Vivint Smart Home Arena

Coordinates: 40°46′6″N 111°54′4″W / 40.76833°N 111.90111°W / 40.76833; -111.90111

Vivint Smart Home Arena
Front exterior entrance (c.2016)
Former names Delta Center (1991–2006)
Salt Lake Ice Center (2002)
EnergySolutions Arena (2006–15)
Address 301 W South Temple
Salt Lake City, UT 84101-1216
Location Downtown Salt Lake City
Public transit Arena (UTA station)
 701  TRAX Blue Line
 704  TRAX Green Line
Planetarium (UTA station)
 701  TRAX Blue Line
Owner Miller Family Legacy Trust[1]
Operator Miller Sports & Entertainment
Capacity 18,300[2]
7,000 (Nu Skin Theatre)
Construction
Broke ground May 22, 1990
Opened October 9, 1991
Construction cost US$93 million
($174 million in 2017 dollars[3])
Architect FFKR Architecture[4]
Structural engineer Ralph L. Wadsworth Engineering
Services engineer Olsen & Peterson Consulting Engineers, Inc.[5]
General contractor Ohbayashi/Sahara
Tenants
Utah Jazz (NBA) (1991–present)
Salt Lake Golden Eagles (IHL) (1991–94)
Utah Grizzlies (IHL) (1995–97)
Utah Starzz (WNBA) (1997–2002)
Utah Blaze (AFL) (2006–08, 2011–13)

Vivint Smart Home Arena is an indoor arena located in Salt Lake City, Utah. The building is owned by the Miller Family Legacy Trust. The arena is the home of the Utah Jazz of the National Basketball Association (NBA) and has been the home venue for other professional athletic teams such as the Utah Blaze of the Arena Football League and the Utah Starzz of the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA). It seats 18,306 for basketball, has 56 luxury suites, and 668 club seats.

Opened in 1991, the arena was known as the Delta Center, under a naming rights deal with Delta Air Lines, which has a hub at Salt Lake City International Airport. Salt Lake City-based EnergySolutions purchased the naming rights in November 2006, after Delta decided not to renew their 15-year contract due to filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy the year prior. From 2006 to 2015 it was known as EnergySolutions Arena.[6][7] On October 26, 2015, the arena was renamed as part of a 10-year naming rights contract with the Provo, Utah-based home security system provider Vivint.[8]

The arena was also home to the figure skating and short track speed skating competitions of the 2002 Winter Olympics, where it was referred to as the Salt Lake Ice Center.

History

Interior arena bowl, 2006.

The arena was originally imagined as 20,000-seat home for the Utah Jazz and Salt Lake Golden Eagles to replace the since-demolished arena of the Salt Palace, which had 12,616 seats.[9] Under the leadership and private financing of Utah businessman Larry H. Miller, ground was broken on May 22, 1990, and it was completed on October 4, 1991 in time for late-October basketball games, at a cost of $93 million ($167 million in 2017 dollars.)[10][3]

The first game played in the arena was a Golden Eagles match against the Peoria Rivermen on October 16, 1991, which the home team lost 4–2.[11] The Eagles had also played the inaugural game in the Salt Palace arena when it opened on October 10, 1969.[12] The Eagles, which were purchased by Miller in 1990, lost nearly a million dollars annually and would not long play in the Delta Center.

The first basketball game played in the arena was a Jazz pre-season loss against Patrick Ewing and the New York Knicks, 101–95.[13]

Exterior view of arena under original name, 2005

The 1993–95 Western Athletic Conference men's basketball tournaments were held at the facility, as was the 1993 NBA All-Star Game. The Delta Center also hosted games of the 1997 and 1998 NBA Finals between the Jazz and Chicago Bulls.

In addition to the Utah Jazz and Blaze, the arena has also been the home of the WNBA's Utah Starzz from 1997 to 2002, the Salt Lake Golden Eagles from 1991 to 1994, and the Utah Grizzlies from 1995 to 1997, both of the International Hockey League. Notably, on June 8, 1996, the Delta Center hosted what was then the largest crowd in the history of American minor league hockey: 17,381 fans attended Game 4 of the 1996 Turner Cup Finals.[14] The Grizzlies won 3–2 in overtime, completing a four-game sweep of the Orlando Solar Bears and earning the IHL championship in their first season in Utah.

Dan Roberts serves as the official Vivint Smart Home Arena public address voice for the Jazz. He has been the Jazz's home game announcer since before the arena was built.[15]

Upgrades and renovations

The exterior of the arena (then known as EnergySolutions Arena) in 2009.

In 2002, the arena upgraded its super system with ribbon display technology and auxiliary scoreboards from Brookings, South Dakota-based Daktronics.

During the summer of 2010, the Arena was remodeled, which included the installation of Bear's Backyard, a playground for kids, a new dining area for adults and over 500 television screens. On June 17, 2013 the Utah Jazz announced that the arena would receive a new scoreboard and ribbon display technology, including display screens in each corner of the arena. The new scoreboard and display systems were installed during the 2013 NBA off-season.

On September 21, 2016, the Utah Jazz announced plans to renovate and upgrade Vivint Smart Home Arena. The majority of the construction related to the building's renovation, which is estimated to cost US$125 million, will begin at the conclusion of the 2016–17 Utah Jazz basketball season, with anticipated completion of the renovation by fall 2017.[16]

Renaming

EnergySolutions Arena logo, 2006–2015

During the Salt Lake City Olympics, due to IOC policies about having corporate sponsorship for venues, the arena was referred to as the Salt Lake Ice Center during events.

After Delta Air Lines declined to renew their 15-year naming rights contract, which expired on September 30, 2006, the stadium's owner, Larry H. Miller, opted to sell naming rights to EnergySolutions, a low-level nuclear waste disposal company headquartered in Salt Lake City.[17][18] The new name was unveiled November 20, prior to the Jazz home game against the Toronto Raptors. Two stickers were placed on the court, covering up the arena's old name with the new one.[19] The temporary logos were replaced with official logos on the court sometime in December. EnergySolutions naming rights were set to expire in 2016.[20]

Initial fan reactions to the new name were predominantly negative. Early nicknames for the arena included "the Dump", a jab at EnergySolutions' radioactive and hazardous waste disposal operations.[21] Other suggestions included the Glow Dome, Radium Stadium, Isotope, Chernobowl, Jazzmat, Big Bang, Tox Box, Power House, Hot Spot, Plutonium Palace, Fallout Shelter, Melta Center, and Energy Pollutions Arena.[22]

On October 26, 2015, the naming rights were acquired by the locally based home security and automation provider Vivint in a 10-year contract.[8][23]

John Stockton and Karl Malone statues

Outside the arena are statues of two players widely regarded as the greatest in the history of the Jazz, as well as among the greatest players in NBA history. The John Stockton statue was unveiled on March 30, 2005. The Karl Malone statue was unveiled on March 23, 2006. The Jazz played games on each of those nights but lost both games.

Larry H. Miller Court

Sporting Events Capacity
Basketball 19,911 (1991–2017)
18,306 (2017–present)[24]
Ice hockey 14,000
Dirt shows 15,000
Professional wrestling 12,000-19,387

On April 15, 2010, over a year after the death of Jazz owner Larry H. Miller, the Jazz basketball court was named in his honor.[25] With the announcement of the arena's new name on October 26, 2015, the new official name of the court is Larry H. Miller Court at Vivint Smart Home Arena.

Notable events

Other sports

The facility played host to the 1999 U.S. Figure Skating Championships. The arena was also home to the figure skating and short track speed skating competitions of the 2002 Winter Olympics.[26]

In the final of the Men's 1000 metres Short track speed skating event at the 2002 Winter Olympics, veteran Australian Steven Bradbury became the most unlikely winner in Winter Olympic history when he won the race after Apolo Anton Ohno (USA), Mathieu Turcotte (Canada), Ahn Hyun-Soo (South Korea), and Li Jiajun (China) all fell on the final turn and left Bradbury, who was running last and about 15 metres (49 ft) behind the pack, to come through and claim Australia's first ever Winter Olympics Gold Medal.

Vivint Smart Home Arena was the site of the West regional semifinals ("Sweet Sixteen") and championship ("Elite Eight") in the 2010 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament. The venue also hosted first and second-round games in the 2013 and 2017 editions of the tournament, and it will do so again in 2019.

Concerts

In addition to sports, the arena was intended to host large music concerts. On October 24, 1991, Oingo Boingo became the first headlining act to rock the Delta Center.[27]

Date Artist Opening act(s) Tour / Concert name Attendance Revenue Notes
February 10, 1992MetallicaWherever We May Roam Tour
May 29, 1992RushMr. BigRoll the Bones Tour
June 4, 1992MetallicaWherever We May Roam Tour
July 7, 1992The CureCranesWish Tour
August 25, 1992Jimmy BuffettRecession Recess Tour
December 8, 1992KissGreat White
Trixter
Revenge Tour
April 7, 1993Guns 'N' RosesBlind MelonUse Your Illusion Tour
August 10, 1993AerosmithJackylGet a Grip Tour
August 19, 1993Garth BrooksThe Garth Brooks World Tour
August 20, 1993
November 4, 1993Depeche ModeThe TheDevotional Tour
April 26, 1994Janet JacksonMint ConditionJanet World TourJanet Jackson took ill 40 minutes into the concert. She was treated at a hospital emergency room for what was reported to be "flu-like symptoms and dehydration."
April 27, 1994
July 28, 1994Phil CollinsBoth Sides of the World Tour
September 10, 1994ZZ TopIan Moore BandAntenna World Tour
October 18, 1994Nine Inch NailsMarilyn Manson
Jim Rose Circus
Self Destruct Tour
June 8, 1995PhishSummer Tour 1995
September 18, 1995Elton JohnMade in England Tour
September 19, 1995Van HalenThe Balance "Ambulance" Tour
January 31, 1996Rod StewartA Spanner in the Works Tour
September 5, 1996KissThe HungerAlive/Worldwide Tour
November 2, 1996Dave Matthews BandMeshell Ndegeocello1996 Fall Tour6,274[28]
January 2, 1997MetallicaKornPoor Touring Me
May 20, 1997RushTest for Echo Tour
May 29, 1997Tina TurnerCyndi LauperWildest Dreams Tour
April 18, 1998AerosmithSpacehogNine Lives Tour
July 9, 1998Garth BrooksThe Garth Brooks World Tour
July 10, 1998
July 11, 1998
July 12, 1998
August 11, 1998Elton JohnBig Picture Tour
December 1, 1998Depeche ModeStabbing WestwardThe Singles Tour
February 4, 1999Rolling StonesBryan AdamsNo Security Tour16,579 / 16,579$1,753,807
May 17, 1999AerosmithThe Afghan WhigsA Little South of Sanity Tour
June 9, 1999Bob DylanPaul SimonNever Ending Tour 1999
October 28, 1999Backstreet BoysInto the Millennium Tour
October 29, 1999
November 19, 1999ZZ TopLynyrd Skynyrd
Screamin' Cheetah Wheelies
XXX Tour
November 27, 1999Ricky MartinJessica SimpsonLivin' la Vida Loca Tour
January 28, 2000CherDo You Believe?
May 15, 2000Tina TurnerLionel Richie
Janice Robinson
Twenty Four Seven Tour
May 29, 2000Bruce Springsteen and the E Street BandReunion Tour
July 28, 2000Tim McGraw
Faith Hill
Soul2Soul Tour
August 14, 2000Britney SpearsMikaila
Josh Keaton
Aaron Carter
A–Teens
Oops!... I Did It Again Tour
October 3, 2000Christina AguileraChristina Aguilera in Concert
November 7, 2000Sarah BrightmanLa Luna World Tour
January 29, 2001Billy Joel
Elton John
Face to Face 200116,538 / 16,538$1,668,470
March 8, 2001Sarah BrightmanLa Luna World Tour
April 28, 2001Bon JoviOne Wild Night Tour
August 28, 2001Dave Matthews BandThe Iguanas2001 Spring/Summer Tour[29]
October 5, 2001Backstreet BoysSisqóBlack & Blue TourOriginally scheduled for August 20, but was postponed in order for group member A. J. McLean to seek treatment for clinical depression.[30]
October 12, 2001Janet Jackson112All for You Tour
November 9, 2001U2No DoubtElevation Tour17,197 / 17,197$1,347,245
November 13, 2001Britney SpearsO-TownDream Within a Dream Tour
January 7, 2002AerosmithCheap TrickJust Push Play Tour
August 14, 2002CherCyndi LauperLiving Proof: The Farewell Tour9,959 / 13,074$535,121
August 23, 2002RushVapor Trails Tour
April 5, 2003Bon JoviGoo Goo DollsBounce Tour
July 9, 2003Dixie ChicksMichelle BranchTop of the World Tour15,435 / 15,435$929,425
August 2, 2003Fleetwood MacSay You Will Tour
October 22, 2003Aerosmith
Kiss
Porch GhoulsRocksimus Maximus Tour/World Domination Tour12,000
December 2, 2003Shania TwainUp! Tour
March 6, 2004Sarah BrightmanHarem World Tour
March 26, 2004Kelly Clarkson
Clay Aiken
The Beu SistersIndependent Tour
August 3, 2004Van HalenShinedownSummer Tour 2004
January 31, 2005CherVillage PeopleLiving Proof: The Farewell Tour9,981 / 13,018$584,474
September 21, 2005Green DayMy Chemical Romance
Simple Plan
Jimmy Eat World
Against Me!
American Idiot World Tour
November 22, 2005Rolling StonesJason MrazA Bigger Bang
December 17, 2005U2Kanye West
Damian Marley
Vertigo Tour18,197 / 18,197$1,709,317
August 4, 2006Tim McGraw
Faith Hill
Soul2Soul II Tour
August 5, 2006
August 11, 2006NickelbackHoobastank
Chevelle
All the Right Reasons Tour
August 16, 2006Red Hot Chili PeppersThe Mars VoltaStadium Arcadium World Tour
November 13, 2006The WhoThe Who Tour 2006–2007
June 11, 2007Tim McGraw
Faith Hill
Soul2Soul II Tour11,289 / 12,049$944,919
August 28, 2007Josh GrobanAngelique KidjoAwake TourThis concert was professionally filmed and recorded then released as Awake Live on May 6, following a showing in Movie theatres on May 1, and before premiering on PBS Soundstage on June 26.
October 26, 2007Miley CyrusJonas BrothersBest of Both Worlds TourThe first show was filmed for a Disney Digital 3D release, entitled Hannah Montana & Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert.[31]
October 27, 2007
October 10, 2008Reba McEntire
Kelly Clarkson
Melissa Peterman2 Worlds 2 Voices Tour
November 3, 2008MetallicaDown
The Sword
World Magnetic Tour
November 22, 2008ColdplayJon Hopkins
Sleepercar
Viva la Vida Tour11,598 / 11,598$935,607[32]
February 22, 2009Céline DionTaking Chances World Tour16,212 / 16,212$1,245,743
April 14, 2009Britney SpearsPussycat DollsThe Circus Tour17,095 / 17,095$1,076,551
May 26, 2009Taylor SwiftKellie Pickler
Gloriana
Fearless Tour13,042 / 13,042$555,207
June 3, 2009Fleetwood MacUnleashed
August 16, 2009Green DayFranz Ferdinand
Tré Cool
21st Century Breakdown World Tour
September 29, 2009Miley CyrusMetro StationWonder World Tour10,885 / 12,525$718,727During the performance of "7 Things", Cyrus ran off the stage because of illness from strep throat and the necessity of medical attention. Her band and back up singers covered for her, and, 15 minutes later, Cyrus returned to resume the concert. "Kicking and Screaming" and "Wake Up America" were both omitted from the setlist to make up for the loss of time.[33][34]
February 19, 2010Billy Joel
Elton John
Face to Face 201016,057 / 16,057$1,729,539Postponed from November 20, 2009.[35][36]
June 23, 2010Backstreet BoysThis Is Us Tour
July 15, 2010Carole King
James Taylor
Troubadour Reunion Tour7,104 / 7,377$563,319[37]
October 20, 2010NickelbackThree Days Grace
Buckcherry
Dark Horse Tour
February 25, 2011Linkin ParkThe ProdigyA Thousand Suns World Tour
March 19, 2011Lady GagaScissor SistersThe Monster Ball Tour14,385 / 14,385$1,313,005
March 22, 2011Bon JoviRyan StarBon Jovi Live17,146 / 17,146$1,338,116
July 25, 2011Katy PerryRobyn
DJ Skeet Skeet
California Dreams Tour11,745 / 12,080$432,840
September 19, 2011Diana RossMore Today Than Yesterday: The Greatest Hits Tour
September 28, 2011Taylor SwiftSpeak Now World Tour13,720 / 13,720$896,946
November 28, 2011Cirque du SoleilMichael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour
November 29, 2011
November 30, 2011
February 14, 2012Lady AntebellumDarius Rucker
Thompson Square
Own the Night Tour
June 12, 2012NickelbackSeether
My Darkest Days
Bush
Here and Now Tour
July 12, 2012Demi LovatoA Special Night with Demi Lovato
January 5, 2013Justin BieberCarly Rae JepsenBelieve Tour14,693 / 14,693$1,007,579
January 25, 2013George StraitMartina McBrideThe Cowboy Rides Away Tour
April 17, 2013Bon JoviBecause We Can16,004 / 16,004$1,233,763
June 1, 2013Taylor SwiftEd Sheeran
Joel Crouse
The Red Tour14,007 / 14,007$1,139,360
September 19, 2013MuseCage the ElephantThe 2nd Law World Tour
November 14, 2013Selena GomezEmblem3
Christina Grimmie
Stars Dance Tour
November 19, 2013Michael BubléNaturally 7To Be Loved Tour8,571 / 8,571$714,585
January 20, 2014P!nkThe KinThe Truth About Love Tour15,738 / 15,738$1,182,944This show was originally scheduled to take place on October 17, 2013, but was postponed due to vocal rest.[38]
January 24, 2014Lady AntebellumKip Moore
Kacey Musgraves
Thomas Rhett
Lauren Alaina
Take Me Downtown Tour
July 8, 2014Cirque du SoleilMichael Jackson: The Immortal World TourThe first show was originally scheduled for July 7, but was cancelled due to scheduling issues.
July 9, 2014
August 4, 2014Lady GagaLady Starlight
Babymetal
ArtRave: The Artpop Ball9,359 / 9,359$516,910"Mary Jane Holland" was temporarily removed from the setlist.
August 7, 2014Paul McCartneyOut There15,064 / 15,064$2,001,260
September 2, 2014EaglesHistory of the Eagles – Live in Concert
September 29, 2014Katy PerryTegan and Sara
Ferras
Prismatic World Tour13,860 / 13,860$1,218,622
May 19, 2015Ed Sheeranx Tour
July 28, 2015Imagine DragonsHalseySmoke + Mirrors Tour
July 29, 2015Mötley CrüeThe Cringe
Alice Cooper
Mötley Crüe Final Tour
August 6, 2015Kenny ChesneyJake Owen
Chase Rice
The Big Revival Tour9,689 / 10,548$505,748
August 15, 2015Shania TwainGavin DeGrawRock This Country Tour11,677 / 11,677$854,366
September 4, 2015Taylor SwiftVance JoyThe 1989 World Tour14,131 / 14,131$1,589,686
October 29, 2015Garth Brooks
Trisha Yearwood
World TourFour shows[39]
October 30, 2015
October 31, 2015
April 2, 2016Justin BieberPost Malone
Moxie Raia
Purpose World Tour15,115 / 15,115$1,400,612
April 27, 2016RihannaTravis ScottAnti World Tour
July 16, 2016Twenty One PilotsMutemath
Chef'Special
Emotional Roadshow World Tour
August 11, 2016Demi Lovato
Nick Jonas
Mike PosnerFuture Now Tour
August 31, 2016ColdplayAlessia Cara
Bishop Briggs
A Head Full of Dreams Tour15,645 / 15,645$1,871,968
October 8, 2016Maroon 5Tove Lo
Phases
Maroon V Tour
February 25, 2017Stevie NicksThe Pretenders24 Karat Gold Tour10,092 / 19,860$928,314
March 21, 2017Ariana GrandeVictoria Monét
Little Mix
Dangerous Woman Tour10,291 / 20,840$584,595
April 9, 2017Neil Diamond50 Year Anniversary World Tour11,887 / 11,887$994,905
September 27, 2017Tim McGraw
Faith Hill
CamSoul2Soul: The World Tour12,528 / 12,528$1,189,950
October 16, 2017Janet JacksonState of the World Tour
November 24, 2017Katy PerryPurity RingWitness: The Tour
November 29, 2017Billy JoelBilly Joel in Concert16,003 / 16,003$1,641,808
December 12, 2017Foo FightersBob MouldConcrete and Gold Tour
December 14, 2017Lady GagaJoanne World Tour12,688 / 12,688$1,425,214
February 6, 2018The KillersTBAWonderful Wonderful World Tour11,449 / 12,062$553,965
November 30, 2018MetallicaJim BreuerWorldWired Tour

In film

The movie Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde was partially filmed in the arena.

Tornado

The arena's roof was damaged by severe winds associated with the Salt Lake City Tornado of August 11, 1999, costing $3,757,000 (equivalent to $5,519,173 in 2017) to repair.[40]

Awards and recognitions

Vivint Smart Home Arena is well known for being one of the hardest places to play for visiting teams in the NBA. According to an NBA Players Poll taken by Sports Illustrated on February 11, 2008, the Vivint Arena is considered "the most intimidating arena in the NBA" with 20% of the vote made up of 240 current NBA players.[41] Many commentators referred to the arena as the "Decibel Center", a play on the name "Delta Center". During Game 5 of the 1997 NBA Finals, a decibel meter installed at floor level had readings of over 110 decibels, close to the noise generated by a jet takeoff. Also, during the 1997 NBA Finals, NBC's Hannah Storm called the then-named Delta Center "one of the loudest places in sports".[42]

References

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  8. 1 2 Lea, Bill (October 26, 2015). "LHM Sports & Entertainment Introduces Vivint Smart Home Arena for the Utah Jazz". UtahJazz.com. Utah Jazz. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  9. Hemphill, Lex (September 29, 1991). "Will Delta Center Pack in the Fans? Ticket Sales Say Yes". The Salt Lake Tribune. Salt Lake City. p. A6.
  10. Sandomir, Richard (October 21, 1991). "Truss Erection System Scores at Utah Arena". Engineering News-Record vol. 226. p. 16.
  11. Kragthorpe, Kurt (October 17, 1991). "Eagles Disappoint". The Salt Lake Tribune. Salt Lake City. p. C1.
  12. Rosetta, Dick (October 17, 1991). "Golden Eagles Jazz up Delta Center". The Salt Lake Tribune. Salt Lake City. p. C1.
  13. Luhm, Steve (October 24, 1991). "Knicks Win to Spoil Jazz Debut". Salt Lake Tribunelocation=Salt Lake City. p. D1.
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  21. Gorrell, Mike (November 21, 2006). "Arena's new name a winner, Miller says". The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved March 19, 2016.
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  42. NBA on NBC Intro - 1997... on YouTube
Events and tenants
Preceded by
Salt Palace
Home of the
Utah Jazz

1991 – present
Succeeded by
current
Preceded by
Orlando Arena
Host of the
NBA All-Star Game

1993
Succeeded by
Target Center
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