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KFC Yum! Center

Coordinates:38°15′27″N85°45′14″W / 38.25750°N 85.75389°W /38.25750; -85.75389
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Multi-purpose indoor arena in Louisville, Kentucky, U.S.

KFC Yum! Center
KFC Yum! Center in 2011
Map
Address1 Arena Plaza
LocationLouisville, Kentucky, U.S.
Coordinates38°15′27″N85°45′14″W / 38.25750°N 85.75389°W /38.25750; -85.75389
OwnerLouisville Arena Authority
OperatorAnschutz Entertainment Group / ASM Global
CapacityBasketball: 22,090
Volleyball: 21,500
End stage: 17,500
Max: 22,090
SurfaceMulti-Surface
Denny Crum Court[2]
Construction
Broke groundNovember 28, 2006[1]
OpenedOctober 10, 2010
Construction cost$238 Million[3]
ArchitectPopulous (formerly HOK Sport)[4]
Louis and Henry Group[4]
C.L. Anderson Architecture[4]
Jill Lewis Smith Architects[4]
Project managerPC Sports[5]
Structural engineerWalter P Moore[6]
Services engineerSmith Seckman Reid, Inc.
General contractorM. A. Mortenson Company[6]
Tenants
Louisville Cardinals (NCAA)
Men's basketball (2010–present)
Women's basketball (2010–present)
Women's volleyball (2011–2017)
Louisville Xtreme (IFL) (2021)
Website
kfcyumcenter.com

TheKFC Yum! Center[7] is a multi-purpose indoorarena in DowntownLouisville, Kentucky, United States. It is named after theKFC restaurant chain andYum! Brands, the parent company of KFC. Adjacent to theOhio River waterfront, it is located on Main Street between 2nd Street and 3rd Street, and opened on October 10, 2010.[8][9] The arena is part of a $450 million project that includes a 975-car parking structure and floodwall.

TheLouisville Cardinals men's andwomen's basketball teams from theUniversity of Louisville are the primary tenants of the arena complex.[8] The U of L women's volleyball team began using the arena as a part-time home in 2011,[10] and made the arena its main home in 2012.[11] With 22,090 seats for basketball, it is the largest arena in the United States by seating capacity designed primarily for basketball,[a] and the second-largest used for college basketball, behind theJMA Wireless Dome atSyracuse University, a venue built to housefootball andlacrosse in addition to basketball. The arena's current attendance record for a sporting event is 22,815, set March 9, 2013, against Notre Dame (men's basketball). The current attendance record for any event is 23,085, set March 9, 2019, whenMetallica played theirWorldWired Tour.[13]

From April to May 2021, it was home to theLouisville Xtreme of theIndoor Football League,[14][15] but they were voted out of the league after five games.[16]

History

[edit]
This section needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(September 2015)

Early arena planning focused on two potential arena sites: one owned by theLouisville Water Company bounded by Liberty Street, Muhammad Ali Blvd, 2nd and 3rd Streets, and one owned byLouisville Gas & Electric (LG&E) on the waterfront between 2nd and 3rd Streets on Main.[17] In March 2006,University of Louisvillemen's basketball coachRick Pitino stated he would not coach in an arena built at the water company site.[18] This came at a time when the House budget committee earmarked funding for the arena only if it was built at the water company site. Others, includingPapa John's Pizza founderJohn Schnatter, a major donor to the U of L athletic program, criticized the LG&E location due to its higher cost.[19]

On March 3, 2006,Kentucky GovernorErnie Fletcher, flanked by Louisville mayorJerry Abramson, announced at a rally in Frankfort his strong preference for locating the new arena at the LG&E site along the Louisville riverfront as it was "undoubtedly the best site for economic development" and would give the state a good return on its investment. Kentucky senate presidentDavid L. Williams pledged to remove the site preference from the budget proposal.[19]

About two months later on April 23, 2006, the Louisville Arena Authority released the design for the interior.[9] The number of seats increased from the original 19,000 to 22,000; it would be divided up between 11,348 seats in the lower bowl, with the remainder on the upper tier. The seat width also increased from 19 to 20 inches. Also included in the release was a proposed sports bar that would be located on the main concourse; it would be open year-round and have views of the Ohio River. The number of suites would increase to 72 that would be located on two levels between the main and upper concourses; they would be twice as large as those inFreedom Hall. A public plaza and concourse along Main Street was also revealed.[9]

Prior to the release of the design, an arena report urged the facility to incorporate energy-saving elements into the construction.[20] Other recommendations included the avoidance of large, blank walls, the inclusion of public art, and the provision of year-round uses inside the building.

On May 21, 2007, the Louisville Arena Authority voted unanimously to remove a hotel from the arena project.[8] The 425-room hotel, which was envisioned as one way to pay off the project, was deleted because other revenues to cover the $252 million construction cost were projected to be higher than expected. The hotel would have also taken land away from a public plaza along Main Street. The Greater Louisville Hotel and Lodging Association also supported the measure, stating that downtown Louisville had enough projected rooms.[8]

The hotel was expected to contribute $1.3 million in annual lease payments, but other sources of revenue were hoped to cover the $573 million in total debt over 30 years on a $339 million bond issue for the arena. Originally, the Kentucky Finance Cabinet projected $211 million in new tax revenues in 2005.[8] A more recent and comprehensive survey was completed recently and the projected revenue increased to $265 million. The other sources of revenue to cover the deletion of the hotel include:[8]

  • $265 million from a tax-increment financing district
  • The city's pledge of $206 million minimum
  • $179 million from interior advertising
  • $84 million facility fee
  • $63 million in luxury suite revenues
  • $37 million in building naming rights

The removal of the hotel would allow for a wider Main Street plaza and would allow for new features, such as a Washington Street entrance.[8] It would also allow for more design flexibility and would lend itself to host after-hour concerts and other events on the plaza.

On April 19, 2010, it was announced that Louisville-based fast food chainYum! Brands would pay $13.5 million for the naming rights[21] and would sell the products of three of its chains—KFC,Pizza Hut andTaco Bell—in seven concession stands within the arena.[7]

Features

[edit]
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This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding to it.(September 2015)

The arena's features include an integrated scoring and video display system, which includes large LED video displays within the seating bowl, with the display and control system provided byDaktronics.

Financing

[edit]
The arena seen from theOhio River, withClark Memorial Bridge to the left

As a result of the subtracted hotel and the revised projected revenues, the arena, which would have lost $123,000 a year originally, might turn a small profit.[8] The arena would generate $9.2 million a year in rent, merchandise, concessions and other revenues, along with funds from a $2 ticket tax on everyLouisville men's basketball game during the first 30 years of the arena's operation. The arena would spend just under $9 million a year, generating an annual profit of $196,000.

Another reason for the revised operating expenses is the reimbursement fee that the Louisville Arena Authority must pay to the Kentucky State Fair Board for the arena's impact onFreedom Hall.[8] The decrease in revenues, from $1.3 million to $738,000 during the first 10 years of operations of the new arena, is the result of a revision taking into account fewer events for the center.

On May 28, 2007, it was announced that theLouisville Metro Council was to propose an arena-financing deal that would save city taxpayers $3.4 million/year, or $100 million over three decades.[22] The proposal, required the arena officials to exhaust other revenue sources, such as naming rights and luxury suite sales, before asking the metro government to pay more than its minimum pledge. The minimum pledge was $206 million towards the construction of the arena in annual installments between 2010 and 2039. Under the deal, the Louisville Arena Authority can ask the local government for up to $3.5 million more a year to cover the debt only if at least five other sources are drained. If the Louisville Arena Authority would have to use additional city funds for two straight years, the Louisville Metro Council has the right to audit the arena's revenues.

The financing agreement allowed $339 million in bonds through the state of Kentucky's Economic Development Finance Authority to be issued to construct the $252 million arena.[22] The total debt on the bonds, $573 million over 30 years, will be paid through several sources. These include the city's $206 million commitment, $265 million from a tax-increment financing district, $179 million from advertising rights inside the arena, $63 million from luxury box sales, and at least $37 million in arena naming rights. The tax-increment financing district will allow part of the anticipated growth in state taxes to help pay for the arena. The arena's share of that revenue is capped at $265 million, although the project will be able to use the excess revenues to pay down the debt. It is expected to generate $574 million over 20 years.

In September 2008, financing was completed for the new waterfront arena.

Construction

[edit]
The arena construction site in March 2010

On May 3, 2007, construction began on a new electrical substation forDowntown Louisville.[23] The previous substation, located on the block of River Road, Main, 2nd and 3rd Streets, was relocated across the street at 3rd and River Road. The new substation, projected to cost $63 million, was completed in October 2008, at which time the land that housed the old substation was transferred to the Louisville Arena Authority for construction of the new arena. Work started on the new arena in November 2008. The complex was officially completed on October 10, 2010.

In June 2010, Gov.Steve Beshear and Mayor Jerry Abramson announced a new $3 million streetscape improvement project directly underneath the Clark Memorial Bridge, a three-block area from Main Street to River Road, which will be transformed into a plaza. This includes a new decorative lighting system under the refurbished Clark Memorial Bridge, wide sidewalks, seats, new pedestrian and festival areas, and extensive plantings, making this an inviting promenade for the new KFC YUM! Center. The project will be completed in time for the October 2010 opening of the arena.[24]

In 2010, the glassed-inskywalk system, called Louie Link, was extended across 3rd Street from the new $16 million Skywalk Garage, an eight-level, 860-space parking facility on 3rd Street, to the new KFC Yum! Center.

Controversy

[edit]

The Task Force meetings were not without controversy. At first, task force member andUniversity of Louisville athletics directorTom Jurich, along with University of Louisville presidentJames Ramsey and Task Force memberJohn Schnatter (founder ofPapa John's Pizza), were ardently opposed to a downtown site and supported instead a campus arena, or a new arena built near Freedom Hall at theKentucky Exposition Center. Jurich and Ramsey would later support the waterfront site. Schnatter, joined by fellow task force member andHumana co-founder David Jones, strongly supported a new arena at the water company site, located four blocks down 2nd Street, or the Exposition Center, which was the cheapest option. They paid over $200,000 for a study that showed the water company site would be much less expensive than the riverfront site. However, the two dropped their lobbying effort after it did not seem to change the minds of the rest of the task force.[25]

Concerts

[edit]

2010

[edit]
DateMain performer(s)Tour / Concert nameAttendanceRevenue
November 10Justin BieberMy World Tour15,943$374,638

2011

[edit]
DateMain performer(s)Tour / Concert nameAttendanceRevenue
February 11Kid RockBorn Free17,500/17,500
October 11Taylor SwiftSpeak Now World Tour14,848$1,003,828

2012

[edit]
DateMain performer(s)Tour / Concert nameAttendanceRevenue
November 2Justin BieberBelieve Tour16,384$1,158,153

2013

[edit]
DateMain performer(s)Tour / Concert nameAttendanceRevenue
March 2Kid RockRebel Soul Tour
December 12BeyoncéThe Mrs. Carter Show World Tour14,979 / 14,979$1,746,575

2015

[edit]
DateMain performer(s)Tour / Concert nameAttendanceRevenue
March 14Maroon 5Maroon V Tour17,645 / 17,645$1,484,359
June 2Taylor SwiftThe 1989 World Tour16,242 / 16,242$1,863,281

2016

[edit]
DateMain performer(s)Tour / Concert nameAttendanceRevenue
January 16MadonnaRebel Heart Tour14,558
April 20Justin BieberPurpose World Tour16,496$1,513,138

2018

[edit]
DateMain performer(s)Tour / Concert nameAttendanceRevenue
January 20Kid RockAmerican Rock n Roll Tour
July 21The Smashing PumpkinsShiny and Oh So Bright Tour
September 22Maroon 5Red Pill Blues Tour13,909 / 17,767$1,219,048

2019

[edit]
DateMain performer(s)Tour / Concert nameAttendanceRevenue
January 25Alan JacksonTour
March 9MetallicaWorldWired Tour23,085$2,531,895
March 12KissEnd of the Road World Tour14,638$1,444,057
April 4Kenny ChesneySongs for the Saints Tour
May 8ToolFear Inoculum
August 3Shawn MendesShawn Mendes: The Tour
October 9Phil CollinsNot Dead Yet Tour
October 11Thomas RhettVery Hot Summer Tour
October 17Carrie UnderwoodCry Pretty Tour 360
October 22Celine DionCourage World Tour[26]12,465$1,531,237
November 2Chris StapletonChris Stapleton's All-American Road Show Tour
November 6The ChainsmokersWorld War Joy Tour
November 9Keith SweatLouisville Soul Music Festival
November 11SlayerThe Final Campaign
November 6For King & CountryBurn The Ships Tour
December 7Gaither HomecomingGaither Christmas
December 11Luke CombsBeer Never Broke My Heart

2020

[edit]
DateMain performer(s)Tour / Concert nameAttendanceRevenue
February 14Brantley GilbertFire't Up Tour
March 10The LumineersIII: The World Tour

2021

[edit]
DateMain performer(s)Tour / Concert nameAttendanceRevenue
November 28For King & CountryA Drummer Boy Christmas
December 11PentatonixThe Evergreen Christmas Tour 2021

2022

[edit]
DateMain performer(s)Tour / Concert nameAttendanceRevenue
March 11Billie EilishHappier Than Ever, The World Tour16,003 / 16,003$1,714,580
April 16Elton JohnFarewell Yellow Brick Road
May 20Kid RockBad Reputation Tour

2023

[edit]
DateMain performer(s)Tour / Concert nameAttendanceRevenue
April 20Morgan WallenOne Night At A Time Tour
July 25The ChicksThe Chicks World Tour 2023

2024

[edit]
DateMain performer(s)Tour / Concert nameAttendanceRevenue
January 3Travis ScottCircus Maximus Tour
April 13AJRThe Maybe Man Tour
April 22Bad BunnyMost Wanted Tour
October 16Lil WayneLil Wayne Live in Concert

Other sports

[edit]

NBA

[edit]
DateHome TeamScoreAway TeamAttendanceref
October 4, 2014Miami Heat98–86New Orleans Pelicans20,074[27]
October 7, 2015Miami Heat97–100Orlando Magic6,123[28]
October 15, 2016Minnesota Timberwolves101–96Miami Heat9,672[29]

Mixed martial arts

[edit]

The arena held Kentucky's firstUFC event on March 3, 2011, forUFC Live: Sanchez vs. Kampmann.[30] The UFC returned to the arena on June 8, 2024, forUFC on ESPN: Cannonier vs. Imavov.[31]

See also

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^Before the 2019–20 season, this distinction belonged toRupp Arena inLexington, Kentucky, home to the Cardinals' archrival, theKentucky Wildcats. A renovation project during the 2019 offseason reduced that venue's capacity from 23,500 to 20,545.[12] The largest arena in the U.S. ever to have been designed primarily for basketball isThompson–Boling Arena at theUniversity of Tennessee, which opened with a capacity of 24,000 but has since been downsized to 21,678. The largestNBA arena by basketball seating capacity isUnited Center inChicago, with 20,917.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Ground Broken for New Louisville Arena – 2006". City of Louisville. November 28, 2006. Archived fromthe original on October 17, 2012. RetrievedApril 25, 2013.
  2. ^Brown, C. L. (October 10, 2010)."Court at KFC Yum! Center Still Honors Crum".The Courier-Journal. Louisville. RetrievedMarch 21, 2015.
  3. ^Green, Marcus (October 10, 2010)."Civic Keaders Hope KFC Yum! Center Will Be Growth Magnet".The Courier-Journal. Louisville. p. A1. RetrievedMarch 21, 2015.
  4. ^abcd"KFC Yum! Center, 2010". University of Louisville Library Digital Collections. Archived fromthe original on October 5, 2015. RetrievedMarch 21, 2015.
  5. ^Miller, Bart (November 1, 2010)."Home Court Advantage".Structural Engineer.Archived from the original on January 25, 2013. RetrievedSeptember 14, 2011.
  6. ^ab"KFC Yum! Center".Emporis. Archived from the original on April 9, 2013. RetrievedSeptember 14, 2011.
  7. ^abGreen, Marcus (April 19, 2010)."Yum! to Pay $13.5 Million to Name Downtown Arena".The Courier-Journal. Louisville. RetrievedApril 19, 2010.
  8. ^abcdefghiGreen, Marcus (May 22, 2007)."Hotel Removed From Arena Plan".The Courier-Journal. Louisville. p. A1. RetrievedMay 22, 2007.
  9. ^abcGreen, Marcus (April 27, 2008)."First Look Inside the Arena".The Courier-Journal. Louisville. p. A1. RetrievedApril 27, 2008.
  10. ^"Volleyball Opens BIG EAST Play at KFC Yum! Center" (Press release).University of Louisville Department of Athletics. September 21, 2011. Archived fromthe original on January 2, 2014. RetrievedSeptember 22, 2011.
  11. ^"Women's Voileyball: 2012–2013 Schedule".University of Louisville Department of Athletics. Archived fromthe original on July 9, 2015. RetrievedMarch 21, 2015.
  12. ^Pilgrim, Jack (October 8, 2019)."Rupp Arena Unveils New Upper-Level Chair Back Seats".Kentucky Sports Radio.Archived from the original on October 9, 2019. RetrievedOctober 9, 2019.
  13. ^WKYT News Staff (March 11, 2019)."Metallica concert breaks KFC Yum! Center attendance record".wkyt.com.Archived from the original on April 1, 2019. RetrievedMarch 11, 2019.
  14. ^Weiter, Taylor (February 22, 2020)."Louisville Xtreme indoor football team to play at KFC Yum! Center".WHAS11.com.Archived from the original on February 23, 2021. RetrievedFebruary 22, 2020.
  15. ^Gazaway, Charles (February 22, 2021)."Louisville Xtreme to call KFC Yum! Center home".WAVE3.com.Archived from the original on February 22, 2021. RetrievedFebruary 22, 2021.
  16. ^"IFL TERMINATES MEMBERSHIP OF LOUISVILLE XTREME".IFL. June 14, 2021.Archived from the original on June 14, 2021. RetrievedJune 15, 2021.
  17. ^"Study Says Water Co. Arena Site Would Cost Less Than LG&E Site".Business First of Louisville. February 24, 2006.Archived from the original on January 28, 2024. RetrievedFebruary 24, 2006.
  18. ^Platt, Rachel (March 3, 2006)."Pitino: Cards won't play at Water Company site". Louisville:WHAS. Archived fromthe original on September 28, 2007. RetrievedMarch 3, 2006.
  19. ^abGreen, Marcus (March 4, 2006)."House panel approves $75 million for project, if it is built at water company site".The Courier-Journal. p. A6.Archived from the original on May 10, 2024. RetrievedMay 10, 2024.
  20. ^Green, Marcus (March 8, 2007)."Arena Report Urges Energy-Saving Features".The Courier-Journal. Louisville. p. B3. RetrievedMarch 8, 2007.
  21. ^"Yum! Brands Gets Arena Naming Rights".WHAS. Louisville. April 19, 2010. Archived fromthe original on April 10, 2011. RetrievedApril 19, 2010.
  22. ^abGreen, Marcus; Klepal, Dan (May 28, 2007)."Deal Offers Protections on Arena Financing".The Courier-Journal. Louisville. p. A1. RetrievedMay 28, 2007.
  23. ^Shafer, Sheldon S. (May 3, 2007)."Electrical Work First Sign of Planned Arena".The Courier-Journal. Louisville. p. B1. RetrievedMay 3, 2007.
  24. ^"Second Street Transformation to Occur Near Arena". City of Louisville. Archived fromthe original on June 9, 2010. RetrievedJune 30, 2010.
  25. ^Shafer, Sheldon S. (June 23, 2006)."Two Give in on Arena Site".The Courier-Journal. Louisville. p. A1.ProQuest 241398601.Archived from the original on January 16, 2016. RetrievedMarch 21, 2015.
  26. ^"In Concert".CelineDion.com.Archived from the original on September 25, 2019. RetrievedAugust 23, 2022.
  27. ^"New Orleans Pelicans vs Miami Heat Oct 4, 2014 Game Summary".www.nba.com. RetrievedDecember 17, 2024.
  28. ^"Orlando Magic vs Miami Heat Oct 7, 2015 Game Summary".www.nba.com. RetrievedDecember 17, 2024.
  29. ^"Minnesota Timberwolves vs Miami Heat Oct 15, 2016 Game Summary".www.nba.com. RetrievedDecember 17, 2024.
  30. ^Morgan, John (March 4, 2011)."UFC on Versus 3 main-card results: Sanchez outlasts Kampmann in three-round thriller".MMAjunkie.com. RetrievedJune 6, 2024.
  31. ^Segura, Danny (June 8, 2024)."UFC on ESPN 57 play-by-play and live results".MMAjunkie.com. RetrievedJune 8, 2024.

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