Enterprise Center
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![]() Exterior view of venue under former signage (c.2005)
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Location in Missouri##Location in the United States
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Former names | Kiel Center (1994–2000) Savvis Center (2000–06) Scottrade Center (2006–18) |
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Address | 1401 Clark Ave St. Louis, MO 63103-2700 |
Location | Downtown West |
Coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Public transit | ![]() |
Owner | City of St. Louis |
Operator | SLB Acquisition Holdings LLC |
Capacity | Ice hockey: 18,400[1] Basketball and Concerts: 22,000 Indoor soccer: 10,000 (expandable to 18,724)[2] |
Construction | |
Broke ground | December 14, 1992[3] |
Opened | October 8, 1994 |
Construction cost | $135 million ($228 million in 2021 dollars[4]) |
Architect | Ellerbe Becket[5] |
Structural engineer | The Consulting Engineers Group, Inc.[6] |
Services engineer | William Tao & Associates, Inc.[7] |
General contractor | J.S. Alberici Construction[8] |
Main contractors | DKW Construction, Inc.[9] |
Tenants | |
St. Louis Ambush (NPSL) (1994–2000) Saint Louis Billikens (NCAA) (1994–2008) St. Louis Blues (NHL) (1995–present) St. Louis Stampede (AFL) (1995–96) St. Louis Vipers (RHI) (1995–97, 1999) St. Louis Steamers (MISL) (2004–06) River City Rage (NIFL) (2006) |
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Website | |
Venue Website |
Enterprise Center is an 18,400-seat[1] arena located in downtown St. Louis, Missouri, United States. Its primary tenant is the St. Louis Blues of the National Hockey League, but it is also used for other functions, such as NCAA basketball, NCAA hockey, concerts, professional wrestling and more. In a typical year, the facility hosts about 175 events. Industry trade publication Pollstar has previously ranked Enterprise Center among the top ten arenas worldwide in tickets sold to non-team events, but the facility has since fallen into the upper sixties, as of 2017.[10]
The arena opened in 1994 and was known as Kiel Center until 2000, Savvis Center from 2000 to 2006, and Scottrade Center from 2006 to 2018. On May 21, 2018, the St. Louis Blues and representatives of Enterprise Holdings, based in St. Louis, announced that the naming rights had been acquired by Enterprise and that the facility's name would change to Enterprise Center, effective July 1, 2018.[11]
Contents
Current tenants
It is the home of the St. Louis Blues of the NHL. In addition to the NHL franchise, the facility has hosted the annual Missouri Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament since 1995, commonly referred to as "Arch Madness", with the winner receiving an automatic berth to the NCAA Tournament. The University of Illinois and University of Missouri play their annual men's basketball rivalry game at Enterprise Center each season, typically on the Saturday before Christmas.
Enterprise Center also hosts a variety of non-sporting events each year, including concerts, ice shows, family events, professional wrestling, and other events. On average, the facility sees about 175 total events per year, drawing nearly two million guests annually to downtown St. Louis.
The facility is frequently chosen by the NCAA to host championship events, including its men's hockey "Frozen Four" in 2007, the women's basketball Final Four in 2001 and 2009, wrestling championships in 2000, 2004, 2005, 2008, 2009, 2012, 2015, and 2017, and several men's and women's basketball Midwest Regional tournament games. After the Missouri Tigers joined the SEC in 2012, St. Louis was added to the list of cities that could serve as hosts for the men's SEC Men's Basketball Tournament, doing so for the first time in March 2018, at the completion of the 2017–2018 regular season.
The building is operated by SLB Acquisition Holdings LLC, owner of the St. Louis Blues, under its chairman, Tom Stillman.[12]
Former tenants
Former tenants of Enterprise Center include the Saint Louis Billikens men's basketball team from Saint Louis University, St. Louis Vipers roller hockey team, St. Louis Ambush and St. Louis Steamers indoor soccer teams, the St. Louis Stampede arena football team, and the River City Rage indoor football team.
History
The arena opened in 1994 to replace Kiel Auditorium, where the Saint Louis University college basketball team had played, which was torn down in December 1992. The Blues had played in the St. Louis Arena prior to moving into Kiel Center in 1994; however, they would not play in the arena until January 1995 due to the lockout that delayed the start of the 1994-95 season. The first professional sports match was played by the St. Louis Ambush, an indoor soccer team. The building is currently known as Enterprise Center, after naming rights were sold in May 2018 to Enterprise Holdings. The Kiel name still exists on the adjoining parking structure and the building cornerstone. Signs for the nearby MetroLink stop have been changed to read "Civic Center", since the building has been renamed four times in its history.
The Opera House portion of the building was not razed when the original Auditorium was but remained closed since 1992, as members of Civic Progress, Inc., who promised to pay for the renovation of the Opera House, reneged on that promise, while opposing all outside efforts to achieve that renovation. In June 2009, the St. Louis Board of Aldermen voted 25-1 to subsidize the renovation and reopening of the Opera House under the direction of its new owners, Sports Capital Partners (who also own the Blues). The subsidies were funded by municipal bonds and state/federal historic tax credits. On July 12, 2010, it was announced that the name of the opera house would be changed to the Peabody Opera House, named after the company Peabody Energy. On October 1, 2011, the Peabody Opera House opened for the first time since the $79 million renovation.
Through its history, the arena has been known as Kiel Center until 2000, Savvis Center from 2000 to 2006, Scottrade Center from 2006 to 2018, and Enterprise Center since July 2018.
The largest crowd to attend an event at the arena was 22,612, which happened twice during the 2007 Missouri Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament.[13] The largest non-sporting event crowd was for a Bon Jovi concert in May of 2011 as part of the Bon Jovi Live Tour with 20,648 in attendance.[14]
A three-phase renovation of the arena began in 2017 and will complete in 2019, with all building works being done in the hockey off-season to minimize schedule disruption. The first phase was largely composed of engineering upgrades (new lighting, sound, HVAC, and ice plant) and dressing rooms, as well as a new scoreboard and replacement of some lower-tier seating on the west end (where the Blues shoot twice) with "theater boxes". Phase two will see the replacement of all upper-tier seats, "theater boxes" added to the east end, and a re-built lower-tier concourse with new club areas for premium ticketholders as well as a beer garden opening onto 14th Street. The third and final phase will include the replacement of lower-tier seats and renovations to private boxes.
Naming rights
Blues management decried its former naming-rights deal with tech company SAVVIS, as much of the compensation was in Savvis shares, then riding high. However, when the tech bubble burst, the team was left with nearly worthless shares.[15]
In September 2006, Scottrade founder Rodger O. Riney and chief marketing officer Chris Moloney announced a partnership with the St. Louis Blues hockey club and arena. The new name of the arena, Scottrade Center, was revealed in a joint press conference. Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but were described as "long-term and significant", by Moloney. Both Scottrade and the Blues said the agreement was "equitable" to both parties. Most of the signage and other promotions were changed to Scottrade Center prior to the first home game of the Blues on October 12, 2006. The Sports Business Journal in March 2007 described it as "one of the fastest naming rights deals in history."
Scottrade announced on October 24, 2016 that it was being sold to TD Ameritrade for $4 billion. It was originally believed that once the deal closed, Scottrade Center would become the TD Ameritrade Center in a naming rights deal set to run until 2021.[16] However, less than a year later, TD Ameritrade announced that it would give back its naming rights upon the closure of the Scottrade acquisition.[17]
On May 21, 2018, Enterprise Holdings, based in St. Louis, and the St. Louis Blues announced that beginning July 1, the facility would be known as Enterprise Center.[11][18] The 15-year agreement calls for interior and exterior signage featuring the Enterprise logo.[19]
Seating capacity
The facility's seating capacity for hockey has varied since opening.
Years | Capacity |
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1994–2000 | 19,260[20] |
2000–2007 | 19,022[20] |
2007–2017 | 19,150[21] |
2017–2018 | 18,724[22] |
2018–present | 18,400[1] |
Events
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Sports
- The PBR has hosted an Unleash the Beast Series (formerly Bud Light Cup Series and Built Ford Tough Series) event at this venue annually since 1997, making it one of the longest-running events on the tour. In 2019 the event was named the Mason Lowe Memorial in honor of bull rider Mason Lowe, an Exeter, Missouri, native who died from injuries he sustained at a PBR Velocity Tour event in Denver on January 15th, 2019.[23]
- 1997 Conference USA men's basketball tournament.
- Hosts the Mid-States Club Hockey Association Challenge Cup and Wickenheiser Cup finals for high school hockey teams in St. Louis
- 1998 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament Midwest Regional
- Women's Final Four in 2001 and 2009
- Hosted the 2006 State Farm U.S. Figure Skating Championships in January 2006, which was used as the primary means to select the United States Figure Skating team for the 2006 Winter Olympics.
- 2014 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament 2nd round & Regional Quarterfinals
- NCAA Division I Wrestling Championships host in 2000, 2004, 2005, 2008, 2009, 2012, 2015 and 2017
- Hosts yearly NBA preseason games. The most recent game took place on October 24, 2014, between the Chicago Bulls and the Minnesota Timberwolves.
- In 2018, the Scottrade Center hosted the Southeastern Conference Men's Basketball Tournament for the first time in the center's history.
- The facility will host the 2020 NHL All-Star Game.[24]
MMA & Boxing
- Hosted the Cory Spinks vs. Zab Judah undisputed welterweight title fight in 2005.
- At Bellator 157 on June 25, 2016, Michael Chandler won the Bellator Lightweight Championship by knocking out Patricky Freire, and former UFC Light Heavyweight Champion Quinton Jackson edged Olympic gold medalist judoka Satoshi Ishii on points.
Wrestling
- No Mercy (2001)
- Survivor Series (1998)
- Raw is Owen
- Badd Blood: In Your House
- Judgment Day (2007)
- Elimination Chamber (2010)
- Royal Rumble (2012)
- Raw 1000[25]
- Extreme Rules (2013)[26]
- Survivor Series (2014)
- Battleground (2015)
- Money in the Bank (2017)[27]
Many historic WWE moments have taken place at the Enterprise Center. Former WWE and World Heavyweight Champion Kane made his WWE debut at this arena in 1997 at the event Badd Blood: In Your House. At that same event, the very first Hell In A Cell match took place. The Rock won his very first WWE Championship in the building at the Survivor Series event in 1998. Chris Jericho won his first World Championship in this arena at the No Mercy event in 2001, and won his latest World Championship in the arena at the Elimination Chamber event in 2010. In 2005 John Cena was revealed here as the first draft pick for Monday Night Raw, where he would remain for most of his career. Dave Batista won his second WWE Championship at the Elimination Chamber event in 2010. The 1000th episode of Monday Night Raw was also held there. At the 2014 Survivor Series Sting made his official debut in WWE. In November 2018 on SmackDown, Daniel Bryan won his fourth WWE Championship. Arguably the most emotional wrestling card held at Scottrade was "Raw is Owen", held in the aftermath of Owen Hart's death the previous night at Over the Edge across the state in Kansas City. That night, ten matches were held with all booking put aside, and many wrestlers and fans paid tribute to the popular Hart.
References
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External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to [[commons:Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).|Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).]]. |
Events and tenants | ||
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Preceded by | Home of the St. Louis Blues 1994 – present |
Succeeded by current |
Preceded by | Home of the St. Louis University Billikens 1994 – 2008 |
Succeeded by Chaifetz Arena |
Preceded by | Host of the NCAA Women's Final Four 2001 |
Succeeded by Alamodome San Antonio, Texas |
Preceded by | Host of the Frozen Four 2007 |
Succeeded by Pepsi Center Denver, Colorado |
Preceded by | Host of the NCAA Women's Final Four 2009 |
Succeeded by Alamodome San Antonio, Texas |
Preceded by | Host of the SEC Men's Basketball Tournament 2018 |
Succeeded by Bridgestone Arena Nashville, Tennessee |
Preceded by | Host of the NHL All-Star Game 2020 |
Succeeded by TBA |
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- ↑ Professional Bull Riders - PBR announces Mason Lowe Memorial event in St. Louis
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- Pages with reference errors
- Articles with short description
- Pages with broken file links
- Commons category link from Wikidata
- Official website not in Wikidata
- 1994 establishments in Missouri
- Arena football venues
- Basketball venues in St. Louis
- Boxing venues in the United States
- College ice hockey venues in the United States
- Defunct college basketball venues in the United States
- Sports venues completed in 1994
- Indoor ice hockey venues in Missouri
- Indoor soccer venues in Missouri
- Mixed martial arts venues in the United States
- National Hockey League venues
- Professional wrestling venues in the United States
- Saint Louis Billikens basketball venues
- Sports venues in St. Louis
- St. Louis Blues arenas
- Tourist attractions in St. Louis
- Wrestling venues in the United States
- Indoor arenas in Missouri
- Downtown West, St. Louis
- Enterprise Holdings