Capital Centre (Landover, Maryland)
Cap Centre The Cap The Centre | |
April 2002, eight months prior to demolition | |
Location in Maryland | |
| Former names | USAir Arena (1993–1996) US Airways Arena (1996–1997) |
|---|---|
| Address | 1 Harry S. Truman Drive |
| Location | Landover, Maryland, U.S. |
| Coordinates | 38°54′9″N 76°50′49″W / 38.90250°N 76.84694°W |
| Owner | Washington Sports & Entertainment (Abe Pollin) |
| Operator | Washington Sports & Entertainment (Abe Pollin) |
| Capacity | Basketball: 19,035 (1974–1989) 18,756 (1989–1997) Ice Hockey: 18,130 |
| Surface | Multi-surface |
| Construction | |
| Broke ground | August 24, 1972 |
| Opened | December 2, 1973 |
| Closed | March 23, 2002 |
| Demolished | December 15, 2002 |
| Construction cost | $18 million ($135 million in 2024) |
| Architect | Shaver Partnership |
| Structural engineer | Geiger-Berger and Associates |
| General contractor | George Hyman Construction Co. |
| Tenants | |
| Capital/Washington Bullets/Wizards (NBA) (1973–1997) Washington Capitals (NHL) (1974–1997) Georgetown Hoyas (NCAA) (1981–1997) Maryland Arrows (NLL) (1974–1975) Washington/Maryland Commandos (AFL) (1987, 1989) Washington Wave (MILL) (1987–1989) Washington Warthogs (CISL) (1994–1997) Washington Power (NLL) (2002) | |
The Capital Centre (later USAir Arena and US Airways Arena) was an indoor arena in the eastern United States, located in Landover, Maryland, a suburb east of Washington, D.C. The seating capacity was 18,756 for basketball and 18,130 for hockey.
Opened in late 1973, it closed in March 2002, and was demolished that December.