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Kitchener Memorial Auditorium Complex

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Operator
  
City of Kitchener

Broke ground
  
1950

Opened
  
24 May 1951

Province
  
Surface
  
Ice 200'x85'

Capacity
  
6,268

Phone
  
+1 519-741-2699

Owner
  
Kitchener

Kitchener Memorial Auditorium Complex

Location
  
400 East StreetKitchener, Ontario, CanadaN2H 1Z6

Address
  
400 East Ave, Kitchener, ON N2H 1Z6, Canada

Similar
  
Centre In The Square, Kitchener City Hall, Doon Valley golf course, Victoria Park - Kitchener, Centennial Stadium

Kitchener memorial auditorium complex february 13 2013 open house 20k


The Kitchener Memorial Auditorium Complex (also known as The Aud) is a multi-use municipally-owned facility in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada. The complex is located on East Avenue, near the Ottawa Street interchange on the Conestoga Parkway. The complex includes "The Kitchener Memorial Audiorium" with the Dom Cardillo Arena, two smaller community arenas the Kinsmen Arena and Kiwanis Arena, the Jack Couch Stadium baseball park, Centennial Stadium (track and field, soccer / football) and a skatepark outside the stadium.

Contents

City and colour the girl may 12 2014 kitchener memorial auditorium complex


Kitchener Memorial Auditorium

The Kitchener Memorial Audiorium or The Aud for short, includes a main ice rink (the Dom Cardillo Arena) with a seating capacity of 7,234 and a total capacity of 7,777, including standing room. It is home to the Kitchener Rangers of the Ontario Hockey League.

The original arena was built in 1950 and has been expanded three times since then.

The Aud hosted the 2008 Memorial Cup from May 16 to May 25, 2008, with 437 additional permanent seats being added. The Aud previously hosted 1962 Memorial Cup, 1975 Memorial Cup and 1984 Memorial Cup games.

Other notable junior ice hockey events include the 1995 and 2003 CHL Top Prospects Game, the 1980, 1985, 1995 Ontario Hockey League All-star games, and the 1986 IIHF World U20 Championship. During the 1986 tournament, Canada defeated West Germany 18-2 at The Aud, setting a record for most goals for, and largest margin of victory by the Canada national junior hockey team at the tournament.

The facility has also hosted major events including concerts by Led Zeppelin, Genesis, KISS, Bob Dylan, Elton John, WCW Monday Nitro, Backstreet Boys, Michael Bublé, Hilary Duff; the Scott Tournament of Hearts, Four Nations Cup, Homesense Skate Canada International, the World Junior Figure Skating Championships, and NBA exhibition games.

Seating

Approximate capacities:

  • 7,777 - Hockey
  • 7,312 - Basketball
  • 8,462 - End stage concert
  • The Aud features 26 luxury suites and seated full service restaurant.

    Centennial Stadium

    Centennial Stadium was a football/soccer stadium next to The Aud. The stadium seated 3,200 spectators and was the largest stadium in Kitchener.

    The stadium was additionally noteworthy for its location with easy highway access from Waterloo, Guelph, and Cambridge and its track and field facilities.

    In the spring of 2011, the grandstand at Centennial Stadium was deemed unsafe and ultimately condemned. On Tuesday, June 12, 2012, Kitchener City Council voted 6-4 to demolish the grandstand, it has since been torn down. Jacob Hespeler Secondary school has recently added an artificial turf field as well as an improved track surface, in order to fill the gap that was left after Centennial was demolished.

    Jack Couch Stadium

    Jack Couch Stadium is a 1,400-seat baseball park in Kitchener, Ontario that hosts the Kitchener Panthers of the Intercounty Baseball League.

    Renovations

    Kitchener Rangers president Steve Bienkowski has stated that the Rangers have begun the process of researching a new arena. The Rangers have sold out almost every game for the past 3 years, and the waiting list for season tickets has been well over the cap of 4,750. The Rangers would like a building with at least 10,000 seats.

    More recently, Bienkowski presented the City of Kitchener council a report on expanding the Aud. The expansion would include another level of seating as well as an expanded concourse. The expansion would add 3,500 seats to the facility to make total seating capacity around 10,500. The estimated cost would be $44 million. This is the favoured route for the team, as a new arena with a larger seating capacity (about 10,000) would cost an estimated $150 million. City council has made it clear they would not finance such a large project unless private companies were adding money to it. Council has been very favourable at the idea of expanding the city owned building. The plan includes raising the roof on the building. This has been done before, with the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium back in the early 1970s.

    Bienkowski and the city have come to an agreement, if approved, that would see the auditorium expanded by 1,000 seats. There would also be a concourse on the third level. The expected cost for this expansion would be roughly $9 million, with the Kitchener Rangers Hockey Club paying for it, via a loan from the City of Kitchener. Work began in February 2012 and should be finished November 2012. Seating capacity when finished should be 7,268, about 1,000 more than now, this includes about 920 in regular seats and 80 seats in new suites. That capacity with standing room will be about 7,800. A direct link to the video rendering of what the Auditorium will look like after the renovations can be found here.

    References

    Kitchener Memorial Auditorium Complex Wikipedia