Former names | Stockton Arena (2005-2023) |
---|---|
Address | 248 West Fremont Street |
Location | Stockton, California |
Owner | City of Stockton |
Operator | ASM Global |
Capacity | Concert (center stage): 11,800 Concert (end stage): 10,414 Basketball: 11,193 Ice Hockey/Indoor soccer: 9,737 Arena football: 9,763 |
Surface | Multi-surface |
Construction | |
Broke ground | April 17, 2004[1] |
Opened | December 2, 2005 |
Construction cost | $68 million ($106 million in 2023 dollars[2]) |
Architect | 360 Architecture |
Structural engineer | Magnusson Klemencic Associates[3] |
Services engineer | Flack + Kurtz Inc.[3] |
General contractor | Swinerton Builders[4] |
Tenants | |
California Cougars (MISL/PASL-Pro) (2005–2011) Stockton Thunder (ECHL) (2005–2015) Stockton Lightning (AF2) (2006–2009) Stockton Wolves (Independent) (2011) California Eagles (AIF) (2012) Stockton Heat (AHL) (2015–2022) Stockton Kings (NBAGL) (2018–present) Stockton Rush (M2) (2018–2019) | |
Website | |
http://www.stocktonlive.com |
The Adventist Health Arena is an indoor arena in Stockton, California. It opened in December 2005 and seats a maximum of 12,000 fans.
It is the home venue of the Stockton Kings of the NBA G League. Former tenants include the Stockton Heat of the American Hockey League, the Stockton Lightning arenafootball2 team, the Stockton Cougars Professional Arena Soccer League team, the Stockton Wolves independent indoor football team, the California Eagles American Indoor Football professional indoor football team and the Stockton Thunder of the ECHL from 2005 until 2015.
The Adventist Health Arena is part of a downtown, waterfront entertainment center which includes Banner Island Ballpark, the home of the Stockton Ports minor league baseball team and the University Plaza Waterfront Hotel, all part of the Stockton Waterfront Events Center.