Philadelphia Convention Hall and Civic Center

The Philadelphia Convention Hall and Civic Center, commonly known simply as the Philadelphia Civic Center, was a convention center complex located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It developed out of a series of buildings dedicated to expanding trade which began with the National Export Exhibition in 1899. The two most significant buildings in the complex were the original main exhibition hall built in 1899, which later housed the Philadelphia Commercial Museum, and the Municipal Auditorium, later called the Convention Hall, which was built in 1931 to the designers of architect Philip H. Johnson. The site was host to national political conventions in 1900, 1936, 1940 and 1948.

Philadelphia Civic Center
"The Nation's Most Historic Arena"
Former namesMunicipal Auditorium
Philadelphia Convention Hall
Address3400 Civic Center Boulevard
LocationPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Coordinates39.947368°N 75.195043°W / 39.947368; -75.195043
CapacityBasketball: 9,600
Concerts: 12,037 (The Beatles 1964)
Convention: 15,000
Construction
Opened1931
Closed1996
Demolished2005
Construction cost$5.3 million
($102 million in 2022 dollars)
ArchitectPhilip H. Johnson
Tenants
Temple Owls (NCAA) (19381955)
Philadelphia Warriors (NBA) (1952–1962)
Philadelphia Tapers (ABL) (1962)
Philadelphia 76ers (NBA) (1963–1967)
Philadelphia Blazers (WHA) (1972–1973)
Philadelphia Firebirds (NAHL/AHL) (1974–1979)
La Salle Explorers (NCAA) (1989–1996)
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