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Former names | American Airlines Arena (1999–2021) FTX Arena (2021–2023) Miami-Dade Arena (2023) |
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Address | 601 Biscayne Boulevard |
Location | Miami, Florida, U.S. |
Coordinates | 25°46′53″N 80°11′17″W / 25.78139°N 80.18806°W / 25.78139; -80.18806 |
Public transit | Historic Overtown/Lyric Theatre MiamiCentral Freedom Tower Park West |
Parking | 939 parking spaces |
Owner | Miami-Dade County |
Operator | Basketball Properties Ltd. |
Capacity | Basketball: 19,600; 16,500 (Without upper levels) Concerts: 5,000–20,021 Hockey: 14,447 |
Surface | Multi-surface |
Construction | |
Broke ground | February 6, 1998; 26 years ago (1998-02-06) |
Opened | December 31, 1999; 24 years ago (1999-12-31) |
Construction cost | US$213 million ($390 million in 2023 dollars[1]) |
Architect | Arquitectonica 360 Architecture (formerly Heinlein Schrock Stearns) |
Project manager | Parsons Brinckerhoff |
Structural engineer | Thornton Tomasetti |
Services engineer | Flack+Kurtz[2] |
General contractor | Morse-Diesel/Odebrecht/Facchina[3] |
Main contractors | John J. Kirlin, LLC[4] Simpson Constructors[5] Crown Corr Inc.[6] |
Tenants | |
Miami Heat (NBA) (2000–present) Miami Sol (WNBA) (2000–2002) |
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Website | |
kaseyacenter |
|
|
Former names | American Airlines Arena (1999–2021) FTX Arena (2021–2023) Miami-Dade Arena (2023) |
---|---|
Address | 601 Biscayne Boulevard |
Location | Miami, Florida, U.S. |
Coordinates | 25°46′53″N 80°11′17″W / 25.78139°N 80.18806°W / 25.78139; -80.18806 |
Public transit | Historic Overtown/Lyric Theatre MiamiCentral Freedom Tower Park West |
Parking | 939 parking spaces |
Owner | Miami-Dade County |
Operator | Basketball Properties Ltd. |
Capacity | Basketball: 19,600; 16,500 (Without upper levels) Concerts: 5,000–20,021 Hockey: 14,447 |
Surface | Multi-surface |
Construction | |
Broke ground | February 6, 1998; 26 years ago (1998-02-06) |
Opened | December 31, 1999; 24 years ago (1999-12-31) |
Construction cost | US$213 million ($390 million in 2023 dollars[1]) |
Architect | Arquitectonica 360 Architecture (formerly Heinlein Schrock Stearns) |
Project manager | Parsons Brinckerhoff |
Structural engineer | Thornton Tomasetti |
Services engineer | Flack+Kurtz[2] |
General contractor | Morse-Diesel/Odebrecht/Facchina[3] |
Main contractors | John J. Kirlin, LLC[4] Simpson Constructors[5] Crown Corr Inc.[6] |
Tenants | |
Miami Heat (NBA) (2000–present) Miami Sol (WNBA) (2000–2002) |
|
Website | |
kaseyacenter |