Air Canada Centre
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| Air Canada Centre | |
|---|---|
| The ACC | |
| Image:Air Canada Centre logo.gif Image:Raptors 0607.JPG | |
| Location | 40 Bay Street Toronto, Ontario M5J-2N8 |
| Broke ground | March 12, 1997 |
| Opened | February 19, 1999 |
| Owner | Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment |
| Construction cost | C$265 million |
| Architect | Brisbin Brook Beynon, Architects |
| Tenants | Toronto Maple Leafs (NHL) (1999-present) Toronto Raptors (NBA) (1999-present) Toronto Rock (NLL) (2001-present) Toronto Phantoms (AFL) (2001-2002) |
| Capacity | Basketball 19,800 Hockey 18,819 Lacrosse 18,819 Concerts 19,800 Theatre 5,200 |
The Air Canada Centre, often referred to simply as the ACC, is a multi-purpose arena located on Bay Street in downtown Toronto, Ontario. It is the home of the Toronto Maple Leafs of the National Hockey League, the Toronto Raptors of the National Basketball Association, and the Toronto Rock of the National Lacrosse League. It was also home to the Toronto Phantoms of the Arena Football League during their brief existence.
The ACC is owned by Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment Ltd., the same group that owns both the Leafs and Raptors, and is 665,000 square feet (62,000 m²) in size. Air Canada Centre is connected to Union Station and the underground pedestrian PATH system, providing easy access to public transportation (TTC, subway and GO Transit) for fans attending events. There are also 13,000 parking spaces within immediate walking distance.
Since opening, Air Canada Centre has been recognized with more than 25 industry awards that range from Canadian Major Facility of the Year (multiple times), the U.S. based Facilities & Event Management Magazine's Prime Site Award, the Wine Spectator, VQA Restaurant and the International (Diamond Wine Award) Awards of Excellence, and Tourism Toronto's Jeff Adams Access Award of Excellence for the facilities accessibility.
Air Canada Centre remains the only arena in North America to house three of its own exclusive award-winning restaurants -- The Platinum Club, Air Canada Club and Hot Stove Club. The restaurants, along with themed concessions stands and kiosks offer a diversity of food and beverages that capture Toronto's multicultural flavour. Two in-house bars, the Ice Box and Rickard's Brewhouse (which has its own micro-brewery) are favourite spots for fans before and during games.
Andy Frost is the public address announcer at the ACC during Toronto Maple Leafs home games, while Herbie Kuhn does the job for the Toronto Raptors, and Bruce Barker is the announcer for Toronto Rock games.
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[edit] Security at the ACC
Security Services at Air Canada Centre are divided into two departments, Event Security and Facility Security. The facility security team is 24 hour security service. The building is monitored 24 hours a day by foot patrols, and CCTV cameras. The event security team works the events only. They are responsible for enforcing the liquor license act, trespass to property act. Event and Facility security officers have the full authority to arrest and physically remove patrons off the property. Facility security officers back up the Event Security team in the event of violent individuals. The entire security team is trained with the Use of Force model used by the police. At each event there are Toronto Police officers on site.
When coming to an event, outside food or drink are prohibited from entering in the building.
[edit] History
The Air Canada Centre was started by the Toronto Raptors under its initial ownership group headed by Canadian businessman John Bitove. The building was designed for both hockey and basketball, but basketball was its foremost purpose; indeed, sight lines were designed to be especially good for basketball's smaller court. While the building was under construction, the Maple Leafs were also looking at building their own new arena at a different location. Journalists such as the Toronto Star's Dave Perkins encouraged both sides to pair up into one arena; two 20,000-seat arenas were seen as overkill for the city.
In purchasing the Raptors and the under-construction Air Canada Centre, MLSE provided the Maple Leafs the venue to move out of the ageing legendary Maple Leaf Gardens. MLSE made some changes to the plans while the construction was underway, including turning upper level seats in the west end of the arena into private boxes. The Air Canada Centre's groundbreaking was performed in February of 1997.
The site was once occupied by the Canada Post Delivery Building. The current building retained the striking facades of the east (along Bay Street) and south (Lakeshore Boulevard) walls of that structure, but the rest of the building (facing Union Station) was removed to make room for the arena.
The 15-storey tower on Bay Street stands at 55 metres, and provides connections in the atrium to Union Station, Bay Street, and York Street (via Bremner Boulevard).
In the year 2000, the ACC became the venue for the long awaited concert of the Iranian singing diva Googoosh, following over 21 years of silence, one of the greatest momentums of Iranian music's history, with record breaking ticket sales.
[edit] Venues
The first Maple Leafs home game took place on February 20, 1999 versus the Montreal Canadiens, won by the Leafs 3-2 on an overtime goal by Steve Thomas. The first Raptors game took place the following night versus the Vancouver Grizzlies. The facility hosted the 2000 NHL All-Star Game and the championship game of the 2004 World Cup of Hockey.
The Toronto Rock also moved to the ACC from Maple Leaf Gardens for the 2001 NLL season. The Rock's first game was a 17-7 win over the Ottawa Rebel on December 21, 2000[1].
The ACC has held numerous concerts to big name stars such as Tina Turner, Shakira, Van Halen, Evanescence, Celine Dion, Kiss, Aerosmith, Queen + Paul Rodgers, My Chemical Romance, Justin Timberlake, Bon Jovi, Guns N' Roses, Depeche Mode, The Who, David Bowie, Gwen Stefani, Coldplay, Nine Inch Nails, Tool, U2, Paul McCartney, Radiohead, Madonna, The Rolling Stones, Simple Plan, Elton John, Oasis, Metallica, Megadeth, Heaven and Hell 2007 (Black Sabbath/Dio), Iron Maiden, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Billy Talent, Mariah Carey, Nelly Furtado, Janet Jackson, Pearl Jam, Hilary Duff, Avril Lavigne, Beyonce Knowles, John Mayer, Spice Girls, Rush, Roger Waters, Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony.
[edit] Best Buy Theatre
Located within the Air Canada Centre is the 5,200-seat Best Buy Theatre, used for theatre concerts, Broadway and family shows, and other events. It was formerly called the Sears Theatre and is also known as the Theatre at ACC. Our Lady Peace and Coldplay, early on in their career, have performed in this venue.
[edit] Future renovations
In late 2005, Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment announced that they would be renovating the western side of the Air Canada Centre during the 2008 off-season, to connect it with the future Maple Leaf Square development. Maple Leaf Square is jointly owned by MLSE, Cadillac Fairview and Lantera Developments. The $500 million development will include two restaurants, Hotel Le Germain at Maple Leaf Square boutique hotel, extensive retail shopping including a 9,000 square foot Leafs, Raptors, and Toronto FC store, two 54-storey condominiums, a Longo's grocery store, a High-Definition broadcast studio, and a public square. It is slated for completion in 2009-10.
During the 2007 off-season summer MLSE installed a $4 million dollar dehumidifier to help create better ice conditions for the players, though it remains to be seen if this actually worked.
[edit] Gallery
Air Canada Centre from CN Tower.jpg
View from CN Tower |
Air Canada Centre Leafs game.jpg
During a Leafs game |
Air Canada Center interior.jpg
Another view of the ACC from the inside. |
ThePolice ACC.jpg
The Police performing on their world tour, November 8, 2007 |
[edit] See also
Other venues in the Toronto area, past and present, include:
- Rogers Centre (Previously SkyDome)
- Ricoh Coliseum
- Maple Leaf Gardens
- Mutual Street Arena
- Molson Amphitheatre
- Varsity Arena
- Hershey Centre (in Mississauga)
- St. Michael's College School Arena
- BMO Field
[edit] External links
- The Air Canada Centre
- Seats3D - Interactive Seating Map at Air Canada Center for Maple Leafs
- Seats3D - Interactive Seating Map at Air Canada Center for Toronto Raptors
[edit] References
- ^ Ben Knight. Toronto Rocks Ottawa in season opener, 17-7. Outsider's Guide to the NLL. Retrieved on 2006-12-13.
| Preceded by SkyDome 1995–1999 | Home of the Toronto Raptors 1999–present | Succeeded by current |
| Preceded by Maple Leaf Gardens 1931–1999 | Home of the Toronto Maple Leafs 1999–present | Succeeded by current |
| Preceded by Maple Leaf Gardens 1999–2000 | Home of the Toronto Rock 2000–present | Succeeded by current |
| Preceded by Hartford Civic Center 1999–2000 | Home of the Toronto Phantoms 2001-2002 | Succeeded by team folded |
Current arenas in the National Lacrosse League | |
|---|---|
| Eastern Division | Air Canada Centre · Blue Cross Arena · HSBC Arena · Madison Square Garden · Sears Centre · Wachovia Center · Xcel Energy Center |
| Western Division | HP Pavilion · Pengrowth Saddledome · Pepsi Center · Rexall Place · Rose Garden |
de:Air Canada Centre it:Air Canada Centre es:Air Canada Centre fr:Air Canada Centre hr:Air Canada Centre he:מרכז אייר קנדה nl:Air Canada Centre ja:エア・カナダ・センター pl:Air Canada Centre pt:Air Canada Centre sv:Air Canada Centre uk:Ер-Канада-центр
Categories: Articles lacking sources from November 2007 | All articles lacking sources | Indoor arenas in Canada | Indoor ice hockey venues in Canada | Indoor lacrosse venues in Canada | Basketball venues in Canada | Music venues in Toronto | 1999 establishments | Toronto Maple Leafs | Toronto Raptors | Sports venues in Toronto | National Hockey League venues | National Basketball Association venues | PATH (Toronto) | World Wrestling Entertainment venues

