Paraboleum | |
Former names | State Fair Arena (1952–1961) |
---|---|
Location | North Carolina State Fairgrounds 1025 Blue Ridge Road Raleigh, North Carolina |
Owner | State of North Carolina |
Operator | State of North Carolina |
Capacity | 5,110 – Arena Football and Hockey 7,610 – Basketball |
Surface | Ice, Concrete, Hardwood |
Construction | |
Opened | 1952 |
Architect | Maciej Nowicki, William Henley Dietrick |
Tenants | |
Carolina Cougars (ABA) (1969–1974) Raleigh Bullfrogs (GBA) (1991–1992) Raleigh IceCaps (ECHL) (1991–1998) Raleigh Cougars (USBL) (1997–1999) Raleigh Rebels (AIFL) (2005–2006) Carolina Rollergirls (WFTDA) (2006–present) Triangle Torch (AIF/SIF) (2016–2017) | |
J. S. Dorton Arena | |
Location | North Carolina State Fairgrounds, W. Hillsborough St., Raleigh, North Carolina |
Coordinates | 35°47′37″N 78°42′36″W / 35.79361°N 78.71000°W |
Built | 1953 |
Architect | Nowicki, Matthew, et al.; Muirhead, William, Construction |
NRHP reference No. | 73001375 [1] |
Added to NRHP | April 11, 1973 |
J. S. Dorton Arena is a 7,610-seat multi-purpose arena located in Raleigh, North Carolina, on the grounds of the North Carolina State Fair. It opened in 1952.
Architect Maciej Nowicki of the North Carolina State University Department of Architecture was killed in an airplane crash before the construction phase. Local architect William Henley Dietrick supervised the completion of the arena using Nowicki's innovative design. Said design features a steel cable supported saddle-shaped roof in tension, held up by parabolic concrete arches in compression. The arches cross about 20 feet above ground level and continue underground, where their ends are held together by more steel cables in tension. The outer walls of the arena support next to no weight at all.
Dorton Arena was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on April 11, 1973.[1] Originally named the "State Fair Arena", it was dedicated to Dr. J. S. Dorton, former North Carolina State Fair manager, in 1961.[2]
In the past, it has hosted many sporting events, concerts, political rallies and circuses.