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HemisFair Arena

HemisFair Arena (also known as theSan Antonio Convention Center Arena) was anindoor arena located inSan Antonio,Texas. It was home to theABA/NBA'sSan Antonio Spurs from1973 to1993 and theSan Antonio Force of theAFL during the1992 season, their only year of existence. TheHouston Rockets also played home games at the arena during the1972-73 NBA season.

HemisFair Arena
San Antonio Convention Center Arena
Location601 HemisFair Way
San Antonio, Texas 78203
Coordinates29°25′12″N98°29′00″W / 29.420134°N 98.483299°W /29.420134; -98.483299
OwnerCity of San Antonio
CapacityBasketball: 16,057[1]
SurfaceMulti-surface
Construction
Broke ground1966
OpenedApril 6, 1968[3]
Renovated1977-78[2]
Expanded1977-78[2]
ClosedMay 31, 1995
DemolishedJune 1995[3]
ArchitectNoonan, Krocker & Dockery
General contractorLyda/H. A. Lott
Tenants
Houston Rockets(NBA) (1972–73)
San Antonio Spurs(ABA/NBA) (1973–93)
San Antonio Force(AFL) (1992)

History

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Construction

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The arena was originally built as part of (and named for) the 1968HemisFair. The facility was located inDowntown San Antonio near theTower of the Americas, one of the most recognizable landmarks in the city. HemisFair Arena and the Tower of the Americas were constructed by a joint venture of two contractors—Lyda Inc. of San Antonio and H. A. Lott, Inc. ofHouston.

As home of the San Antonio Spurs

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The arena initially held 10,146 fans forbasketball. TheSan Antonio Spurs of theAmerican Basketball Association moved to the arena after theDallas Chaparrals relocated following the 1972–73 ABA season. The February 1974 arrival of Hall of FamerGeorge Gervin helped transform the franchise. The Spurs were such a success as an ABA franchise that they became one of four ABA franchises absorbed into theNBA following theABA-NBA merger in 1976.[4]

The Spurs played their first game at the arena on October 10, 1973, losing to theSan Diego Conquistadors 121-106[5] in front of 5,879.[3] Throughout its lifespan, it was considered one of the loudest arenas in the NBA.[6] As Spurs games began regularly selling out, new seating was added in 1978 by raising the roof of the arena, allowing the construction of an upper deck, increasing the capacity to more than 16,000.[1] While the renovation boosted capacity, it did result in a large number of obstructed view seats in the lower levels due to the support beams required for the upper deck. In 1986, the White Way Sign/SonyJumboTron center-hung video scoreboard was introduced, remaining at the arena for the rest of its life. It was the first center-mounted arena JumboTron in existence.[7]

Final events

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HemisFair Arena was torn down in 1995, two years after the Spurs moved to theAlamodome in 1993. The last Spurs game at HemisFair Arena took place May 20, 1993, when the Spurs lost to thePhoenix Suns in Game 6 the Western Conference semifinals in the1993 NBA Playoffs on a last-second jump shot by league MVPCharles Barkley.[5] The last ticketed event to be held at the facility was aVan Halen concert March 25, 1995.[3] The last event at HemisFair Arena was a graduation for a local high school,Thomas Jefferson High School, on May 30, 1995.[3] The site is now the location of an expansion to the adjacentHenry B. Gonzalez Convention Center.

Seating Capacity

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The seating capacity for basketball was:[8]

YearsCapacity
1968–1976
10,146
1976–1978
10,446
1978–1979
16,055
1980–1981
16,114
1981–1987
15,800
1987–1988
15,770
1988–1990
15,861
1990–1991
15,908
1991–1995
16,057

Notable concerts

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toSan Antonio Convention Center Arena.
  • Johnny Cash performed at HemisFair Arena on September 14, 1969.

References

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  1. ^abNBA Arenas
  2. ^ab"HemisFair Arena". Archived fromthe original on 2017-11-16. Retrieved2017-11-16.
  3. ^abcdeBriggs, Jerry (August 28, 2007)."Places of the Heart: HemisFair Arena".San Antonio Express-News. Archived fromthe original on October 11, 2007. RetrievedDecember 14, 2020.
  4. ^"Remember the ABA: San Antonio Spurs".
  5. ^abKey Dates in Spurs History
  6. ^AT&T CENTER
  7. ^Rodriguez, Ken (2017-04-22)."Introduced by the Spurs, the JumboTron Marks a Sports Arena Milestone".San Antonio Report. Retrieved2022-12-31.
  8. ^"2013–2014 San Antonio Spurs Media Guide". San Antonio Spurs.{{cite web}}:Missing or empty|url= (help)
  9. ^"Lost Live Dead".
  10. ^Triumph Tour[unreliable source?]
Preceded by Home of the
San Antonio Spurs

1973 – 1993
Succeeded by

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