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Winnipeg Arena

Winnipeg Arena
Ol' Barn on Maroons Road, White House, Crazy Corner
Location 1430 Maroons Road
Winnipeg, MB R3G 0L5
Coordinates 49°53′13″N 97°11′52″W / 49.88694°N 97.19778°W / 49.88694; -97.19778Coordinates: 49°53′13″N 97°11′52″W / 49.88694°N 97.19778°W / 49.88694; -97.19778
Owner Winnipeg Enterprises Corp.
Operator Winnipeg Enterprises Corp.
Capacity Ice hockey: 10,100 WHA
Ice hockey: 15,393 NHL
Ice hockey: 13,985 AHL
Construction
Broke ground October 19, 1954
Opened October 18, 1955
Closed November 7, 2004
Demolished March 26, 2006
Construction cost $2.5 million CAD
($22.5 million in 2017 dollars)
Architect Herbert Henry Gatenby Moody Moody and Moore Architects
Tenants
Winnipeg Warriors (WHL) (1955–1961)
Winnipeg Jets/Clubs/Monarchs (WCHL) (1967–1977)
Winnipeg Jets (WHA / NHL) (1972–1996)
Winnipeg Warriors (WHL) (1980–1984)
Winnipeg Thunder (WBL) (1992–1994)
Manitoba Moose (IHL / AHL) (1996–2004)

Winnipeg Arena was an indoor arena located in the Polo Park district of Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. The arena was the city's premier ice hockey venue from 1955 to 2004 and is best remembered as the home of the first Winnipeg Jets franchise, which played in the World Hockey Association (WHA) from 1972 to 1979 and the National Hockey League (NHL) from 1979 to 1996. It was also home to junior and minor league teams such as the Manitoba Moose (1996–2004) and Winnipeg Warriors (1955–1961). The arena closed after the completion of the MTS Centre in November 2004 and was later demolished. A retail and commercial complex occupies the site today.

Construction on a new facility to replace Winnipeg's obsolete Shea's Amphitheatre began in October 1954. Situated between Winnipeg Stadium and the Polo Park Racetrack, the new arena opened its doors for the 1955–56 hockey season and, in its original configuration, had a seating capacity of approximately 9,500. During the 1950s and 1960s, the Winnipeg Arena was considered to be among the finest facilities in the western half of North America.

The Winnipeg Arena's grand opening occurred in conjunction with the first hockey game played on October 18, 1955, a Western Professional Hockey League game between the Winnipeg Warriors and the Calgary Stampeders. The ceremonial opening face-off was conducted by Warriors Hockey Club president J. D. Perrin, Sr. before a sell-out crowd (including standing room) of 9,671, a then-record for the league. The following year, Perrin offered to purchase the arena and Winnipeg Stadium from Winnipeg Enterprises Corporation. In keeping with the tenor of the times, when public ownership was thought to be advantageous, the offer was rejected. The Warriors called the arena home until 1961, when the club was sold and relocated. Six years later, the arena found a new tenant in the Winnipeg Jets junior hockey club when it began play in the new Western Hockey League. The club would later be renamed the Monarchs and played at the arena until 1977.


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