ground September 16, 1949
Opened December 1951
Construction cost $3 million
Tenants
Denver Cutthroats (CHL) (2012–14)
Denver Mavericks (IHL) (1959)
Denver Rockets/Nuggets (ABA) (1967–75)
Colorado/Denver Rangers (IHL) (1987–89)
Denver Spurs (WHL/CHL) (1968–75)
Colorado Wildcats (PIFL) (1998)

Denver Coliseum is an indoor arena, owned by the City and County of Denver, operated by its Theatres and Arenas division and is located in Denver, Colorado. The arena holds 10,200 people and was built in 1951.

A wide variety of events are held throughout the year including: Disney on Ice, Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus, The Denver March Pow Wow, the Denver Coliseum Mineral, Fossil, Gem, and Jewelry Show, Christian events, cheerleading competitions, high school sports playoffs, motivational seminars, Mexican dances, roller derby, music concerts, and other miscellaneous events. The arena played host to the Denver Cutthroats, a Central Hockey League team.

The coliseum is located in Denver's Elyria-Swansea neighborhood. It currently sits atop the stop where the Denver Pacific Railway broke ground on its Cheyenne line in 1868.

Opened in 1952, today the Denver Coliseum is home to the National Western Stock Show and hosts a multitude of other events including: rodeos, ice shows, motor shows, circuses, concerts, dances, exhibits and trade shows.

When McNichols Sports Arena opened in 1975, the coliseum would be continue its use as an alternate venue to the larger arena for events that required less seating or overall space. This continues today after the Pepsi Center opened in 1999.

June Haver was the first to perform at the Coliseum, but over the years the Coliseum hosted many celebrities or soon-to-be celebrities in performance: Elvis Presley (twice), The Grateful Dead, The Who, The Rolling Stones, Lovin’ Spoonful, The Monkees, Cream, CSNY, Ike & Tina Turner, The Moody Blues, Santana, The Eagles, Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton, Rammstein and many more. Recently the Coliseum completed an interior make-over to the concourse areas plus the construction of a new box office, new windows, doors and floors.


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