- Omni Coliseum
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Omni Coliseum The Omni Location 100 Techwood Drive, Atlanta, Georgia, USA 30303 Coordinates 33°45′27″N 84°23′48″W / 33.7575°N 84.39667°WCoordinates: 33°45′27″N 84°23′48″W / 33.7575°N 84.39667°W Opened 1972 Closed 1997 Demolished July 26, 1997 Owner City of Atlanta Architect Thompson, Ventulett, Stainback & Associates Capacity Basketball: 16,181 (1972-1977), 16,400 (1977-1984), 16,522 (1984-1987), 16,451 (1987-1988), 16,371 (1988-1990), 16,390 (1990-1991), 16,425 (1991-1992), 16,441 (1992-1993), 16,368 (1993-1994), 16,378 (1994-1997)
Ice hockey: 15,191 (1972-1984), 15,278 (1984-1997)Tenants Atlanta Flames (NHL) (1972–1980)
Atlanta Hawks (NBA) (1972–1997)
Atlanta Chiefs (NASL Indoors) (1979–1981)
Democratic National Convention (1988)
Atlanta Attack (AISA/NPSL) (1989–1991)
Atlanta Knights (IHL) (1992–1996)
Atlanta Fire Ants (RHI) (1994)
1977 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament
1996 Summer Olympics (indoor volleyball venue)The Omni Coliseum, usually called The Omni, from the Latin for "all," or "every," was an indoor arena, located in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. Completed in 1972, the arena seated 16,378, for basketball and 15,278, for ice hockey. It was part of the Omni Complex, now known as the CNN Center.
Demolished in 1997, the only remaining reminder is the scoreboard from the Omni that now hangs in the pavilion of the Philips Arena.
Contents
History
This arena was an architectural marvel when first constructed, combining innovative design for the roof, seating, and the structure itself. The logo is based on the unique seating arrangement. Its exterior of Cor-Ten was supposed to "surface rust" to seal itself, making a solid steel structure that would last for decades. The Omni was noted for its distinctive space frame roof, often joked about as looking like an egg crate or a rusty waffle iron[citation needed]. Designed by the firm of Thompson, Ventulett, Stainback & Associates with structural engineering work by the firm of Prybylowski and Gravino, the roof was technically described as an ortho-quad truss system. Elvis Presley performed twice in the Omni and a plaque was placed on an interior wall to that effect after his death. Other concerts held at the arena included shows by Van Halen, Bon Jovi, Def Leppard, Rod Stewart, Dwight Yoakam, Ozzy Osbourne, Metallica, and many,many others. Parts of Def Leppard's live home video "In The Round,In Your Face" were filmed at the Omni in October 1988.
Among the other non-sports events hosted at the Omni was the 1988 Democratic National Convention.
Basketball and hockey
The Omni was home to the NBA Atlanta Hawks from 1972–1997, the NHL Atlanta Flames from 1972–1980 (now the Calgary Flames), and the IHL Atlanta Knights (1992-1996). The Knights were the only pro team to win a championship in the building by winning the Turner Cup in 1994. The arena also hosted the 1977 NCAA Final Four, won by Marquette University over North Carolina in what was Warriors' (their nickname at the time) coach Al McGuire's last game, one SEC and three ACC men's basketball tournaments, the 1978 NBA All-Star Game, the 1993 NCAA Women's Basketball Final Four, and the indoor volleyball matches for the 1996 Summer Olympics. The Flames were replaced by the Atlanta Thrashers, who began play in 1999 after the Omni was demolished and Philips Arena was built.
Indoor soccer
The Omni also served as the indoor home of the Atlanta Chiefs of the North American Soccer League as well as the Atlanta Attack of the American Indoor Soccer Association.
Pro wrestling
The Omni was also home to many legendary professional wrestling events, as it was the "home arena" for many of WWE's rival promotions, starting with Georgia Championship Wrestling. After they were sold, the National Wrestling Alliance's Jim Crockett Promotions and its successor, Ted Turner/Time Warner's World Championship Wrestling used the building many times. In total, four Starrcades (1985, 1986, 1989, 1992) were held there, as well as parts of two NWA Great American Bash events (1986, 1987) and Slamboree 1993. In actuality, The Omni was not the "home arena" for Jim Crockett Promotions, it was the Greensboro Coliseum in North Carolina. When Turner bought out JCP in 1988, the Omni became the "home arena" for the NWA/WCW. The final wrestling event to take place in The Omni was an episode of WCW Monday Nitro on March 3, 1997.
Problems
One of the problems with the building was that some of the innovations were not successful. The worst was that the exterior never ceased rusting to seal itself. By the mid 1990s, the rusting exterior had holes big enough that chain link fences were installed in a number of locations to keep people from crawling though the wall to see events. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, a growing number of NBA and NHL teams started constructing new arenas with better amenities for their high-end customers, such as luxury boxes, club-level seating, and massive club concourses, in order to increase their revenue streams. Some of these new arenas had as many as 200 luxury boxes, compared to the Omni which had only had 16 such boxes, and no club level at all, thus putting the Atlanta Hawks at a disadvantage.[citation needed] It also became a disadvantage to the city of Atlanta; until the Georgia Dome was finished in 1992, the Omni served as its largest indoor facility in terms of seating capacity.
Built on a former railroad yard, after construction, the Omni settled more than its designers expected. There were unanticipated stresses in the space frame roof, which often leaked water.
Although the Omni hosted many events, it lost more than its share due to the smaller seating capacity and lack of amenities when compared to newer buildings in other cities. Despite quite enjoyable seating and viewing for the fans, the structure had the outward appearance of looking dated by the early-'90s (although the arena was only 20 years old), so there was a collective effort by many parties to build a replacement. This also stemmed from the desire of Ted Turner to own an NHL franchise; the Atlanta Flames had been sold to Canadian businessmen and relocated to Calgary, Alberta a decade earlier. However, the only way the league would approve an expansion team to him would be with the guarantee of a new arena. In 1997, the Omni was demolished, and Philips Arena was constructed on the same site. It opened two years later.
References
- 1996 Summer Olympics official report. Volume 1. p. 543.
- 1996 Summer Olympics official report. Volume 3. p. 465.
Events and tenants Preceded by
Alexander Memorial ColiseumHome of the
Atlanta Hawks
1972 – 1997Succeeded by
Georgia Dome &
Alexander Memorial ColiseumPreceded by
noneHome of the
Atlanta Flames
1972 – 1980Succeeded by
Stampede CorralPreceded by
The SpectrumNCAA Men's Division I
Basketball Tournament
Finals Venue
1977Succeeded by
The CheckerdomePreceded by
MECCA ArenaHost of the
NBA All-Star Game
1978Succeeded by
Pontiac SilverdomePreceded by
Moscone CenterHost of the
Democratic National Convention
1988Succeeded by
Madison Square GardenAtlanta landmarks Museums Apex Museum · Atlanta Contemporary Art Center · Atlanta Cyclorama & Civil War Museum · Atlanta History Center · Callanwolde Fine Arts Center · Delta Heritage Museum · Fernbank Museum of Natural History · Fernbank Science Center · Hammonds House Museum · High Museum of Art · Imagine It! The Children's Museum of Atlanta · Jimmy Carter Library and Museum · Joel Chandler Harris House (Wren's Nest) · King Plow Arts Center · Margaret Mitchell House & Museum · Martin Luther King, Jr., National Historic Site · Michael C. Carlos Museum · Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia · Museum of Design Atlanta · Rhodes Memorial Hall House Museum · Robert C. Williams Paper Museum · William Breman Jewish Heritage & Holocaust Museum · World of Coca-Cola
Skyscrapers Downtown 25 Park Place · 40 Marietta Street · 55 Marietta Street · 191 Peachtree Tower · 270 Peachtree · Atlanta Hilton · Briarcliff Hotel · Candler Building · Centennial Hill (55 Allen Plaza · Peachtree Summit · 30 Allen Plaza · TWELVE Centennial Park · 45 Allen Plaza/W Atlanta Downtown Hotel & Residences) · Centennial Tower · Coastal States Building · Equitable Building · Flatiron Building · Georgia Power · Georgian Terrace Hotel · Georgia-Pacific Tower · Healey Building · Hurt Building · Hyatt Regency Atlanta · J. Mack Robinson College of Business Administration Building · Marriott Marquis · One Park Tower · Peachtree Center (North Tower · South Tower · International Tower · Harris Tower · Marquis One · Marquis Two) · Rhodes-Haverty Building · Richard B. Russell Federal Building · Sam Nunn Atlanta Federal Center · Southern Bell Telephone Company Building · State of Georgia Building · SunTrust Plaza · The Metropolitan · Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel · William-Oliver Building · Winecoff Hotel
Midtown 1010 Midtown · 1075 Peachtree · 1100 Peachtree · 1180 Peachtree · 1280 West · AT&T Midtown Center · Atlantic Center Plaza · Bank of America Plaza · The Campanile · Coca-Cola · Colony Square (Colony Square 100 · Colony Square 400 · W Atlanta-Midtown) · CNN Center · Four Seasons Hotel Atlanta/GLG Grand · Mayfair Condominiums · One Atlantic Center · One Georgia Center · Promenade II · The Proscenium · Spire · Viewpoint · Atlantic Station (171 17th Street · 201 17th Street · 271 17th Street · The Atlantic · TWELVE Atlantic Station)
Buckhead 2828 Peachtree · 3344 Peachtree · 3630 Peachtree · Atlanta Plaza · Buckhead Grand · Mansion on Peachtree · Paramount at Buckhead · Park Avenue Condominiums · Park Place · Realm · Resurgens Plaza · Terminus (Terminus 100 · Terminus 200 · 10 Terminus Place) · Tower Place
Perimeter Center Concourse Corporate Center V & VI (King & Queen towers) · Park Towers I & II · Three Ravinia Drive
Sites of Interest Commercial Atlantic Station · Briarcliff Plaza · Clermont Lounge · Lenox Square · Mary Mac's Tea Room · Phipps Plaza · Ponce City Market (Sears Building/City Hall East) · Underground Atlanta · The Varsity
Government Industrial DuPre Excelsior Mill (Masquerade) · Ford Factory · Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills · Georgia Railroad Freight Depot · King Plow Arts Center
Monuments & Memorials Atlanta from the Ashes · Carnegie Education Pavilion · Millennium Gate · Oakland Cemetery · Stone Mountain Confederate Memorial · World Athletes Monument
Parks & Nature Performing Arts Alliance Theatre · Atlanta Symphony Hall · Atlanta Civic Center · Buckhead Theatre · Center for Puppetry Arts · Eyedrum · Fox Theatre · King Plow Arts Center · Plaza Theatre · Shakespeare Tavern · The Masquerade · The Tabernacle · Tara Theatre · Variety Playhouse · Woodruff Arts Center
Residential (Former) Asa G. Candler, Jr. (Callanwolde) · Water T. Candler (Lullwater) · Joel Chandler Harris (Wren's Nest) · Edward H. Inman (Swan House) · Martin Luther King, Jr. · Ferdinand McMillan (The Castle) · Margaret Mitchell · Edward C. Peters (Ivy Hall) · Amos Giles Rhodes (Rhodes Hall) · Rufus M. Rose
Sports Former 688 Club · Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium · Atlantic Steel Mill · Coca-Cola Olympic City · DeGive's Opera House · 3rd Georgia Governor's Mansion (John H. James mansion) · Henry Grady Hotel · Loew's Grand Theatre · Masonic Temple · National Museum of Patriotism · Omni Coliseum · Piedmont Hotel · Ponce de Leon amusement park · Ponce de Leon Park (ballpark) · Ponce de Leon Springs · Rich's · Riverbend Apartments · Roxy Theatre · SciTrek · Terminal Station · Turner Broadcasting tower · Union Stations: 1853 · 1871 · 1930
Planned Atlanta Symphony Center · National Center for Civil and Human Rights
Venues of the 1996 Summer Olympics Olympic Ring Alexander Memorial Coliseum · Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium · Clark Atlanta University Stadium · Cycling road course · Georgia Dome · Georgia State University Gymnasium · Georgia Tech Aquatic Center · Georgia World Congress Center · Marathon course · Morehouse College Gymnasium · Morris Brown College Stadium · Olympic Stadium · Omni Coliseum · Walking courseMetro Atlanta Other venues Florida Citrus Bowl (Orlando, Florida) · Golden Park (Columbus, Georgia) · Legion Field (Birmingham, Alabama) · Ocoee Whitewater Center (Polk County, Tennessee) · Orange Bowl (Miami, Florida) · RFK Memorial Stadium (Washington, D.C.) · Sanford Stadium (Athens, Georgia) · University of Georgia Coliseum (Athens, Georgia) · Wassaw Sound (Savannah, Georgia)1964: Komazawa Volleyball Courts, Yokohama Cultural Gymnasium (final) • 1968: Juan de la Barrera Olympic Gymnasium (final), Juan Escutia Sports Palace, Revolution Ice Rink • 1972: Volleyballhalle • 1976: Montreal Forum (final), Paul Sauvé Centre • 1980: Druzhba Multipurpose Arena, Minor Arena (final) • 1984: Long Beach Arena • 1988: Hanyang University Gymnasium, Jamsil Gymnasium (final), Saemaul Sports Hall • 1992: Palau dels Esports de Barcelona, Palau Sant Jordi (final), Pavelló de la Vall d'Hebron • 1996: Atlanta Beach, Omni Coliseum (indoor final), University of Georgia Coliseum • 2000: Bondi Beach, Sydney Entertainment Centre (indoor final), The Dome and Exhibition Complex • 2004: Faliro Olympic Beach Volleyball Centre, Peace and Friendship Stadium • 2008: Beijing Institute of Technology Gymnasium, Capital Indoor Stadium (indoor final), Chaoyang Park Beach Volleyball Ground • 2012: Earls Court Exhibition Centre, Horse Guards Parade • 2016: Copacabana Arena, MaracanãzinhoACC Men's Basketball Tournament venues Reynolds Coliseum (1954–66) • Greensboro Coliseum (1967, 1971–75, 1977–80, 1982, 1984, 1986, 1988, 1995–98, 2003–04, 2006, 2010–11, 2013–15) • Bojangles' Coliseum (1968–70) • Capital Centre (1976, 1981, 1987) • The Omni (1983, 1985, 1989) • Charlotte Coliseum II (1990–94, 1999–2000, 2002) • Georgia Dome (2001, 2009) • Verizon Center (2005) • St. Pete Times Forum (2007) • Time Warner Cable Arena (2008) • Philips Arena (2012)
Atlanta Flames Franchise Arena Omni ColiseumSeasons Atlanta Hawks Formerly the Buffalo Bisons, Tri-Cities Blackhawks, Milwaukee Hawks, and St. Louis Hawks • Founded in 1946 • Based in Atlanta, Georgia The Franchise Franchise • All-Time roster • Seasons • Head coaches • Current seasonArenas Buffalo Memorial Auditorium • Wharton Field House • Milwaukee Arena • Kiel Auditorium • St. Louis Arena • Alexander Memorial Coliseum • Omni Coliseum • Lakefront Arena • Georgia Dome • Philips ArenaHead Coaches D-League Affiliate NBA
Championships (1)Retired Jerseys Lore "Shock the World" • The Human Highlight Film • Harry the Hawk • The Highlight Factory • J-Smoove • Pistol PeteMedia TV: WPCH-TV • Fox Sports South • SportSouth • Radio: WQXI-AM • Announcers: Bob Rathbun • Dominique Wilkins • Steve HolmanCategories:- Defunct National Hockey League venues
- Buildings and structures completed in 1972
- 1997 disestablishments
- Demolished sports venues in the United States
- Demolished music venues in the United States
- Sports venues in Atlanta, Georgia
- Basketball venues in Georgia (U.S. state)
- Indoor ice hockey venues in the United States
- 1996 Summer Olympic venues
- Olympic volleyball venues
- Atlanta Flames arenas
- Atlanta Hawks venues
- World Championship Wrestling
- Defunct indoor soccer venues in the United States
- Defunct National Basketball Association venues
- Defunct indoor arenas
- Demolished buildings and structures in Atlanta, Georgia
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