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Lakewood Church Central Campus

Lakewood Church Central Campus
Lakewood church.JPG
Former names The Summit (1975–1998)
Compaq Center (1998–2003)
Location 3700 Southwest Freeway
Houston, Texas 77027
Coordinates 29°43′49″N 95°26′6″W / 29.73028°N 95.43500°W / 29.73028; -95.43500Coordinates: 29°43′49″N 95°26′6″W / 29.73028°N 95.43500°W / 29.73028; -95.43500
Owner Lakewood Church
Operator Lakewood Church
Capacity

Basketball: 15,676 (1975–1983), 16,016 (1983–1986), 16,279 (1986–1987), 16,611 (1987–1995), 16,285 (1995–2003)
Ice hockey: 14,906 (1975–1983), 15,256 (1983–1994), 15,242 (1994–2003)
Indoor Soccer: 14,848

Current configuration for worship services: 16,000
Surface Wood
Construction
Broke ground December 1973
Opened November 7, 1975
Reopened July 16, 2005
Construction cost US$27 million
($120 million in 2016 dollars)
Architect Lloyd Jones Brewer & Associates
Structural engineer Walter P Moore
Tenants
Houston Aeros (WHA) (1975–1978)
Houston Rockets (NBA) (1975–2003)
Houston Summit (MISL) (1978–1980)
Houston Aeros (IHL/AHL) (1994–2003)
Houston Hotshots (CISL) (1994–1997)
Houston Thunderbears/Texas Terror (AFL) (1996–2001)
Houston Comets (WNBA) (1997–2003)
Lakewood Church (2005–present)

Basketball: 15,676 (1975–1983), 16,016 (1983–1986), 16,279 (1986–1987), 16,611 (1987–1995), 16,285 (1995–2003)
Ice hockey: 14,906 (1975–1983), 15,256 (1983–1994), 15,242 (1994–2003)
Indoor Soccer: 14,848

The Lakewood Church Central Campus (originally The Summit and formerly Compaq Center) is a house of worship in Houston, Texas. It is located about five miles southwest of Downtown Houston, next to the Greenway Plaza.

From 1975 to 2003 the building served as a multi-purpose sports arena, for various professional teams in Houston, most notably the NBA's Houston Rockets.

From its opening until 1998, the building was known as The Summit. Computer technology firm Compaq bought naming rights to the building after that and it was known as Compaq Center until 2003. At that point the name was dropped, coinciding with opening of the Toyota Center as a new professional sports venue in Houston. Shortly after, the building was leased out to Lakewood Church for use as its main facility. Lakewood Church purchased the building outright in 2010.

In 1971, the National Basketball Association's San Diego Rockets were purchased by new ownership group Texas Sports Investments, who moved the franchise to Houston. The city, however, lacked an indoor arena suitable to host a major sports franchise. The largest arena in the city at the time was 34-year-old Sam Houston Coliseum, but the Rockets would not even consider using it as a temporary facility. Plans were immediately undertaken to construct the new venue that would become The Summit. The Rockets played their home games in various local facilities such as Hofheinz Pavilion and the Astrodome during the interim.


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