The arena in 1994
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Location | 1635 Bryant Street Denver, Colorado 80204 |
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Coordinates | 39°44′34″N 105°1′21″W / 39.74278°N 105.02250°WCoordinates: 39°44′34″N 105°1′21″W / 39.74278°N 105.02250°W |
Owner | City of Denver |
Operator | Feyline |
Capacity |
Basketball: 16,700 (1975–77), 17,387 (1977–81), 17,251 (1981–86), 17,022 (1986–93), 17,171 (1993–99) Ice hockey: 15,900 (1975–77), 16,399 (1977–81), 16,384 (1981–86), 16,061 (1986–99) |
Construction | |
Broke ground | August 8, 1973 |
Opened | August 22, 1975 |
Renovated | 1986 |
Closed | September 29, 1999 |
Demolished | January 24, 2000 |
Construction cost | US$16 million ($71.2 million in 2017 dollars) |
Architect | Charles S. Sink & Associates |
Structural engineer | Ketchum, Konkel, Ryan, & Fleming |
Tenants | |
Denver Spurs (WHA) (1975–76) Colorado Rockies (NHL) (1976–82) Colorado Flames (CHL) (1982–84) Denver Nuggets (NBA) (1975–99) Colorado Avalanche (NHL) (1995–99) Denver Grizzlies (IHL) (1994–95) Denver Dynamite (AFL) (1987, 1989–91) Denver Avalanche (MISL) (1980–82) Colorado Xplosion (ABL) (1996–98) Denver Daredevils (RHI) (1996) |
McNichols Sports Arena was an indoor arena located in Denver, Colorado. Located adjacent to Mile High Stadium and completed in 1975, at a cost of $16 million, it seated 16,061 for hockey games, 17,171 for basketball games and contained 27 luxury suites, which were installed as part of a 1986 renovation. It was named after Denver mayor William H. McNichols, Jr., who served from 1968 to 1983. A small-scale scandal surrounded the naming, because McNichols was in office at the time. The 1986 renovations also saw the original Stewart-Warner end-zone scoreboards, which each had color matrix screens, upgraded by White Way Sign with new digits and to include new color video screens (which replaced the matrix screens).
The arena remained closed after the Nuggets and Avalanche moved to Pepsi Center and was demolished in 2000 to make space for a parking lot surrounding Sports Authority Field at Mile High.
McNichols Sports Arena was the home of the Denver Nuggets of the ABA and NBA for its entire existence from 1975 to 1999 It also hosted multiple hockey teams, including the Denver Spurs of the WHA during the 1975–76 season, the Colorado Rockies of the NHL from 1976 to 1982, the Colorado Flames of the CHL from 1982 to 1984, the Denver Grizzlies of the International Hockey League from 1994 to 1995, and the Colorado Avalanche of the NHL from 1995 to 1999.