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Reunion Arena

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Reunion Arena
Reunion Arena
Location 777 Sports Street, Dallas, Texas 75207
Coordinates 32°46′22″N 96°48′29″W / 32.77278°N 96.80806°W / 32.77278; -96.80806Coordinates: 32°46′22″N 96°48′29″W / 32.77278°N 96.80806°W / 32.77278; -96.80806
Opened April 1980
Closed June 2008
Owner The City of Dallas
Construction cost US$27 million
Architect HKS, Inc.
Capacity Basketball: 17,293
Ice hockey: 17,001
Indoor Soccer: 16,626
Concerts:
  • End Stage: 18,628
  • Center Stage: 19,071
  • Half House: 9,663
Tenants
Dallas Mavericks (NBA) (1980–2001)
Dallas Tornado (NASL INDOOR) (1980–1981)
Dallas Sidekicks (MISL) (1984–2004)
Dallas Texans (AFL) (1990–1993)
Dallas Stars (NHL) (1993–2001)
Dallas Stallions (RHI) (1999)
Dallas Desperados (AFL) (2003)
1986 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament

Reunion Arena was an indoor arena in the Reunion district of downtown Dallas, Texas (USA). The arena held 17,300 for basketball and 17,000 for ice hockey. It is currently being demolished, and the site is scheduled to be cleared by the end of September 2009.[1]

Contents

[edit] History

Reunion Arena was completed in 1980 at a cost of $27 million.[2] It was named for the early mid-nineteenth century commune, La Reunion. In late 2005, the arena and the Dallas Convention Center were used as the primary Dallas shelters for evacuees of Hurricane Katrina. In 1994, President Bill Clinton visited the arena to watch his beloved University of Arkansas basketball team play in the NCAA Tournament.

In 1984, the arena hosted the only national political convention held in Dallas when the Republican party nominated Ronald Reagan for a second term as president.

Reunion Arena also hosted the WCT Tennis Tournament in the 1980s, including The Virginia Slims Invitational Tournament. Due to scheduling conflicts in 1984, the Virginia Slims Tournament forced the Dallas Mavericks to play Game 5 of their first ever playoff series at Moody Coliseum, against the Seattle SuperSonics. While Southern Methodist University competed in the Southwest Conference, Reunion Arena was known by University of Arkansas Razorbacks fans, as Barnhill South, due to the big following by the Arkansas fans away from home, the Barnhill Arena was the home to all UA games until 1993.

[edit] About

The arena also hosted numerous concerts and other events. While the first concert at Reunion was billed as The Who on July 2, 1980, at least two other concerts played there in late June: Foghat and Pat Travers on June 25, 1980; and Ted Nugent, Scorpions, and Def Leppard on June 26, 1980. The rock band Journey played three consecutive shows at the arena in April 1983 and in December 1986, Van Halen played three shows in June 1984 and Pink Floyd played three consecutive shows at Reunion in November, 1987. Pop songstress Whitney Houston played two sold-out concerts at Reunion in September, 1987. The video for the Scorpions' song "Still Loving You" was filmed there.

The arena featured 30,000 ft² (2,790 ) of arena floor space and had great sightlines, making it ideal for a number of events and games, including many high school graduations. Country music superstar Garth Brooks filmed his first television special, This Is Garth Brooks, in the arena during two sold-out concerts in September 1991, and country music superstar Shania Twain once performed her Come on Over Tour in the arena on September 12, 1998 and was filmed in her first DVD released Shania Twain Live. U2 filmed them performing Bullet the Blue Sky for their Rattle and Hum movie in 1987. Dire Straits played there during their On Every Street world tour in 1991. Reunion was also a venue that was frequently used by World Class Championship Wrestling in the 1980s, in which the promotion held many, if not all of their bi-monthly Star Wars events.

[edit] Home teams

The arena's last remaining full-time sports tenant was the MISL Dallas Sidekicks, but the club has been inactive since the Fall of 2004 season. The arena was the home of the Dallas Mavericks from 1980 to 2001 and the Dallas Stars from 1993 to 2001. Both teams moved to the American Airlines Center in 2001.

[edit] Closure

After a unanimous vote by the Dallas City Council, Reunion Arena officially closed on June 30, 2008. [3] It is expected to be demolished beginning in March 2009.[4]

[edit] Planned Demolition

In August 2008 the Dallas City Council said it would implode the stadium if it could find an entity willing to foot the bill. Plans from the council call for the implosion to be part of a movie scene with the film company picking up the tab for the implosion. [5]

In April 2009, contractor A&R Demolition has announced the following demolition schedule:[6]

• Through April 15: Lowering of JumboTron scoreboard

• By April 20: Delivery of heavy equipment to the site

• May 31-Aug. 31: Concrete crushing on site

• June 19-29: Implosion of arena's upper concrete wall

• September: Roof demolition

• Oct. 5: Restoration of area

[edit] Events

[edit] References

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Preceded by
first arena
Home of the
Dallas Mavericks

1980 – 2001
Succeeded by
American Airlines Center
Preceded by
Met Center
Home of the
Dallas Stars

1993 – 2001
Succeeded by
American Airlines Center
Preceded by
American Airlines Center
Home of the
Dallas Desperados

2003
Succeeded by
American Airlines Center
Preceded by
Rupp Arena
NCAA Men's Division I
Basketball Tournament
Finals Venue

1986
Succeeded by
Louisiana Superdome
Preceded by
Hoosier Dome
Host of the
NBA All-Star Game

1986
Succeeded by
Kingdome
Preceded by
first arena
Home of the
Dallas Stallions (RHI)

1999
Succeeded by
none
Preceded by
Cotton Bowl
Home of the
Dallas Tornado

1980 – 1981
Succeeded by
none
Preceded by
none
Home of the
Dallas Sidekicks

1984 – 2004
Succeeded by
none
Preceded by
none
Home of the
Dallas Texans

1990 – 1993
Succeeded by
none
Preceded by
Joe Louis Arena
Host of the
Republican National Convention

1984
Succeeded by
Louisiana Superdome
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