Myriad Convention Center
Interactive map of Myriad Convention Center | |
| Former names | Myriad Convention Center (1972–2002) Cox Convention Center (2002–2021) |
|---|---|
| Address | 1 Myriad Gardens Oklahoma City, OK 73102-9219 |
| Location | Downtown Oklahoma City |
| Coordinates | 35°27′55″N 97°30′52″W / 35.46528°N 97.51444°W |
| Owner | City of Oklahoma City |
| Operator | SMG |
| Capacity | Basketball: 13,846 Ice hockey: 13,399 Arena football: 13,231 Concerts: 15,634 |
| Public transit | OKC Streetcar Century Center OKC Streetcar Arena |
| Construction | |
| Broke ground | 1969 |
| Opened | November 5, 1972 |
| Closed | 2025 |
| Demolished | March 2025–present |
| Construction cost | $23 million ($202 million in 2025 dollars) |
| Architect | Bozalis, Dickinson & Roloff |
| General contractor | H.A. Lott Inc. |
| Tenants | |
| Oklahoma City Blazers (CHL) (1973–77) Oklahoma City Stars (CHL) (1978–82) Oklahoma City Cavalry (CBA) (1990–97) Oklahoma City Blazers (CHL) (1992–2002) Oklahoma Coyotes (RHI) (1995–96) Oklahoma Wranglers (AFL) (2000–01) Oklahoma City Yard Dawgz (af2/AFL) (2009–10) Oklahoma City Barons (AHL) (2010–15) Bricktown Brawlers (IFL) (2011) Oklahoma City Blue (NBA D-League/NBA G League) (2014–20) | |
Prairie Surf Studios (originally Myriad Convention Center and later Cox Convention Center) was a film production complex located in downtown Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. It was formerly a convention center and the home of several minor league teams. The site is currently being demolished to make room for a new basketball arena.