|
in dollars) | architect = Mark L. Faddis | structural engineer = Richard Bradshaw〔 | general_contractor = Trepte Construction Company〔 | former_names = San Diego International Sports Center (1966-1970) San Diego Sports Arena (1970-2004; 2007-2010) iPayOne Center (2004–2007) | tenants = San Diego Gulls (WHL) (1966–1974) San Diego State Aztecs (NCAA) (1966–1997) San Diego Rockets (NBA) (1967–1971) San Diego Conquistadors (ABA) (1974–1975) San Diego Sails (ABA) (1975) San Diego Mariners (WHA) (1974–1977) San Diego Friars (WTT) (1975–1978) San Diego Clippers (NBA) (1978–1984) San Diego Sockers (NASL/MISL I/CISL) (1980–1996) San Diego Friars/Buds (TT) (1981–1985) San Diego Gulls (IHL) (1990–1995) San Diego Gulls (WCHL/ECHL) (1995–2006) San Diego Sockers II (WISL/MISL II) (2001–2004) San Diego Riptide (AF2) (2002–2005) San Diego Barracudas (RHI) (1993–1996) San Diego Seduction (LFL) (2009–2011) San Diego Sockers (MASL) (2012–present) San Diego Aviators (WTT) (2014) San Diego Gulls (AHL) (2015–present) | seating_capacity = Arena Football: 12,000 Ice hockey: 12,920 Basketball: 14,500 Concerts: 14,800 Circus: 13,000 Mixed Martial Arts: 16,100 }} Valley View Casino Center (formerly San Diego Sports Arena and iPayOne Center) is an indoor arena located on Sports Arena Blvd, in Point Loma, San Diego, California, off Interstate 8. The arena seats 12,000 for arena football, 12,920 for ice hockey, 14,500 for basketball and tennis, 5,450 for amphitheater concerts and stage shows, 8,900-14,800 for arena concerts, 13,000 for ice shows and the circus and 16,100 for boxing and mixed martial arts.〔http://hockey.ballparks.com/WHA/SanDiegoMariners/index.htm〕 In 2000, ''Amusement Business/Billboard Magazine'' listed the arena as the "#1" facility in the nation for venues seating 10,001 to 15,000 seats. The same magazine ranked the arena as #2 in 2002 and as the #5 facility in 2003. In 2007, the arena was ranked as the #5 facility by Billboard Magazine.〔Arena rankings, quoted in San Diego Sports Arena's web site's History page (); Amusement Business Magazine folded in 2006 so the primary source cannot be accessed ().〕 In 2013, ''U-T San Diego'' named the arena #3 on its list of the 50 most notable locations in San Diego sports history. ==Location and access== The arena is located at 3500 Sports Arena Blvd., which is slightly southwest of the interchange of Interstate 5 and Interstate 8. This places it in the Midway neighborhood, approximately 10 minutes away from San Diego International Airport by car〔http://www.sandiegoarena.com/directions.php〕 and about a mile away from the Old Town Transit Center by foot.〔http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&source=s_d&saddr=old+town+transit+center&daddr=3500+Sports+Arena+Boulevard,+San+Diego,+CA+92110&hl=en&geocode=%3BFfvN8wEdzHsD-Q&mra=ls&dirflg=w&sll=32.754185,-117.205796&sspn=0.008752,0.014656&ie=UTF8&ll=32.753499,-117.205689&spn=0.008752,0.014656&t=h&z=16〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Valley View Casino Center」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|