The Arizona Coyotes announced on Monday that they are in the
process of working to build a new 16,000 seat arena in Tempe, Arizona.
The Coyotes and Catellus Development Corp, the master
developer for the Arizona State University Athletic Facilities District have
begun discussion to build the new home, with an attached 4,000 seat multisport
facility. Under the new plan, the Coyotes will play in the main arena, with the
attached facility being used as the practice arena, as well as for the ASU Athletic
Department, youth hockey and other community events.
National Hockey League Commissioner, Gary Bettman said, “I think first and foremost it will stop all
of the speculation of what may or may not happen to the franchise. Secondly, it
will, I believe, based on locations I am hearing about, ensure from an
attendance standpoint this franchise can thrive and I think it will assure the
long-term future of this franchise beyond doubt.”
While still in the early stages of the project, phase two is
expected to include a hotel within the area as well.
The Coyotes have played in their current home, Gila River
Arena, in Glendale, since December of 2003. The team is expected to reach an
agreement with Gila River Arena and the city of Glendale to remain in their
present home until the new facility is built.
Gila River Arena is the organization’s second rink, since they
first relocated from Winnipeg, twenty years ago. For their first seven years,
in the desert, they called America West Arena, now known as Talking Stick Resort
Arena, in Phoenix. The new arena will be located about 10 miles east of Talking
Stick Resort Arena.
The agreement between the Coyotes and Catellus Development,
gives them until June 30 to create a budget, design and operational plan for
the project.
Coyotes majority owner, chairman and governor, Andrew
Barroway said, “We are thrilled to
partner with Catellus on this tremendous project that will include our future new
home in the East Valley. The Coyotes are committed to Arizona, and we are
extremely excited about our bright future.”
Team President and CEO, Anthony LeBlanc added, “While we have tremendous fans across the
Greater Phoenix metropolitan area, not to mention the entire state, it became
clear that the East Valley is home to a majority of our fans and corporate partners.
Our fans in the West Valley have shown us tremendous support over the last 13
years, and we look forward to working with them as we transition to our new
home in the future.”
He continued, “It is
probably the most important thing we will do off the ice in our tenure as
owner. This is all about ensuring that we have a location that is easily accessible
by much of our fan base. I know whenever you make a change like this, you are
going to upset some people, and we understand that and it is unfortunate,
especially since we have so many great fans in the West Valley. This is a very
significant day for the Coyotes; we are just excited to be at this point.”
LeBlanc and ASU had discussed different options for the new
facility, but eventually decided it was more feasible to build one arena for
both teams. ASU recently moved from a AA program to a Division I about two
years ago.
Barroway estimates that the cost of the new arena will be
about 400 million dollars.
He said, “We want it
to be a state of the art facility. Best in class, and we want something that people
are proud of and people want to go to a location that is ideal and centrally
situated for a lot of our fans. The stadium will be first rate, the drawings
look gorgeous, we look forward to showing you them in the future.”
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