The Coliseum
Milk Bowl The Black Hole Baseball's Last Dive Bar |
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Former names | Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum (1966–1998, 2008–2011, 2016–2019, 2020, 2023–present) Network Associates Coliseum (1998–2004) McAfee Coliseum (2004–2008) Overstock.com Coliseum (2011) O.co Coliseum (2011–2016) RingCentral Coliseum (2019–2020, 2020–2023) |
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Address | 7000 Coliseum Way |
Location | Oakland, California |
Coordinates | 37°45′6″N 122°12′2″W / 37.75167°N 122.20056°W / 37.75167; -122.20056 |
Public transit | AC Transit: 45, 46L, 73 , 90, 98, 646, 657, 805 Alameda County East Oakland Shuttle Amtrak: Capitol Corridor at Oakland Coliseum BART: OAK B O G at Coliseum Harbor Bay Business Park Shuttle |
Owner | Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Authority (City of Oakland and Alameda County) |
Operator | AEG |
Capacity | Baseball: 46,847[1] (expandable to 56,782 without tarps)[2] Football: 53,200 (expandable to 63,132)[3] Concerts: 47,416 or 64,829 (depending on configuration) Soccer: 15,000[4] |
Record attendance | Baseball: 56,310 (July 21, 2018, Athletics vs Giants) Football: 62,784 (January 14, 2001, Raiders vs Ravens) |
Field size | Left field 330 feet (101 m) Left center 388 feet (118 m) Center field 400 feet (122 m) Right center 388 feet (118 m) Right field 330 feet (101 m) Backstop 60 feet (18 m) |
Surface | Tifway II Bermuda Grass |
Scoreboard | 36 feet (11 m) high by 145 feet (44 m) wide |
Construction | |
Broke ground | April 15, 1964 (April 15, 1964)[5] |
Opened | September 18, 1966 (September 18, 1966) |
Renovated | 1995–1996, 2017[6] |
Construction cost | $25.5 million ($239 million in 2023 dollars[7]) $200 million (1995–96 renovation) ($389 million in 2023 dollars[7]) |
Architect | Skidmore, Owings & Merrill HNTB (1995–96 renovation) |
Structural engineer | Ammann & Whitney[8] |
Services engineer | Syska & Hennessy, Inc.[9] |
General contractor | Guy F. Atkinson Company[5] |
Tenants | |
Oakland Athletics (MLB) 1968–2024 Oakland Raiders (AFL/NFL) 1966–1981, 1995–2019 Oakland Clippers (NPSL/NASL) 1967–1968 Oakland Stompers (NASL) 1978 Oakland Invaders (USFL) 1983–1985 San Jose Earthquakes (MLS) 2008–2009[10] Oakland Roots (USLC) 2025–present Oakland Soul (USLWL) 2025–present |
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Website | |
theoaklandarena.com |
The Coliseum
Milk Bowl The Black Hole Baseball's Last Dive Bar |
|
|
|
Former names | Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum (1966–1998, 2008–2011, 2016–2019, 2020, 2023–present) Network Associates Coliseum (1998–2004) McAfee Coliseum (2004–2008) Overstock.com Coliseum (2011) O.co Coliseum (2011–2016) RingCentral Coliseum (2019–2020, 2020–2023) |
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Address | 7000 Coliseum Way |
Location | Oakland, California |
Coordinates | 37°45′6″N 122°12′2″W / 37.75167°N 122.20056°W / 37.75167; -122.20056 |
Public transit | AC Transit: 45, 46L, 73 , 90, 98, 646, 657, 805 Alameda County East Oakland Shuttle Amtrak: Capitol Corridor at Oakland Coliseum BART: OAK B O G at Coliseum Harbor Bay Business Park Shuttle |
Owner | Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Authority (City of Oakland and Alameda County) |
Operator | AEG |
Capacity | Baseball: 46,847[1] (expandable to 56,782 without tarps)[2] Football: 53,200 (expandable to 63,132)[3] Concerts: 47,416 or 64,829 (depending on configuration) Soccer: 15,000[4] |
Record attendance | Baseball: 56,310 (July 21, 2018, Athletics vs Giants) Football: 62,784 (January 14, 2001, Raiders vs Ravens) |
Field size | Left field 330 feet (101 m) Left center 388 feet (118 m) Center field 400 feet (122 m) Right center 388 feet (118 m) Right field 330 feet (101 m) Backstop 60 feet (18 m) |
Surface | Tifway II Bermuda Grass |
Scoreboard | 36 feet (11 m) high by 145 feet (44 m) wide |
Construction | |
Broke ground | April 15, 1964 (April 15, 1964)[5] |
Opened | September 18, 1966 (September 18, 1966) |
Renovated | 1995–1996, 2017[6] |
Construction cost | $25.5 million ($239 million in 2023 dollars[7]) $200 million (1995–96 renovation) ($389 million in 2023 dollars[7]) |
Architect | Skidmore, Owings & Merrill HNTB (1995–96 renovation) |
Structural engineer | Ammann & Whitney[8] |
Services engineer | Syska & Hennessy, Inc.[9] |
General contractor | Guy F. Atkinson Company[5] |
Tenants | |
Oakland Athletics (MLB) 1968–2024 Oakland Raiders (AFL/NFL) 1966–1981, 1995–2019 Oakland Clippers (NPSL/NASL) 1967–1968 Oakland Stompers (NASL) 1978 Oakland Invaders (USFL) 1983–1985 San Jose Earthquakes (MLS) 2008–2009[10] Oakland Roots (USLC) 2025–present Oakland Soul (USLWL) 2025–present |
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Website | |
theoaklandarena.com |