Former names | Sovereign Bank Arena (1999–2009) Sun National Bank Center (2009–2017) |
---|---|
Location | 81 Hamilton Avenue Trenton, NJ 08611 USA |
Public transit | River Line at Hamilton Avenue |
Owner | Mercer County Improvement Authority[2] |
Operator | Oak View Group |
Capacity | Ice hockey: 7,605 Basketball: 8,600 Concerts: 8,500 |
Construction | |
Broke ground | December 2, 1997[1] |
Opened | October 6, 1999 |
Construction cost | $53 million ($96.9 million in 2023 dollars[3]) |
Architect | Sink Combs Dethlefs Vitetta Group |
Structural engineer | Geiger Engineers[4] |
Services engineer | French & Parrello Associates, P.A.[5] |
General contractor | Gilbane Building Company[6] |
Tenants | |
Trenton Titans/Devils (ECHL) (1999–2013) Trenton Shooting Stars (IBL) (1999–2001) Trenton Lightning (IPFL) (2001) Philadelphia Passion (LFL) (2009–2011) Trenton Steel (SIFL) (2011) New Jersey Rascals (PLL) (2012) Trenton Freedom (PIFL) (2014–2015) Jersey Flight (NAL) (2018–2022) TCNJ Lions (ACHA) (2021–2022) Trenton Terror (PBLA) (2022–2023) Philadelphia Soul (AFL) (2024) [a] |
The CURE Insurance Arena is a multipurpose arena in Trenton, New Jersey. It hosts events including shows, sporting events and concerts.
The arena seats 7,605 for hockey and other ice events, 8,600 for basketball and up to 10,500 for concerts, family shows, and other events which makes it the largest arena in Central New Jersey. The arena is located next to, and served by, the Hamilton Avenue station on NJ Transit's River Line and New Jersey Route 129.
It is managed by Oak View Group.
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