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200 W. Nationwide Blvd. Columbus, OH 43215 OH Tel. 614-246-2000 Fax 614-264-4300 |
Type: Private
On the web:
http://www.nationwidearena.com
Nationwide Arena brings the world to Columbus. The facility is the $150 million home to the Columbus Blue Jackets, the professional hockey team that represents the Ohio city in the National Hockey League. It also hosts a number of concerts, dance performances, and other entertainment events such as the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus. The arena has more than 50 suites, restaurants and snack bars, and meeting space. Insurer Nationwide owns most of the arena, which opened in 2000.
Officers:
General Manager: Eric Granger
Director of Operations: Scott Lofton
Manager Marketing: Jim Riley
| Nationwide Arena | |
|---|---|
| The Nat | |
| Location | 200 West Nationwide Boulevard Columbus, OH 43215 |
| Coordinates | 39°58′9.42″N 83°0′22.00″W / 39.9692833°N 83.00611°WCoordinates: 39°58′9.42″N 83°0′22.00″W / 39.9692833°N 83.00611°W |
| Broke ground | May 26, 1998[1] |
| Opened | September 9, 2000 |
| Owner | Franklin County Convention Facilities Authority |
| Operator |
Columbus Arena Management
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| Construction cost | $175 million ($236 million in 2012 dollars[2]) |
| Architect | 360 Architecture (formerly Heinlein Schrock Stearns) & NBBJ |
| Project Manager | Project Management Consultants, LLC.[3] |
| Structural engineer | Thornton-Tomasetti Group Inc.[4] |
| Services engineer | M*E Engineers[4] |
| General Contractor | Turner/Barton Malow[4]/Miles-McClellan[4] |
| Capacity | Ice hockey: 18,144 Arena football: 17,171 Basketball: 19,500 Concert: 21,000 |
| Tenants | |
| Columbus Blue Jackets (NHL) (2000–present) Columbus Destroyers (AFL) (2004–2008) Ohio Junior Blue Jackets (USHL) (2006–2008) Columbus Landsharks (NLL) (2001–2003) |
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Nationwide Arena is a multi-purpose arena, in Columbus, Ohio, USA. It opened in 2000 and is the home of the Columbus Blue Jackets, of the NHL.
It is one of three facilities in Columbus (along with Greater Columbus Convention Center and Franklin County Veterans Memorial Auditorium) that hosts events during the annual Arnold Classic, a sports and fitness event hosted by former professional bodybuilder and Governor of California Arnold Schwarzenegger.
In May 2012, Columbus Mayor Michael B. Coleman made a pitch to the NBA requesting an expansion or relocated team be moved to Nationwide Arena. [5]
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The venue is named for the arena's original majority owner, Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, whose world headquarters are located across the street. Nationwide's real estate development affiliate, Nationwide Realty Investors, financed and developed the project—making it one of very few privately financed arenas in the nation.
On February 21, 2012, arena owners Nationwide Insurance and the Dispatch Publishing Group sold the facility to the Franklin County Convention Facilities Authority (FCCFA). As part of the sale, Nationwide agreed to loan the FCCFA $43.3 million to finance the arena's purchase which will be paid back by 2039 with casino tax revenue collected by both the City of Columbus and Franklin County. In addition, the Ohio Department of Development agreed to a 10-year, $10 million loan to the FCCFA to assist with the facilities purchase. If the Blue Jackets meet annual roster payroll requirement, $500,000 of this loan per year will be forgiven. Nationwide Insurance will also pay the Blue Jackets $28 million to retain the arena's naming rights until 2022 as well as $58 million to purchase 30% ownership stake in the franchise. The Blue Jackets, in turn, agreed to remain in the city until 2039 or pay $36 million in damages. [6]
While the overall management responsibilities of the arena fell solely with the Blue Jackets from 2000-2012, the team contracted day to day operational and event booking to venue management giant SMG from the arena's opening until June 30, 2010. On May 12, 2010, the Blue Jackets announced that SMG would not be retained as arena managers and further announced that a one-year, annually renewable, management contract had been signed with The Ohio State University.[7] The contract called for the university to take over both day to day arena operations as well as booking non-athletic events, with the Blue Jackets booking athletic events and maintaining overall control of the arena.[8] This arrangement will made Nationwide Arena a sister venue to the on-campus Value City Arena. The university started booking acts in May 2010 and assumed day to day control of the arena on July 1, 2010.[9] As part of the arena purchase in 2012, the Blue Jackets and the university, along with Nationwide Insurance and the FCCFA, will form Columbus Arena Management (CAM). CAM will approve the arena's annual budget and will take over management of arena operations.[10]
The arena is of a brick design and serves as the center of an entertainment district located about one-half of a mile north of the Ohio State Capitol. Seating capacity is approximately 18,500[11] for hockey, 17,171 for arena football, 19,500 for basketball, and up to 21,000 for concerts. The death of Brittanie Cecil from injuries sustained from a hockey puck flying into the stands at a Blue Jackets game on March 16, 2002 led to the installation of nylon netting to catch pucks that fly over the acrylic glass at all professional ice hockey arenas in the NHL, AHL, and ECHL.
The area surrounding Nationwide Arena, appropriately called the Arena District, houses bars, clubs and a movie theater. The Columbus Clippers, a AAA baseball team in the International League, play in the newly constructed Huntington Park nearby. Columbus uses the arena as a drawing point for the city with the other establishments feeding off of the foot traffic. The Lifestyle Communities Pavilion concert venue, and Arena Grand Theatre adjacent to the Nationwide Arena property, completes the entertainment complex.
Nationwide Arena houses a smaller ice rink called the OhioHealth IceHaus (formerly named the CoreComm IceHaus and Dispatch Ice Haus). This facility serves as the practice rink for the Blue Jackets and is also used for youth hockey games and open skating times for the public. This facility makes Nationwide Arena the first NHL arena with an on-site practice facility and one of only two such facilities in NHL (the other being the Prudential Center, home of the New Jersey Devils).
Nationwide Arena was built at the site of the abandoned Ohio Penitentiary. Although believed to be built over the prison, the arena is actually built over the prison's former parking lot. Nationwide's parking lot is built where the prison formerly stood. Many prisoners were executed at the prison, and a fire on April 21, 1930 killed 322 prisoners locked in their cells.[12] Some fans and employees who frequent Nationwide claim experiencing paranormal activities.[13]
ESPN The Magazine declared it “the No. 2 stadium experience in professional sports.”[17] The Ultimate Sports Road Trip rated it the best arena in the NHL saying "This newer arena in downtown Columbus is the anchor for the emerging Arena District, already burgeoning with shops, restaurants and hotels. The venue is spectacular, from its nostalgic brick and stone veneer to its sweeping concourses with blue mood lighting and modern amenities. The arena bowl has state of the art scoreboards and surround LED graphics boards which look 21st century high tech. With a separate practice rink built right in the facility, theme restaurants and great food selection, not to mention a raucous hockey atmosphere, this NHL venue is a must see!"[18]
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Nationwide Arena |
| Preceded by first arena |
Home of the Columbus Blue Jackets 2000 – present |
Succeeded by current |
| Preceded by Scotiabank Place |
Host of the NHL All-Star Game 2013 |
Succeeded by TBD |
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