Access the Colonial Center Web Site
Colonial Center Photo Construction Timeline
Fans Help Choose Floor Design of Colonial Center
An exciting era in the history of the University of South Carolina and the athletics department opened in November, 2002, with the unveiling of The Carolina Center. The South Carolina women’s team, coming off the best season in school history, christened the building with a Nov. 22 matchup against arch-rival Clemson, while the men opened 2002-03 action on Nov. 24 against East Tennessee State.
The Colonial Center, with a seating capacity of nearly 18,000 for basketball and 19,000 for other events, is the crown jewel of USC, Columbia, the Midlands and the entire state of South Carolina. Not only is The Colonial Center the largest arena in the state, it opened as the 10th-largest on-campus basketball facility in the nation and the fourth-largest in the Southeastern Conference.
But the building is far from being only basketball. The Colonial Center has and will continue to attract big-time events, ranging from big-time sports like Gamecock basketball, NCAA Tournaments and NBA and NHL exhibition games, to big-time events from world-class concerts to figure skating to earth-shaking motorsports. Bruce Springsteen and the E-Street Band entertained fans in Dec., 2002 and The Colonial Center hosted freestyle motocross, Champions on Ice, World Wrestling Entertainment Smackdown, Disney On Ice, Jimmy Buffett and the Coral Reefer Band, and many other family shows and entertainment during its first few months after opening.
The primary tenant from November through March is Gamecock basketball, and many of the design features of The Carolina Center were put in place with that in mind.
“It is with a great sense of appreciation that we designed The Colonial Center with our basketball fans in mind,” said Carolina Director of Athletics Dr. Mike McGee. “Our design decisions were made to enhance the viewing experience of our fans and the wide range of entertainment programming as well. The Colonial Center is a state-of-the-art facility that will serve the University of South Carolina, the Midlands and the entire state of South Carolina.”
At the forefront of the arena design was configuration for an expanded student section to help give the Gamecocks one of the best homecourt advantages in the SEC. Almost 500 sideline seats extending the length of the court were designed with students in mind as those seats are depressed to allow individuals to stand while not blocking the views of seated spectators above.
The sideline court seats for students more than double the 198 sideline court seats available to students at the Carolina Coliseum. Approximately 1,700 student seats below the portals in The Colonial Center also are more than double the 833 available student seats below the portals at the Carolina Coliseum.
The building has an intimate double-deck design that put every seat close to the action on the court. The distance from midcourt to the last seat in The Colonial Center is roughly the same distance as midcourt to the last seat in the Carolina Coliseum. More than 5,000 additional seats are packed into The Colonial Center, providing the ultimate homecourt advantage. The cantilever (or overlap) of the upper deck over the lower deck extends further than any other arena of its size with great sight lines.
The design of the arena also is unique, as the seating configuration is very tight for basketball while expandable for other events. To achieve this, the 212-foot floor is completely exposed by pushing back just one end of stands. This allows for long floor events such as rodeos, a three-ring circus, hockey and motocross. The Colonial Center is one of just a handful of arenas in the United States with an unidirectional floor configuration.
There are 41 private suites and other premium seating options in The Colonial Center, including also are four 42-seat entertainment suites and the 4,500-square foot McGuire Club overlooking the floor. And highlighting the arena is a state-of-the-art multi-million dollar scoreboard with four high-definition video screens (12 mm). The scoreboard exhibits the latest technology and provides fans with the best video experience. Enhancing the basketball experience are two scoreboards on the facing of the upper deck and two “hustle” boards, keeping fans up to date on rebounds, steals, assists and the like.
The are a variety of food court favorites available for fans at the games, as well as stands set up in the spacious concourse with other family food favorites. In fact, the extra-wide concourse serves both the upper and lower bowls and features celebrated student-athletes in Carolina history and “Carolina Great Moments,” a series of sports highlights in Gamecock athletics history. There also are 296 public restroom facilities (compared to 79 in the Carolina Coliseum) with almost a three-to-one ratio of women’s restrooms compared to men’s.
The use of a single concourse helped to save some $8-10 million of construction costs with another construction feature saving nearly $20 million. The 342,000 square foot arena is being built partly on a berm, saving 100,000 square feet of space at $164 per square foot. Approximately half of the lower-bowl seats sitting on dirt as office and lockerroom space was more efficiently allocated.
These savings kept the overall project in the $64 million range to construct the largest building ever at the University of South Carolina and the largest arena in the Palmetto State. Of that $64 million, the USC Athletics Department was responsible for $44 million, with any annual shortfall coming out of the athletics department’s operating budget. The $64 million figure does not include land acquired for the site that was obtained in an exchange involving a Norfolk & Southern donation to the University.
Even before The Colonial Center opened its doors, the building already was turning heads at CBS Sports, as Bob Dekas, the CBS Coordinating Producer of NCAA Basketball, marveled at the building’s layout while conducting a television site survey.
“The Colonial Center is one of the nicest on-campus basketball arenas that I have ever seen,” said Dekas. “And I say this having done every basketball arena survey for CBS Sports for the last 19 years.”
Carolina fans showed their enthusiasm with 12,000 men’s season tickets have been sold — the most ever for the Gamecock basketball program (the previous high was 8,200) — and public season ticket sales taking place for the first time in more than a decade before the arena opened its doors. That excitement certainly was not lost on USC men’s coach Dave Odom.
“During my 26 years of college coaching, I have had the opportunity to experience exciting games played in great arenas across the country,” said Odom. “Capacity crowds cheering for their teams in `fan-friendly’ arenas are what made those atmospheres special. No doubt, The Colonial Center is among the best in all of college basketball … the place to be for every Gamecock fan!”
And The Colonial Center proved to be the place to be for people in the Midlands and the state of South Carolina as well, as the “Crown Jewel” since its grandest of openings in November, 2002.
Fast Facts About The Colonial Center
Did you know that the Colonial Center …
… has seating for nearly 18,000 fans for basketball and 19,000 for concerts.
… is the 10th largest on-campus basketball facility in the nation and the fourth largest in the Southeastern Conference.
… is a $64 million project with $44 million coming from USC Athletics Department funds. Other funding from the project came from state-appropriated funds ($12.5 million), and $2.5 million each from Richland County, Lexington County and the City of Columbia. The $64 million figure does not include land acquired for the site that was obtained in an exchange involving a Norfolk & Southern donation to the University.
… unlike most sports/entertainment centers, does not put taxpayers on the hook for any annual losses. The athletics department is responsible for any annual shortfall with those funds coming out of the athletics operating budget.
… will have an estimated $23 million annual impact on the Midlands area. During the two-year construction period, The Colonial Center had an estimated economic impact of $60 million annually on the Midlands.
… will have approximately 120 events a year, with only about 25 percent of the dates being University events.
… has enabled USC to sell more men’s basketball season tickets than any other point in its history (the previous high was 8,200). Prior to the 2002-03 season, 12,000 men’s season tickets had been sold with public season ticket sales taking place for the first time in more than a decade.
… impressed Bob Dekas, the CBS Coordinating Producer of NCAA Basketball, who conducted a television site survey prior to the opening of the building. “The Colonial Center is one of the nicest on-campus basketball arenas that I have ever seen,” said Dekas. “And I say this having done every basketball arena survey for CBS Sports for the last 19 years.”
… has an intimate double-deck design that puts every seat close to the action on the court. The distance from midcourt to the last seat in The Colonial Center is roughly the same distance as midcourt to the last seat in the Carolina Coliseum. More than 5,000 additional seats are packed into The Colonial Center, providing the ultimate homecourt advantage.
… has approximately 1,700 student seats located below the portals with 500 of those being sideline court seats. The seating arrangement for the 500 student seats is lowered to allow students to stand without blocking views of seated spectators above. Students had less than half of those amounts in the Carolina Coliseum (833 below the portals, 198 sideline court seats).
… has a state-of-the-art multi-million dollar scoreboard with four high-definition (12 mm) video screens. The scoreboard exhibits the latest technology and will provide fans with the best video experience.
… has two additional scoreboards on the facing of the upper deck and two “hustle” boards, keeping fans up to date on rebounds, steals, assists and the like.
… has a seating configuration that is very tight for basketball while expandable for other events. To achieve this, the 212-foot floor is completely exposed by pushing back just one end of stands. This allows for long floor events such as rodeos, a three-ring circus, hockey and motocross. The Colonial Center is one of just a handful of arenas in the United States with an unidirectional floor configuration.
… has a cantilever (or overlap) of the upper deck over the lower deck that extends further than any other arena of its size with great sight lines.
… has 41 private suites and other premium seating options, including four 42-seat entertainment suites and the 4,500-square foot McGuire Club overlooking the floor.
… had a cost savings of approximately $25 million by use of a pair of design features. The use of a single concourse helped to save some $8-10 million of construction costs, while the 342,000 square foot arena was built partly on a berm, saving 100,000 square feet of space at $164 per square foot. Approximately half of the lower-bowl seats sit on dirt as office and lockerroom space was more efficiently allocated.
… is the largest building ever constructed at the University of South Carolina at 342,000 square feet (almost 9.6 acres).
… has a spacious concourse with a variety of food court favorites. The concourse features celebrated student-athletes in Carolina history, and “Carolina Great Moments,” a series of sports highlights in Gamecock athletics history.
… has two spacious, identical lockerrooms for the Gamecock men’s and women’s basketball teams with team meeting rooms, recruiting rooms, coaches lockerrooms and a training room facility.
… has additional lockerrooms for visiting teams and officials with ample space for hosting postseason events and tournaments.
… will be an excellent recruiting and public relations tool for Carolina, not only for its athletics programs, but for the entire institution.
… will feature an all-sports Recruiting Room, to be used by all of the USC coaching staffs to entertain recruits and their families on official visits.
… has 296 total public men’s and women’s restroom facilities, compared to a total of 79 in the Colonial Coliseum. There are 58 percent more women’s public restroom facilities than men’s.
… has a media room equipped with the latest technology, including phone and data lines (for instant connections to the World Wide Web) which afford reporters the best means possible to get the word out on the Gamecocks.
Fun Facts About The Colonial Center
Did you know that the Colonial Center has (or had)…
… 16,880 cubic yards of earth moved, which is enough to fill 222 swimming pools.
… 14,030 cubic yards of concrete, which would pave 5 1/2 Go-Cart tracks at Frankie’s Fun Park.
… 3,848 tons of steel, which would weigh equal to 96,200 quarters, which would equal $24,050.
… 125 miles of cable, which would stretch between Columbia and Folly Beach.
… 1,872 tons of cooling, which would cool an average of 12 grocery stores.
… 205,384 bricks and 60,137 concrete blocks, which would stretch the entire length of Lake Murray (41 miles).
… 8,750 gallons of paint, which would paint approximately 115 average Columbia 2-story houses.
… 4,781 square yards of carpet, which would carpet approximately the field at Williams-Brice Stadium.
… 443 people working on building the arena at a given time, which would staff 44 fast food restaurants.
… 1,158,000 man-hours to complete the Colonial Center, which would equal two working hours from each person living in the Columbia Metro area.
Events during the first year (2002-03) at The Colonial Center
November-March Gamecock Men's and Women's Basketball
November 22 First Women's Basketball Game Carolina vs. Clemson
November 24 First Men's Basketball Game Carolina vs. East Tennessee State
November 26 World Wrestling Entertainment Smackdown!
December 5-8 Sesame Street Live 1-2-3 Imagine
December 9 Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band
January 5 Champions on Ice Dorothy Hamill, Nancy Kerrigan and others in the 2002 Olympic Tour
January 22-26 Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus
February 5 Jimmy Buffett and the Coral Reefer Band
February 7-9 Hot Rod Association Monster Jam
February 21-22 IFMA Freestyle Motocross
March 16 Lipizzaner Stallions
March 27-30 Disney on Ice
May 14-18 Dragon Tales Live!