Coca-Cola Coliseum
| Former names | 
 | 
|---|---|
| Address | 19 Nunavut Road | 
| Location | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | 
| Coordinates | 43°38′09″N 79°24′54″W / 43.63583°N 79.41500°W | 
| Public transit | Exhibition GO Station Exhibition Loop | 
| Owner | City of Toronto | 
| Operator | Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment | 
| Capacity | Centre Stage Mode: 9,250 Basketball: 8,500 Hockey: 8,140 Boxing/Wrestling: 7,600 | 
| Construction | |
| Broke ground | 1920 | 
| Opened | December 16, 1921 | 
| Renovated | 1963, 1997, 2003 | 
| Construction cost | CA$1 million $3 million (1963 renovation) $38 million (2003 renovation) | 
| Architect | George F.W. Price (original) Brisbin Brook Beynon, Architects (renovation) | 
| Tenants | |
| Toronto-Buffalo Royals (WTT) (1974) Toronto Roadrunners (AHL) (2003–2004) Toronto Marlies (AHL) (2005–present) Toronto Triumph (LFL) (2011–2012) Toronto Sceptres (PWHL) (2024–present) Toronto Tempo (WNBA) (starting in 2026) | |
| Website | |
| coca-colacoliseum | |
Coca-Cola Coliseum (also or formerly known as CNE Coliseum, Royal Coliseum, Ricoh Coliseum, Toronto Coliseum, or Coliseum) is an arena at Exhibition Place in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, used for agricultural displays, ice hockey, and trade shows. It was built for the Canadian National Exhibition (CNE) and the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair (the Royal) in 1921. Since 1997 it has been part of the Enercare Centre exhibition complex. It serves as the home arena of the Toronto Sceptres of the Professional Women's Hockey League and the American Hockey League's Toronto Marlies, the farm team of the Toronto Maple Leafs. It will also serve as the home arena of the Toronto Tempo when they debut in 2026.