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Nashville Municipal Auditorium

Multi-purpose indoor arena in Tennessee, U.S.

Nashville Municipal Auditorium

Summary

Multi-purpose indoor arena in Tennessee, U.S.

FieldValue
nameNashville Municipal Auditorium
nickname"NMA"
logo_imageNashville_Municipal_Auditorium_logo.png
logo_size150
imageFile:MHOF.jpg
image_size275
address417 Fourth Avenue North
locationNashville, Tennessee, U.S.
coordinates
broke_ground1959
built1959–1962
openedOctober 7, 1962
costUS$5 million
($ in dollars)
architectMarr & Holman
renovated1993, 2017
ownerMetropolitan Government of Nashville & Davidson County, Tennessee
operatorMetropolitan Government of Nashville & Davidson County, Tennessee
surfaceConcrete
structural_engineerN.J. Olson
general_contractorNashville Bridge Company
main_contractorsRock City Contracting Co.
tenantsNashville Dixie Flyers (EHL) 1962–1971
Nashville South Stars (CHL) 1981–1983
Nashville Knights (ECHL) 1989–1996
Nashville Stars (WBL) 1991
Music City Jammers (GBA) 1991–1992
Nashville Nighthawks/Ice Flyers (CHL) 1996–1998
Nashville Noise (ABL) 1998
Belmont Bruins (NCAA) 2001–2003
Nashville Rollergirls (WFTDA) 2006–2019
Nashville Broncs (ABA) 2008–2009
Nashville Venom (PIFL) 2014–2015
Nashville Knights (LFL) 2018–2019
Nashville Kats (AFL) 2024–2025
capacity9,700 in the round
9,432 in the round (reserved)
8,000 (basketball)
dimensions200000 sqft
website

($ in dollars) Nashville South Stars (CHL) 1981–1983 Nashville Knights (ECHL) 1989–1996 Nashville Stars (WBL) 1991 Music City Jammers (GBA) 1991–1992 Nashville Nighthawks/Ice Flyers (CHL) 1996–1998 Nashville Noise (ABL) 1998 Belmont Bruins (NCAA) 2001–2003 Nashville Rollergirls (WFTDA) 2006–2019 Nashville Broncs (ABA) 2008–2009 Nashville Venom (PIFL) 2014–2015 Nashville Knights (LFL) 2018–2019 Nashville Kats (AFL) 2024–2025 9,432 in the round (reserved) 8,000 (basketball) Auditorium, half house (masking curtain), (4,505)James Robertson Theater (masking curtain), (3,000)--

The Nashville Municipal Auditorium is an indoor sports and concert venue in Nashville, Tennessee. It opened October 7, 1962 with both an arena and exhibition hall. The former exhibition hall has been permanent home to the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum since 2013.

It was the city's primary indoor sports and concert venue from its opening until 1996, when Bridgestone Arena (then known as Nashville Arena) was constructed a few blocks away. Since that time, it has hosted secondary events and various minor league sports franchises. The venue has hosted major events including the CMA Awards (1967), Volunteer Jam (1976–1985), WrestleWar (1989), No Holds Barred: The Match/The Movie (1989), Starrcade (1994–1996), In Your House (1995), U.S. Figure Skating Championships (1997), SuperBrawl (2001). Slammiversary (2007), Lockdown (2012), CMT Music Awards (2022) and Ric Flair's Last Match (2022).

History

Construction

Church of Christ]] revival on October 7, 1962

Designed by Marr & Holman and constructed by Nashville Bridge Company in 1962 at a cost of $5 million, the venue was the first public assembly hall in the Mid South with air conditioning.

The venue was built on the site of Bijou Amusement Company’s former Bijou Theatre as part of an urban renewal plan. Bijou Theatre was frequented by African American audiences prior to desegregation.

The structure contains a 306-foot diameter bowl with a spherically curved, clear-span roof. Within the facility is an underground exhibition hall and an arena with two tiers of spectator stands.

Opening and reception

The first event at the venue was a Church of Christ revival on October 7, 1962. The week-long revival from October 7–14 drew more than 90,000 people.

Alterations

The walls of the upper and lower concourses are decorated with enlarged ticket stubs from events and concerts the venue hosted between 1962 and 2010.

$3.2 million in renovations were completed in 2017 to satisfy venue promoter Live Nation, including modernized seating and dressing room areas.

Notable events

Ice Hockey

Despite the auditorium's floor area being too small to fit a regulation North American rink, several minor league ice hockey teams have been based at Municipal Auditorium, including the Nashville Dixie Flyers (EHL, 1962-71), South Stars (CHL, 1981-83), Knights (ECHL, 1989-96), and Nighthawks/Ice Flyers (CHL, 1996-98). The auditorium has not hosted a hockey game since the Nashville Predators were founded in 1998 at Bridgestone Arena.

Basketball

The venue was home court for the NCAA Belmont Bruins basketball teams from 2001 to 2003 while Striplin Gym was demolished to make way for Curb Event Center.

The venue hosted the Ohio Valley Conference basketball tournament in 1989, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2008, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017.

It currently hosts the annual Magnet Madness basketball game between rivals Hume-Fogg High School and Martin Luther King Magnet.

Professional wrestling

The venue hosted the NWA's inaugural WrestleWar event, WrestleWar '89: Music City Showdown, which featured the Pro Wrestling Illustrated Match of the Year between Ric Flair and Ricky Steamboat.

It hosted WWF's No Holds Barred: The Match/The Movie pay-per-view special in December 1989, WWF's SummerSlam Spectacular broadcast in August 1992, as well as WWF In Your House 2: The Lumberjacks in 1995.

The venue hosted WCW's Starrcade 1994, Starrcade 1995, Starrcade 1996, Clash of the Champions XXXV in 1997, and SuperBrawl Revenge in 2001.

Masato Tanaka won his only ECW Heavyweight Championship by defeating Mike Awesome at the venue during an ECW on TNN taping in December 1999.

Total Nonstop Action Wrestling held their first events at the venue in June 2002 before moving to Tennessee State Fairgrounds. The venue also hosted TNA Wrestling's Slammiversary 2007 and Lockdown 2012.

The venue hosted Ring of Honor Wrestling television tapings between 2016 and 2020, and AEW Dynamite broadcasts between 2019 and 2022.

[[Ric Flair]], who headlined events at the venue including [[WrestleWar '89: Music City Showdown]], [[Starrcade '95: World Cup of Wrestling]] and [[Ric Flair's Last Match

Ric Flair's Last Match took place at the venue in July 2022.

Other sports

The venue hosted the 1994 Coca-Cola National Gymnastics Championships.

The Professional Bull Riders' Bud Light Cup Series held an event at the venue from 1993 through 2001. In 2002, the event was moved to Bridgestone Arena.

The venue hosted the 1997 U.S. Figure Skating Championships.

The venue hosted the Championship Bull Riding All-Star Shootout on June 10, 2009.

Strikeforce Challengers: Woodley vs. Saffiedine took place at the venue on January 7, 2011.

The third incarnation of the Nashville Kats of the AF1 began play at the venue in 2024, but will relocate to F&M Bank Arena in Clarksville, Tennessee for 2026.

Concerts

[[Charlie Daniels]], who staged [[Volunteer Jam]] at the venue between 1976 and 1985

In 1967, the auditorium hosted the Country Music Association's first CMA Awards event, before the ceremonies moved to the Ryman Auditorium the following year.

The 3rd GMA Dove Awards were held at the venue on October 9, 1971.

David Bowie's performance at the venue on November 30, 1974, was released in part on I'm Only Dancing (The Soul Tour 74).

Charlie Daniels Band staged their annual Volunteer Jam concerts at the venue from 1976 to 1985.

Ted Nugent's July 1977 performance at the venue was released in part on Double Live Gonzo!.

The Grateful Dead's April 22, 1978 concert at the venue was released as the live album Dave's Picks Volume 15.

Auditions for Season 2 (2003), Season 14 (2015), and Season 18 (2020) of American Idol were held at the venue. Eventual Season 2 winner Ruben Studdard was discovered at the 2003 audition.

The 35th GMA Dove Awards were held at the venue on April 28, 2004.

Due to the damage at Grand Ole Opry House because of the May 2010 Tennessee floods, the venue hosted the June 8, 2010 edition of the Grand Ole Opry.

The 29th Stellar Awards were held at the venue on January 18, 2014.

Carrie Underwood filmed the video for her song "Cry Pretty" at the venue in 2018.

The 2022 CMT Music Awards were held at the venue on April 11, 2022.

Political events

[[Donald Trump]] rally on March 15, 2017

President Donald Trump appeared on March 15, 2017, for a rally and speech. According to a public address announcement in the venue, thousands more were unable to attend leaving empty seats in the upper level. This announcement was highly controversial as there was no evidence the upper level tickets were ever sold.

Special features

Musicians' Hall of Fame and Museum

On June 4, 2013, the auditorium began housing the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum within its exhibition hall. The museum was relocated from Music City Center due to construction.

References

References

  1. Page 2-F of the ''Sunday Tennessean'' Oct.7, 1962.
  2. (October 7, 1962). "Our History".
  3. (January 14, 2022). "Construction Methods & Equipment 1962-04: Vol 44 Iss 4 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive".
  4. Hooper, R.E.. (2001). "A Distinct People: A History of the Churches of Christ in the 20th Century". Wipf & Stock Publishers.
  5. (October 10, 2017). "Historic Performance Venue, Nashville Municipal Auditorium, Completes Renovation of Dressing Rooms and Seating".
  6. The Oklahoman. (August 24, 1994). "Gymnasts Qualify For Nationals".
  7. Rogers, Richard. (October 30, 2019). "1997 U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Nashville".
  8. "CBR Announces ALL STAR event in Nashville, TN".
  9. "Kanngiesser Takes It All In First Ever All-Star Challenge".
  10. (January 7, 2011). "Strikeforce - Challengers 13".
  11. BubbleUp, LTD.. (October 3, 2016). "Charlie Daniels 80th Birthday Volunteer Jam is the Hottest Ticket in Town-Announces Additional Tickets on Sale By Popular Demand".
  12. "Calendar of Shows".
  13. (15 March 2017). "Trump in Nashville: 'Time for us to embrace our glorious national destiny'". [[The Tennessean]].
  14. Williams, William. (November 7, 2012). "Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum shoots for year-end opening". [[NashvillePost.com]].
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