Location | 444 Cajundome Boulevard Lafayette, Louisiana 70506 |
---|---|
Owner | University of Louisiana at Lafayette |
Operator | Cajundome Commission |
Capacity | Basketball: 11,550 Ice Hockey: 11,433 Concerts: 13,500[1] Pro Wrestling: 12,121 |
Surface | Multi-surface |
Construction | |
Broke ground | January 27, 1982[2] |
Opened | November 10, 1985[6] |
Construction cost | $60 million ($170 million in 2023 dollars[3]) |
Architect | Neil Nehrbass |
Structural engineer | William J. Mouton[4] |
General contractor | Blunt Brothers Corp.[5] |
Tenants | |
Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns men's basketball (NCAA) (1985–present) Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns women's basketball (NCAA) (1985–2018; doubleheaders) (2019–present; regular) Louisiana IceGators (ECHL) (1995–2005) Lafayette SwampCats (EISL) (1997–1998) Lafayette Roughnecks (af2) (2001) Louisiana IceGators (SPHL) (2010–2016) Lafayette Wildcatters (SIFL) (2010) |
The Cajundome is a 13,500-seat multi-purpose arena located in Lafayette, Louisiana on the University of Louisiana at Lafayette campus. It is home to the Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns men's and women's basketball programs in addition to hosting various university events and commencement ceremonies including high school graduations.
The arena hosts many regional & national touring concerts (seating for concerts up to 13,500) and special events, such as World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) events and the annual outdoor Cajun Heartland State Fair, an eleven-day state fair that attracts more than 50,000 guests. The arena also hosts the annual Jr. Beta Club Louisiana state conventions for middle and elementary school students and the Sr. Beta Conventions for high schoolers on occasion. The facility is a recognizable Lafayette landmark that was built by the State of Louisiana, partially funded by the City of Lafayette, and is owned by the University of Louisiana at Lafayette and managed by the CAJUNDOME Commission.[7]
Currently, the CAJUNDOME is the largest basketball arena in the Sun Belt Conference, the largest college basketball arena in Louisiana, the third largest overall indoor arena in Louisiana (behind the Smoothie King Center in New Orleans and the Brookshire Grocery Arena in Bossier City), one of the largest mid-major college basketball arenas, and in the top 10 largest college basketball arenas in the Deep South.[8]