Hampton Coliseum
The arena in 2014 | |
Interactive map of Hampton Coliseum | |
| Former names | Hampton Roads Coliseum (1969 - 1975) |
|---|---|
| Address | 1000 Coliseum Drive Hampton, Virginia United States |
| Owner | City of Hampton |
| Operator | City of Hampton |
| Capacity | 13,800 (concerts) 10,147 (basketball) |
| Construction | |
| Broke ground | May 24, 1968 |
| Built | 1968–1969 |
| Opened | December 1, 1969 |
| Construction cost | $8.5 to $9.0 million USD |
| Architect | Odell Associates |
| General contractor | McDevitt and Street Co. |
| Tenants | |
| Virginia Squires (ABA) (1970–76) Tidewater/Virginia Wings (AHL) (1971–75) Hampton Gulls (SHL/AHL) (1974–78) Hampton Aces (NEHL/EHL) (1978–81) Old Dominion Monarchs (NCAA) (part-time, 1970–95) | |
Hampton Coliseum is a multi-purpose arena in Hampton, Virginia. Construction began on May 24, 1968. The venue held its first event on December 1, 1969, with the nearby College of William & Mary playing North Carolina State University in a college men's basketball game. On January 31, 1970, the Coliseum formally opened as the first large multi-purpose arena in the Hampton Roads region and the state of Virginia (opening a year before the Norfolk Scope in Norfolk.)
With a final estimated cost between $8.5 million to $9 million, the arena was designed by Odell Associates and constructed by McDevitt and Street, of Charlotte, North Carolina. The venue capacity is configurable from 9,800 to 13,800 seats. Fans of the Grateful Dead and Phish have nicknamed the building The Mothership, a term coined by The Virginian-Pilot reporter John Colt in a 1981 Grateful Dead concert review.