Full name | Albany James H. Gray Sr. Civic Center |
---|---|
Location | 100 West Oglethorpe Boulevard Albany, Georgia 31701-6808 |
Owner | City of Albany, Georgia |
Operator | Spectra Venue Management |
Capacity | 10,712 (concerts) 9,082 (Sesame Street Live) 8,436 (basketball) 7,782 (rodeo) 6,570 (Disney on Ice) 7,200 (arena football) |
Opened | February 1983 [1] |
Tenants | |
Albany Sharp Shooters (GBA) (1991–1992) South Georgia Blues (GBA) (1992) Albany State Golden Rams (SIAC) (1994–1995) South Georgia Wildcats (AF2) (2005–2009) Albany Panthers (SIFL/PIFL) (2010–2013) Albany Shockwave (ABA) (2012–2013) Georgia Firebirds (AIF/NAL) (2016–2017) Albany Aces (NISL) (2024–present) Flint Rivergators (AIF) (2025–future) |
The Albany James H. Gray Sr. Civic Center (Albany Civic Center for short) is a multi-purpose arena located in downtown Albany, Georgia on the west bank of the Flint River. Opened in 1983, the arena is the only one of its kind in Southwest Georgia. Its maximum seating capacity of 10,711 is the largest of any indoor arena in the state of Georgia outside of metropolitan Atlanta and third-largest in the state behind State Farm Arena in downtown Atlanta and Gas South Arena in Gwinnett County. [2]
The arena currently serves as the home field of the Albany Aces, playing their inaugural season in the National Indoor Soccer League in 2024.
With the opening of the Albany Mall in the northwestern part of the city in 1976, most long-established firms closed their stores in downtown Albany, and commercial growth shifted to the north near the Lee County line. Mayor James H. Gray Sr. led an effort to revitalize the downtown area, with the Albany Civic Center as its crown jewel. The arena was named in honor of Gray after his sudden death just three years after its opening in 1986. [3]
In July 1994, the building was narrowly spared from flooding as the Flint River rose out of its banks, cresting 23 feet above flood stage. [4] The majority of the parking around the Civic Center was submerged, and traffic was halted across not only the nearby Oglethorpe Boulevard and Broad Avenue bridges across the Flint but all four bridges across the river in Albany. This led to a circuitous 100-mile detour to get from the west to east side of the city. [5]
The Albany Civic Center was designed to be an arena and a convention center. As a result, the arena features 46,000 square feet (4,300 m2) of exhibit space, plus an additional 6,000 square feet (600 m2) of meeting room space. For sporting events, the arena seating capacity is 6,570 for Disney on Ice or any other ice skating events; 7,782 as a rodeo arena; 8,436 in a basketball arena configuration; and 9,013 for boxing and wrestling events. For concerts, the arena seats 5,728 in a half-house configuration, 10,297 end-stage, and its maximum capacity of 10,711 for a center-stage show. Up to 1,932 seats can be accommodated on the arena floor, while there are 7,794 permanent seats and 905 retractable seats in the arena bowl.
Today, the arena is a part of the Flint River Entertainment Complex, a group of entertainment venues located in downtown Albany that also includes the Albany Municipal Auditorium and the Veterans Park Amphitheater. [6]
The Albany Civic Center has served as the home arena for numerous sports teams during its lifetime. It was the home field for three different football franchises: the Georgia Firebirds indoor football team which played in American Indoor Football in 2016 and the National Arena League in 2017; the Albany Panthers from 2010 to 2013, last playing in the Professional Indoor Football League; [7] [8] [9] and the South Georgia Wildcats of the now defunct af2, playing in the arena from 2005 to 2009. [10] The Civic Center also was the host arena of the former Albany Shockwave of the American Basketball Association; [11] Albany State University Golden Rams basketball after the 1994 flood damaged their on-campus facilities; and the Albany Sharp Shooters/South Georgia Blues of the defunct Global Basketball Association.
From 1987 to 1992, the Albany Civic Center hosted the SEC women's basketball tournament. [12]
The Albany Civic Center hosted several professional wrestling events. This included National Wrestling Alliance's Clash of the Champions III: Fall Brawl (which aired live September 7, 1988, on TBS). [13] [14] It hosted World Championship Wrestling's pay-per-views Great American Bash (1992) [15] and SuperBrawl IV, [16] in addition to three episodes of WCW Monday Nitro on TNT (October 16, 1995, April 22, 1996, and April 29, 1996). [17] [18]
Run-DMC's music video for their song "Mary, Mary" was filmed at the Albany Civic Center in 1988. [19]
Albany is a city in the U.S. state of Georgia. Located on the Flint River, it is the seat of Dougherty County, and is the sole incorporated city in that county. Located in Southwest Georgia, it is the principal city of the Albany metropolitan area. The city's population was 68,089 in 2020.
The Bert L. and Iris S. Wolstein Center is a 13,610-seat indoor arena located in downtown Cleveland, Ohio, United States, on the campus of Cleveland State University (CSU). It is home to the Cleveland State Vikings men's and women's basketball teams and previously served as the home of the Cleveland Crunch of the National Professional Soccer League and Major Indoor Soccer League from 1992 to 2005 and the Cleveland Charge of the NBA G League from 2021 to 2024.
The UW–Milwaukee Panther Arena is an indoor arena located in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The arena, which seats as many as 12,700 people and offers 41,700 square feet (3,874 m2) of floor space, is part of a larger downtown campus, that includes the Milwaukee Theatre and Wisconsin Center.
The Cajundome is a 13,500-seat multi-purpose arena located in Lafayette, Louisiana on the University of Louisiana at Lafayette campus. It is home to the Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns men's and women's basketball programs in addition to hosting various university events and commencement ceremonies including high school graduations.
Joseph Scott James is an American wrestling producer, former referee and retired professional wrestler better known as Scott Armstrong, who is currently signed to Diamond Championship Wrestling. He worked for WWE. James is the oldest son of Bob Armstrong and has three brothers who became wrestlers, Brad, Steve and Brian.
Erie Insurance Arena is a multi-purpose indoor arena in the downtown area of Erie, Pennsylvania. It is home to the Erie Otters of the Ontario Hockey League and was the former home of the Erie BayHawks of the NBA G League. It was built in 1983 as part of the Erie Civic Center Complex Plaza, which also includes the Warner Theatre and UPMC Park – all of which are administered by the Erie County Convention Center Authority. The arena is named for the Erie Insurance Group, which purchased the naming rights in May 2012.
The Macon Coliseum is a multi-purpose arena in Macon, Georgia, United States. It is home to the Macon Mayhem, a minor-league hockey team in the SPHL. The Centerplex was home to the Macon Whoopee (ECHL), Macon Whoopee (CHL) and Macon Trax ice hockey teams and the Macon Knights arena football team. It seats 7,182 for hockey and arena football and up to 9,252 for concerts.
Columbus Civic Center is a 10,000-seat multi-purpose arena in Columbus, Georgia, built in 1996.
Clash of the Champions is an American series of professional wrestling television specials that were produced by World Championship Wrestling (WCW) and Jim Crockett Promotions (JCP) in conjunction with the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA). The specials were supercards comprising pay-per-view caliber matches, similar to the World Wrestling Federation's Saturday Night's Main Event series. The Clash of the Champions shows were famous for typically not airing commercials during matches even though many of these matches lasted 20 minutes or more.
Cadence Bank Arena, formerly Tupelo Coliseum, BancorpSouth Center and BancorpSouth Arena is a 10,000-seat multi-purpose arena, near downtown Tupelo, Mississippi, named for the locally based Cadence Bank, a large multi-state commercial banking company.
Jeffrey Warner is a retired American professional wrestler and boxer best known by the ring name J. W. Storm.
WCW Saturday Night was an American weekly Saturday night television show on TBS that was produced by World Championship Wrestling (WCW). Launched in 1971 initially by Georgia Championship Wrestling, the program existed through various incarnations under different names before becoming WCW Saturday Night in 1992. Although initially the anchor show of the Turner Broadcasting-backed wrestling company, the September 1995 premiere of WCW Monday Nitro airing on sister station TNT usurped the show's once preeminent position in the company, as the primary source of storyline development and pay-per-view buildup.
Alliant Energy PowerHouse is a multi-purpose arena located in the downtown area of Cedar Rapids, Iowa. It was financed by the approval of a voter referendum to allocate special municipal capital improvement bond monies, after several prior bond referendums to build a civic center failed between 1965 and 1977. The initial construction cost was approximately $7 million for the arena and facilities. The city approved an additional $1 million to build an adjacent multi-level parking facility connected to the center by a skywalk. The center is adjoined by a 16-story DoubleTree hotel facility built directly above the arena.
Peoria Civic Center is an entertainment complex located in downtown Peoria, Illinois. Designed by Pritzker Prize winning architect Philip Johnson and John Burgee, it has an arena, theater, exhibit hall and meeting rooms. It opened in 1982 and completed an expansion to its lobby and meeting facilities in 2007. On the grounds of the Peoria Civic Center sits the massive "Sonar Tide," the last and largest sculpture of the pioneer of abstract minimalism Ronald Bladen.
Veterans Park Amphitheater is a 2,500-seat amphitheater located in Albany, Georgia. It is part of a sports, entertainment and convention complex that also includes the Albany Civic Center and Albany Municipal Auditorium. From its opening in the mid 1980s into the mid 1990s, the amphitheater was an anchor for two major annual events in Albany; River Days in the spring and Fall on the Flint. It is now primarily used for concerts and Memorial Day, Independence Day and Veterans Day celebrations.
The Albany Panthers were an indoor football team based in Albany, Georgia. The team joined the Southern Indoor Football League (SIFL) during their inaugural season in 2010. When the SIFL folded, the team joined the Professional Indoor Football League (PIFL) in 2012. The Panthers' home games were played at the Albany Civic Center until 2014.
The Georgia Firebirds are a professional indoor football team based in Albany, Georgia, and play their home games at the Albany Civic Center. Previously, the Firebirds played as an outdoor football team in various semi-pro leagues before going indoor. The Firebirds joined American Indoor Football (AIF) for the 2016 season but the league folded after one season. The Firebirds then joined the new National Arena League (NAL) for the 2017 season.
The Georgia Fire were a professional indoor football team based in Rome, Georgia. They were members of the American Conference in the Professional Indoor Football League (PIFL) during the 2014 season.
James Harrison Gray Sr. was a Georgia politician and Democratic chairman. He was the founder of Gray Communications Systems, Inc., the editor and publisher of The Albany Herald and the mayor of Albany, Georgia.
The 2016 Georgia Firebirds season was the first season for the American indoor football franchise, and their first in American Indoor Football.