Xcel Energy Centeris a multipurpose arena inSaint Paul, Minnesota,United States. Completed in 2000 and often called "The X" by fans,[5]it is named for its locally based corporate sponsorXcel Energy.With an official capacity of 17,954, the arena has four spectator levels: one suite level and three for general seating.[6]The building is home to theNHL'sMinnesota Wildand theMinnesota Frostof thePWHL.
The X | |
Location inMinnesota Location in theUnited States | |
Address | 199 Kellogg Boulevard West |
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Location | Saint Paul, Minnesota,U.S. |
Coordinates | 44°56′41″N93°6′4″W/ 44.94472°N 93.10111°W |
Public transit | Green Line atCentral Station Metro Transit Route54 |
Owner | City of Saint Paul |
Operator | Minnesota Sports & Entertainment |
Capacity | Ice hockey: 18,064 (2000–2012) 17,954 (2012–present)[1] Concerts:
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Field size | 650,000 sq ft (60,000 m2) |
Surface | Multi-surface |
Construction | |
Broke ground | June 23, 1998 |
Opened | September 29, 2000 |
Construction cost | US$170 million[2] |
Architect | HOK Sport (now Populous)[2] |
Project manager | Project Management Consultants, LLC.[3] |
Structural engineer | Geiger Engineers PC |
Services engineer | M-E Engineers. Inc.[4] |
General contractor | Mortenson/Thor[4] |
Tenants | |
Minnesota Wild(NHL) (2000–present) Minnesota Frost(PWHL) (2024–present) Minnesota Swarm(NLL) (2005–2015) Minnesota Lynx(W NBA) (2017) | |
Website | |
xcelenergycenter |
The arena is owned by the city of Saint Paul and operated by the Wild's parent company, Minnesota Sports & Entertainment. It is on the same block of downtown St. Paul as theRiverCentreconvention facility, theRoy Wilkins Auditorium,and theOrdway Center for the Performing Arts,and shares a single indoor access area with the RiverCentre and Roy Wilkins Auditorium.
History
editThe arena opened on September 29, 2000. It was built on the site of the demolishedSt. Paul Civic Center.The push for a new arena in Saint Paul grew after theNational Hockey League'sMinnesota North Starsmoved toDallas.Saint Paul courted theHartford WhalersandWinnipeg Jetsunder MayorNorm Coleman,but the Civic Center was an obstacle to both deals.[7]In order to get an NHL expansion team, Saint Paul needed to build a new arena. After several failed attempts to get funding, the state funded the project in April 1998. It gave Saint Paul a no-interest loan of $65 million for the $130 million project, though it forgave $17 million of that in exchange for having high school sports championships played at the arena.[7]
The arena hosted theVote for Change Touron October 5, 2004, featuring performances byBright Eyes,R.E.M.andBruce Springsteen& TheE Street Band(with special guestJohn Fogertyand unannounced guestNeil Young).[8]
In 2006, theTwin Citieswere selected as the hosting metropolis for the2008 Republican National Convention,and the arena was chosen as the main venue.[9]The convention was held there on September 1-4, 2008.[9]The manager of the Xcel Energy Center at the time was Minnesota Sports & Entertainment whose ownerCraig Leipoldis also the owner of theMinnesota Wildand a prominentRepublicanand supporter ofGeorge W. BushandMitt Romney.[10][11][12]
The 10 millionth person passed through its gates on July 3, 2007.
In 2010,ESPNmagazine listed aMinnesota Wildgame at Xcel Energy Center as the third-best stadium experience in North America.[13]
In December 2023, Saint Paul city officials spoke on the condition of the venue, stating that it was "showing its age", and said needed renovations could cost "several hundred million [dollars]....based on similar renovations". The project would focus on modernizing the facility to meet demands of newer generations of visitors.[14]
Features
editThe concourse areas contain hockey jerseys from every Minnesota high school on the walls, reflecting the "State of Hockey." Surrounding the arena at all four corners are "crow's nests." One features an organ and is played during Wild games. The second features a lighthouse that houses a foghorn that is blasted when the team takes the ice before games, for all Wild/PWHL Minnesota goals, and after a victory. The third is used for the Wild's drum line. The fourth provides an additional stage for various uses.
Before it opened, the arena installed an integrated scoring, video, information and advertising display system byDaktronics.The system includes a large LED circular, center-hung scoreboard with multiple displays, nearly 1,100 feet (340 m) of ribbon display technology mounted on the fascia and large video displays outside the facility.[15]The center ice display was replaced in the summer of 2014. Of the 10 LED screens, the largest measures 37.5 feet (11.4 m) wide by 19 feet (5.8 m) high.[16]In 2015 the arena began replacing every seat in the building with cushioned seating. This was finished by early 2016.
Attendance records
edit- January 6, 2024: 13,316 fans attended theMinnesota Frost'sProfessional Women's Hockey Leaguehome debut, setting a new record for the largest crowd to attend a professional women's hockey game.[17]The previous record had been set only five days earlier at a sold-out PWHL game inOttawa,Canada.[18]
- March 6, 2015: 21,609 fans attended the 2015 State Boys' Hockey Tournament Class AA semifinals at Xcel Energy Center, setting a new record for the largest crowd to ever attend an indoor hockey game in the state of Minnesota.[19]
- March 9, 2012: TheMinnesota State High School LeagueBoys' hockey tournament again set a new attendance record during the 2012 AA semifinal session.Hill-MurrayandMoorheadplayed in the first game followed by Benilde St-Margaret's andLakeville Southin front of a crowd of 19,893.[20]
- March 8, 2008: TheMinnesota State High School LeagueBoys' hockey tournament set a new attendance record during the AA semifinal session.EdinaandBenilde-St. Margaret'splayed in the first game followed by Roseau andHill-Murrayin front of a crowd of 19,559.
- February 8, 2004: The NHL All-Star Game set a record for attendance at a hockey game in Minnesota at 19,434.
- The record attendance for a Wild game was set May 6, 2014, at 19,416, against the Chicago Blackhawks.
- On October 28, 2003,Shania Twainset the arena's single-night concert attendance record of 20,554.
- On March 17, 2007, 19,463 spectators watched the final game of theWCHAFinal Five tournament, the largest crowd ever for an indoor United States college ice hockey game[21](i.e. not including games held in football stadiums such as theCold War).
- On January 19, 2013, 19,298 fans watched the Wild defeat theColorado Avalanchein the first game after the shortened 2012–13 season. It also marked the debuts of signeesZach PariseandRyan Suter.[22]
- Every Wild game at the Xcel Energy Center sold out until October 16, 2010, totaling 400 consecutive home games.[23]
- PrinceandTaylor Swifthold the record for the most consecutive sold-out shows at three.[24]
Sustainability efforts
editThe campus of Xcel Energy Center, Saint Paul RiverCentre, and The Roy Wilkins Auditorium has three world-class certifications:
- Green Globes Certification – November 2017
- LEED Platinum Certification – September 2019[25]
- Event Industry Council (EIC) Sustainable Event Standards (SES) – Gold Certification – November 2020
The Xcel Energy Center and Saint Paul RiverCentre campus is the world's first complex to receive all three of those certifications. The road to achieving them took several years. Some of the steps taken to achieve these awards are:
- 60% of all waste is recycled
- 40% of staff commute by bus, bike, carpool or an efficient vehicle
- 90% of cleaning products meet green standards
In addition to the efforts made by staff, Xcel Energy Center has partnered with the NHL to join Change the Course, a national initiative promoting water conservation and restoration. To highlight its achievements, the Xcel Energy Center producedExceptionally Green: Minnesota Wild, Saint Paul RiverCentre and Xcel Energy Center.
Sports
editXcel Energy Center is a hub for sports events in the Midwest. In 2004, ESPN named the arena the best overall sports venue in the U.S.[26]It hosted the NCAAFrozen Fourtournament in 2002, 2011, and 2018; and will host again in 2024.[27]TheNational Lacrosse League'sMinnesota Swarmplayed in the arena from January 2005 until they moved to Georgia in 2015. TheMinnesota Lynxof theW NBAused Xcel Energy Center during the2016 W NBA Playoffsand the2017 W NBA seasonas their home arena, Minneapolis'sTarget Center,was undergoing renovation.[28][29]As of 2018, it is host venue of theNCHC Frozen Faceoff.[30]The venue formerly hosted theBig Ten Men's Ice Hockey Tournament,alternating withJoe Louis Arenain Detroit.[31][32]The venue is used by theMinnesota State High School League(MSHSL) for its Girls Volleyball State Tournament, Wrestling State Tournament, and the Boys and Girls Hockey State Tournaments.
TheMinnesota Wildplayed their first game at the arena on October 11, 2000, against thePhiladelphia Flyers.Their first win at the arena came on October 18, 2000, when they defeated theTampa Bay Lightning6–5. The Wild's first playoff game at the arena was on April 14, 2003. In that game, the Wild suffered a 3–0 loss to theColorado Avalanche.On April 21, 2003, the Wild won their first playoff game 3–2 on an overtime game-winner byRichard Park.[33]On April 26, 2015, the Wild clinched a playoff series at the arena for the first time, defeating theSt. Louis Blues4–1 in game six of the Western Conference Quarterfinals.[34]
In 2023, it was announced that theMinnesota Frostof theProfessional Women's Hockey Leaguewould be based out of the arena.[35]The team hosted its inaugural home game on January 6, 2023—a 3–0 shutout victory over theMontréal Victoire.Grace Zumwinklescored the first home goal for the Frost, and went on to record ahat-trick;Maddie Rooneyrecorded the shutout.[17]With more than 13,000 fans in attendance, the game set a new record for attendance at a professional women's hockey game.[18]
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Interior during a Minnesota Wild game
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Interior during a Minnesota Swarm lacrosse game
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Interior during the 2006 WCHA Final Five Championship
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Interior prior to the 2009 Boys' High School Championship game between Eden Prairie and Moorhead
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Interior before the 2020 Minnesota State High School League Boys' Hockey AA Championship game between Eden Prairie and Hill Murray
Concerts
editVarious music artists have heldconcertsat the arena since its opening in 2000. Some of these includeTaylor Swift,[36]Olivia Rodrigo,[37]Lady Gaga,[38]Katy Perry,[39]Imagine Dragons,[40]Elton John,[41]Pink,[42]Madonna,[43]Pentatonix,[44]Kelly Clarkson,[45]Ariana Grande,[46]Post Malone,[47]Beyoncé,[48]Shania Twain,[49]Iron Maiden[50]andBruno Mars.[51]
Funding
editIn 1998, the state made a $65 million interest-free loan toward construction of the $130 million arena, $17 million of which was forgiven when the team agreed to allow amateur and public events. That left a loan of $48 million.
In 2013, the state legislature passed an omnibus jobs, housing and commerce bill that included forgiveness of the remaining $32.7 million loan to Xcel Energy Center.
Under the terms of the forgiveness deal in this bill, St. Paul's annual loan payment was reduced by $500,000 in 2014 and again in 2015. The balance of the loan was forgiven in 2016. The city still owes $56.8 million in bonds on the arena, of the $72.7 million it borrowed in 1998.[52]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^Doyle, Mike (January 19, 2013)."GAMEDAY: Wild vs. Avalanche".National Hockey League. Archived fromthe originalon April 13, 2015.RetrievedSeptember 18,2013.
- ^ab"About us".Xcel Energy Center.RetrievedJanuary 30,2021.
- ^Project Management Consultants: Project Profiles – Ballparks, Stadium & ArenasArchivedNovember 4, 2011, at theWayback Machine
- ^ab"Xcel Energy Center Facts & Figures".SportsBusiness Journal.October 2, 2000.RetrievedNovember 7,2011.
- ^Callaghan, Peter (November 14, 2023)."Minnesota Wild taps former state budget director as lobbyist. Is a public ask for Xcel Energy Center renovations next?".Minnpost.Archived fromthe originalon May 6, 2024.RetrievedMay 6,2024.
- ^"Xcel Energy Center".Xcel Energy Center. July 6, 2000. Archived fromthe originalon September 18, 2008.RetrievedFebruary 22,2013.
- ^abRybin, Virginia (September 27, 2000)."St. Paul New Arena is Tale of Survival".St. Paul Pioneer Press.RetrievedSeptember 18,2013.
- ^"2004 Setlists".Backstreets. July 17, 2004.RetrievedNovember 7,2011.
- ^abRepublicans start arena conversion for conventionUSA Today.
- ^Collins, Bob (January 10, 2008)."Who is Craig Leipold".Minnesota Public Radio.Archived fromthe originalon January 12, 2008.Retrieved2010-04-27.
- ^Brothers, Bruce (April 10, 2008)."Craig Leipold officially takes over as the Minnesota Wild's new majority owner".Pioneer Press.Archived fromthe originalon May 6, 2024.RetrievedMay 6,2024.
- ^"2008 Republican Convention, Day 1: SEPTEMBER 1, 2008. PART OF CSPAN CONVENTION COVERAGE REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION".CSPAN.September 1, 2008.RetrievedMay 6,2024.
- ^Van Denburg, Hart."ESPN Magazine calls Target Field the best stadium in North America".City Pages. Archived fromthe originalon 17 May 2014.Retrieved16 May2014.
- ^Walsh, James Walsh."St. Paul officials say Xcel Energy Center is showing its age — and they want state help to fix it up".Star Tribune.Retrieved2024-03-02.
- ^"Xcel Energy Center".Prairie Biz Magazine.July 1, 1492. Archived fromthe originalon February 19, 2014.RetrievedSeptember 18,2013.
- ^"Xcel Energy Center, Wild will unveil new center-ice video board Sept. 27".Star Tribune.June 30, 2014.RetrievedJuly 21,2014.
- ^abNelson, John (2024-01-07)."PWHL Minnesota smashes attendance world record and wins in shutout".Sports Illustrated.Archivedfrom the original on 2024-01-07.Retrieved2024-01-07.
- ^ab"PWHL game in Minnesota sets attendance record with 13,316 fans".The Guardian.2024-01-07.Archivedfrom the original on 2024-01-07.Retrieved2024-01-07.
- ^"Minnesota State High School Boys' Hockey".
- ^Leighton, Tim (March 10, 2012)."State Hockey: Hill-Murray Coach Discusses Jack Jablonski's Effect on BSM".St. Paul Pioneer Press.RetrievedSeptember 18,2013.
- ^Tour De Force: Wheeler Nets OT Goal To Give Minnesota Broadmoor TrophyArchivedSeptember 17, 2007, at theWayback Machine
- ^Eide, Nathan (January 19, 2013)."Minnesota Wild vs. Colorado Avalanche: Game Recap".Hockey Wilderness.RetrievedFebruary 22,2013.
- ^"2010 Hockey Day Minnesota Announced".National Hockey League. June 22, 2009.RetrievedNovember 7,2011.
- ^"Taylor Swift lights up St. Paul with 'breathtaking' shows during 3-night takeover".Bring Me the News. Mar 8, 2018.RetrievedMay 8,2023.
- ^"RiverCentre/Xcel Energy Center | U.S. Green Building Council".usgbc.org.Retrieved2023-01-27.
- ^Bauer, Ted (June 4, 2008)."SPORTS AND POLITICS: XCEL ENERGY CENTER".ESPN.RetrievedMarch 3,2024.
- ^Kahner, Johnny (2023-11-14)."Tickets to college hockey's 2024 NCHC Frozen Faceoff at Xcel Energy Center on sale - CBS Minnesota".cbsnews.Retrieved2024-03-02.
- ^"Lynx to play first two playoff games in St. Paul".12 September 2016.Retrieved24 February2019.
- ^"Lynx to play 2017 home games at Xcel Energy Center".Star Tribune.Retrieved24 February2019.
- ^"NCHC Establishes New Partnership with Xcel Energy Center to Host Frozen Faceoff".National Collegiate Hockey Conference.2017-09-07.Retrieved2018-03-17.
- ^"Big Ten Announces Conference Schedule for 2017-18 Hockey Season".Big Ten Conference.May 4, 2017. Archived fromthe originalon May 8, 2017.Retrieved21 June2017.
- ^Dilks, Chris (September 30, 2016)."Big Ten Officially Approves On-Campus Playoffs".SB Nation.Retrieved20 June2017.
- ^"2002-03 Minnesota Wild Roster and Statistics".Hockey-Reference.Retrieved2019-04-24.
- ^"2015 Stanley Cup Playoffs First Round schedule".NHL.Retrieved2019-04-24.
- ^Kennedy, Ian (2023-11-28)."PWHL Officially Announces Venues".The Hockey News.Archivedfrom the original on 2023-11-29.Retrieved2024-01-06.
- ^Gabler, Jay (2013-09-09)."MUSIC REVIEW | Taylor Swift at the Xcel Energy Center: A celebration of perseverance in the face of being talented, beautiful, and famous".Twin Cities Daily Planet.Retrieved2024-08-15.
- ^Bream, Jon (2024-03-16)."Review: Who was louder in St. Paul: Olivia Rodrigo or her overexuberant fans?".startribune.Retrieved2024-08-15.
- ^Raihala, Ross (August 22, 2017)."Lady Gaga extends her Super Bowl performance into wildly entertaining Xcel concert".Twin Cities.RetrievedMarch 3,2024.
- ^"Katy Perry just wants to have fun in arena spectacle at Xcel Energy Center".Star Tribune.December 1, 2017.RetrievedMarch 1,2024.
- ^Lipshutz, Jason (2013-10-07)."Imagine Dragons Announces 'Into The Night' 2014 Tour".Billboard.Retrieved2024-03-02.
- ^"Elton John's farewell tour stops at the X — but he's not going anywhere".Pioneer Press.2022-03-23.Retrieved2024-03-02.
- ^Raihala, Ross (2024-02-26)."Pink adds second show at Xcel Energy Center in October".Pioneer Press.Retrieved2024-03-02.
- ^Raihala, Ross (2024-02-14)."Review: Madonna heats up the X with a late-night greatest hits show".Pioneer Press.Retrieved2024-03-02.
- ^Streed, Leyden (2023-08-21)."Pentatonix coming to St. Paul for Christmas concert".Fox 9 KMSP.Retrieved2024-03-02.
- ^"Kelly Clarkson steers her own course in St. Paul concert".Star Tribune.2015-08-04.Retrieved2024-03-02.
- ^Dunn, Patrick (2014-12-09)."MUSIC PHOTOS | 101.3 KDWB's Jingle Ball 2014 at Xcel Energy Center".Twin Cities Daily Planet.Retrieved2024-03-02.
- ^Raihala, Ross (2022-09-12)."Post Malone gets goofy and emotional at sold-out Xcel Energy Center concert".Pioneer Press.Retrieved2024-03-02.
- ^"Beyonce Coming To Xcel Energy Center In July - CBS Minnesota".cbsnews.2013-02-04.Retrieved2024-03-02.
- ^Bream, Jon (2023-05-17)."Review: Shania Twain shows sell-out crowd in St. Paul why she's iconic".Star Tribune.Retrieved2024-03-02.
- ^"The Future Past Tour - 2024".Iron Maiden.Retrieved2024-10-19.
- ^"Bruno Mars has it all in St. Paul — except originality".Star Tribune.2017-08-06.Retrieved2024-03-02.
- ^"St. Paul wins forgiveness of Xcel arena loan".Star Tribune.Retrieved24 February2019.
External links
editEvents and tenants | ||
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Preceded by First Arena
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Home of the Minnesota Wild 2000 – present |
Succeeded by Current
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Preceded by First Arena
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Home of the PWHL Minnesota 2024 – present |
Succeeded by Current
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Preceded by | Host of the Frozen Four 2002 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by | Host of the NHL All-Star Game 2004 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by First Arena
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Home of the Minnesota Swarm 2005 – 2015 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by | Host of the Frozen Four 2011 |
Succeeded by |