Rose Quarter
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Full name | Moda Center at the Rose Quarter |
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Former names | Rose Garden (1995–2013) |
Address | 1 North Center Court Street |
Location | Portland, Oregon, U.S. |
Coordinates | 45°31′54″N 122°40′0″W / 45.53167°N 122.66667°W / 45.53167; -122.66667 |
Public transit | MAX Light Rail Blue Line Green Line Red Line at Rose Quarter Transit Center MAX Light Rail Yellow Line at Interstate/Rose Quarter |
Owner | City of Portland |
Operator | City of Portland |
Capacity | Basketball: 19,393 (2015–present)[1] 19,441 (2014–2015)[2] 19,980 (1999–2014) 21,538 (1996–1999) 21,401 (1995–1996) Ice hockey / Lacrosse: 18,280 Center stage: approx. 20,500 End stage: approx. 15,000 "Theatre of the Clouds": approx. 6,500 |
Construction | |
Broke ground | July 12, 1993[3] |
Opened | October 12, 1995 |
Construction cost | $262 million ($524 million in 2023 dollars[4]) |
Architect | Ellerbe Becket |
Project manager | Shiels Obletz Johnsen, Inc.[5] |
Structural engineer | KPFF Consulting Engineers[6] |
Services engineer | Flack + Kurtz, Inc.[7] |
General contractor | Drake/Turner |
Tenants | |
Portland Trail Blazers (NBA) (1995–present) Portland Winterhawks (WHL) (1995–2021) Portland Forest Dragons (AFL) (1997–1999) Portland Pythons (WISL) (1998–1999) Portland Fire (WNBA) (2000–2002) Portland LumberJax (NLL) (2006–2009) Portland Thunder/Steel (AFL) (2014–2016) (OSAA) Men's State Basketball Tournament (2010–2014) Portland WNBA team (WNBA) (2026–future) |
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Website | |
rosequarter |
Rose Quarter
|
|
|
|
Full name | Moda Center at the Rose Quarter |
---|---|
Former names | Rose Garden (1995–2013) |
Address | 1 North Center Court Street |
Location | Portland, Oregon, U.S. |
Coordinates | 45°31′54″N 122°40′0″W / 45.53167°N 122.66667°W / 45.53167; -122.66667 |
Public transit | MAX Light Rail Blue Line Green Line Red Line at Rose Quarter Transit Center MAX Light Rail Yellow Line at Interstate/Rose Quarter |
Owner | City of Portland |
Operator | City of Portland |
Capacity | Basketball: 19,393 (2015–present)[1] 19,441 (2014–2015)[2] 19,980 (1999–2014) 21,538 (1996–1999) 21,401 (1995–1996) Ice hockey / Lacrosse: 18,280 Center stage: approx. 20,500 End stage: approx. 15,000 "Theatre of the Clouds": approx. 6,500 |
Construction | |
Broke ground | July 12, 1993[3] |
Opened | October 12, 1995 |
Construction cost | $262 million ($524 million in 2023 dollars[4]) |
Architect | Ellerbe Becket |
Project manager | Shiels Obletz Johnsen, Inc.[5] |
Structural engineer | KPFF Consulting Engineers[6] |
Services engineer | Flack + Kurtz, Inc.[7] |
General contractor | Drake/Turner |
Tenants | |
Portland Trail Blazers (NBA) (1995–present) Portland Winterhawks (WHL) (1995–2021) Portland Forest Dragons (AFL) (1997–1999) Portland Pythons (WISL) (1998–1999) Portland Fire (WNBA) (2000–2002) Portland LumberJax (NLL) (2006–2009) Portland Thunder/Steel (AFL) (2014–2016) (OSAA) Men's State Basketball Tournament (2010–2014) Portland WNBA team (WNBA) (2026–future) |
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Website | |
rosequarter |