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Spectrum (arena)

The Spectrum (later known as CoreStates Spectrum, First Union Spectrum and Wachovia Spectrum) was an indoor arena in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. Opened in September 1967 as part of what is now known as the South Philadelphia Sports Complex, after several expansions of its seating capacity it accommodated 18,168 for basketball and 17,380 for ice hockey, arena football, indoor soccer, and box lacrosse.

The Spectrum
"America's Showplace"
"Broad Street"
Former names
  • Spectrum (1967–1994)
  • CoreStates Spectrum (1994–1998)
  • First Union Spectrum (1998–2003)
  • Wachovia Spectrum (2003–2009)
Address3601 South Broad Street
LocationPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania
Coordinates39°54′15″N 75°10′16″W / 39.90417°N 75.17111°W / 39.90417; -75.17111Coordinates: 39°54′15″N 75°10′16″W / 39.90417°N 75.17111°W / 39.90417; -75.17111
OwnerComcast Spectacor, L.P.
OperatorGlobal Spectrum
CapacityConcerts:
*End stage: 18,369
*Center stage: 19,456
*Theater: 5,000–8,000
Basketball: 18,168
Ice Hockey: 17,380
SurfaceMulti-surface
Construction
Broke groundJune 1, 1966[1]
OpenedSeptember 30, 1967
Renovated1986
ClosedOctober 31, 2009
DemolishedNovember 23, 2010 – May 2011
ArchitectSkidmore, Owings & Merrill
General contractorMcCloskey & Company, Inc.
Tenants
Philadelphia Flyers (NHL) (1967–1996)
Philadelphia 76ers (NBA) (1967–1996, 2009)
Philadelphia Freedoms (WTT) (1974)
Philadelphia Wings (NLL) (1974–1975)
Philadelphia Fever (MISL) (1978–1981)
Philadelphia Wings (NLL) (1987–1996)
Philadelphia Bulldogs (RHI) (1994–1996)
Philadelphia Phantoms (AHL) (1996–2004, 2005–2009)
Philadelphia KiXX (NPSL/MISL/NISL) (1996–2009)
La Salle Explorers (NCAA) (1996–1998)
Philadelphia Soul (AFL) (2004–2008) (select games)

The last event at the Spectrum was a Pearl Jam concert on October 31, 2009.[2] The arena was demolished between November 2010 and May 2011.

History

Opened as the Spectrum in September 1967, Philadelphia's first modern indoor sports arena was built to be the home of the expansion Philadelphia Flyers of the NHL, and also to accommodate the existing Philadelphia 76ers of the NBA. The building was the second major sports facility built at the south end of Broad Street in an area previously known as East League Island Park and now referred to simply as the South Philadelphia Sports Complex.

Early years

Ground was broken on the arena on June 1, 1966, by Jerry Wolman and then-Philadelphia Mayor James Tate as the home of the NHL's expansion Philadelphia Flyers.[1] The first event at the arena was the Quaker City Jazz Festival on September 30, 1967,[3] produced by Larry Magid.[4] The first sporting event at the arena was an October 17, 1967 boxing match featuring Joe Frazier vs. Tony Doyle.[5] From 1967 through 1972, fifteen fight cards were held at the Spectrum. The NBA's 76ers also moved there from Convention Hall as a second major league sports tenant. Lou Scheinfeld, former President of the Spectrum, explained that the name "Spectrum" was selected to evoke the broad range of events to be held there. "The 'SP' for 'sports' and 'South Philadelphia,' 'E' for 'entertainment,' 'C' for 'circuses,' 'T' for 'theatricals,' 'R' for 'recreation,' and 'UM' as 'um, what a nice building!" Scheinfeld also said that a seat in the city's first superbox initially cost $1,000 a year: "For every Flyers game, Sixers game, circus, you name it, you got 250 events for $1,000."[6] The Flyers won their first ever home game in this arena by defeating the Pittsburgh Penguins, 1–0. Bill Sutherland scored the arena's first goal.

On March 1, 1968, wind blew part of the covering off the Spectrum's roof during a performance of the Ice Capades, forcing the building to close for a month while Mayor Tate fought with then-Philadelphia County District Attorney Arlen Specter over responsibility for the construction of the roof, and the damage was repaired.[7] The 76ers moved their home games to Convention Hall and to the Palestra, but neither of those arenas had ice rinks at the time, and there were no other NHL-quality sites in the Philadelphia area. Thus the Flyers hurriedly moved their next home game (against the Oakland Seals) to Madison Square Garden in New York followed by a meeting with the Boston Bruins played at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto before establishing a base at Le Colisée in Quebec City, home of their top minor league team, the AHL Quebec Aces, for the remainder of their regular season, marking the first NHL games in Quebec City in over four decades, and years before the Quebec Nordiques joined the NHL. (The roof was repaired in time to permit the Flyers to return to the Spectrum to open their first Stanley Cup playoffs against the St. Louis Blues on April 4, 1968; the opening faceoff came just as the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. was transpiring in Memphis, Tennessee.)[8] Similarly, in 1993, the Flyers played a day game against the Los Angeles Kings during a blizzard. A piece of flying debris smashed out one of the concourse windows, cancelling the game just after the first period.

In the 1970s, the venue's location near Broad Street and the reputation for fisticuffs that the Flyers had developed led to the nickname "Broad Street Bullies."

A plaque inside The Spectrum stated that it held the world record for the fastest conversion from Hockey to Basketball.

The Spectrum, along with the Met Center and The Forum, was one of the first sports arenas to have a scoreboard with a messageboard. Furthermore, the messageboards on the Spectrum scoreboard were the first dot matrix screens in pro hockey or basketball, capable of photos, animation, and replays as well as messages. This was replaced in 1986 with ArenaVision, which consisted of six 9-by-12-foot (2.7 by 3.7 m) rear-projection videoscreens at the top and a four-sided American Sign and Indicator scoreboard at the bottom. Inside the videoscreens were General Electric projectors located 15 feet (4.6 m) away from each screen.[9]

Seating capacity

Flyers and 76ers' championships and All-Star Games hosted

 
The Spectrum's ice rink

The Flyers won their first Stanley Cup at the Spectrum on May 19, 1974, defeating the Boston Bruins, 1–0, in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Finals in front of a then-capacity crowd of 17,007. Perhaps the most important and emotional hockey game—or sporting event of any kind—ever held there, however, came at the height of the Cold War on January 11, 1976, when the Flyers became the first NHL team to defeat (by 4–1) the vaunted hockey team of the Soviet Central Red Army (ЦСКА). [1] Two games in the inaugural Canada Cup hockey tournament were also held at the Spectrum in September of that year, as the U.S. took on Czechoslovakia and the USSR.

Ten NHL or NBA playoff championship series were hosted at the Spectrum. The Flyers competed in the Stanley Cup Finals in 1974, 1975, 1976, 1980, 1985, and 1987. The 76ers played in the NBA Finals in 1977, 1980, 1982, and 1983. The 1976 and 1992 NHL, and 1970 and 1976 NBA All-Star Games were also held here. The AHL Phantoms also won their first Calder Cup title on Spectrum ice before a sellout crowd of 17,380 on June 10, 1998, by defeating the Saint John Flames, 6–1.

The only visitors to win the Stanley Cup and NBA championship at the Spectrum were the Montreal Canadiens (1976) and the Los Angeles Lakers (1980) respectively.

The Spectrum is the only venue to host the NBA and NHL All-Star Games in the same season, doing so in 1976, when it also hosted that year's Final Four. It is also one of a handful of venues to host the Stanley Cup and NBA Finals at the same time, doing so in 1980 (all four major Philadelphia teams would reach the championship round of their respective sport in 1980).

College basketball tournaments

The Spectrum was used for many basketball tournaments, including Big Five games, eight Atlantic 10 Conference tournaments (1977, 1983, 1997–2002), the 1975, 1980 and 1992 NCAA East Regional (site of the famous last-second shot by Christian Laettner of Duke to beat Kentucky), and the 1976 and 1981 Final Fours (both won by Bob Knight's Indiana Hoosiers). Smaller conferences preferred holding tournament games at this venue over the larger Center nearby.

Bull riding

In 2003 and 2004, the PBR brought their Built Ford Tough Series tour to the Spectrum.

Notable concerts

 
Billboard ad for the arena, 1974.

Many concerts were staged at the Spectrum, often praised for its acoustic properties, beginning in the 1960s. In the 1970s, Electric Factory Concerts became the prominent concert promoter for the facility.[31]

  • Cream performed during their farewell tour there, supported by Lee Michaels.
  • The First Quaker City Rock Festival was an early all-star show there, featuring Moby Grape, The Chambers Brothers, Vanilla Fudge, and Big Brother & The Holding Company, and Buddy Guy among other acts.
  • Depeche Mode performed at the venue 6 times between 1988 and 1998.
  • Led Zeppelin performed on their second American tour in July 1969.
  • The Jimi Hendrix Experience performed April 12, 1969 with Fat Mattress opening (Noel Redding's solo band).
  • The Doors performed a 103-minute show, a recording of which was released years later as, The Doors Live in Philadelphia '70.
  • The Grateful Dead played the Spectrum 53 times, by far the most of any musical act. Live albums recorded here include Dick's Picks Volume 36, Road Trips Full Show: Spectrum 11/5/79, Road Trips Full Show: Spectrum 11/6/79, Road Trips Volume 4 Number 4, Dave's Picks Volume 32, and Dave's Picks Volume 39.
  • Bryan Adams performed during his Waking Up The World tour on May 15, 1994.
  • Phish performed at the venue 9 times between 1995 and 2003, most notably two shows on December 2-3 1997 as part of their "Phish Destroys America" tour.
  • Yes played the Spectrum 28 times between 1971 and 2004, including a matinee show in 1974 for their Tales from Topographic Oceans Tour plus 2 dates (August 3, 1989 and March 19, 1990) as "Anderson, Bruford, Wakeman and Howe".[32] Yes keyboardist Rick Wakeman also performed solo shows at the Spectrum in 1974 and 1975.
  • Elvis Presley played The Spectrum for five shows between 1971 and 1977, his final performance there was May 28, 1977, just months before his death.[32]
  • Bob Marley and The Wailers played at the venue on June 20, 1975 and June 5, 1978, in support of his Natty Dread and Kaya Tour respectively.
  • Aerosmith played the venue 23 times between 1976 and 1994, including a few notorious performances in the late 1970s in which rowdy fans injured the band members with glass bottles and M-80s.
  • Pink Floyd played the Spectrum in 1972, 1973, 1975 and 1977. They last played two shows there on June 28–29, 1977, during their Animals/In the Flesh Tour. On the second night (June 29, 1977), Floyd member Roger Waters fell ill and did most of the show after a painkiller injection. However, the painkiller wore off and was taken to the hospital and missed the final encore of "Us and Them" where second guitarist Snowy White had to fill in on bass guitar. Unbeknownst to the crowd, this was the first time that the rest of Pink Floyd (guitarist/vocalist David Gilmour, drummer Nick Mason and keyboard player Rick Wright) performed a song live without Waters (they would go on without Waters as of 1986). Waters' experience performing while ill at this venue would be documented on "Comfortably Numb".
  • The Who performed at the Spectrum throughout the 1970s. The 1973 show was documented in a famous audio bootleg of their Quadrophenia performance. A CD has been released of John Entwistle's performance on March 15, 1975, when he opened for Humble Pie.
  • 1978 saw the last tour of the original Black Sabbath lineup. Opening for them was Van Halen.
  • Genesis regularly played the venue during the Phil Collins era from 1977 to 1986 (they would play Veterans Stadium on their 1992 We Can't Dance tour and the Wells Fargo Center (Philadelphia) on their 2007 Turn it On Again and 2021 The Last Domino? reunion tours). Their three November 1983 performances on the band's Mama Tour were recorded for a US FM radio broadcast and was released as a bootleg entitled "Three Nights in Philly". Collins would play the Spectrum on his own in September 1985, during his No Jacket Required Tour, in a concert rescheduled from May 18 of that year due to an Eastern Conference Finals game between the 76ers and the Boston Celtics.
  • Queen performed at The Spectrum on August 22, 1980, during The Game Tour.
  • The Jacksons performed at The Spectrum multiple times between 1973 & 1981.
  • Dio performed at The Spectrum in 1984, with Twisted Sister as opener. This concert was filmed for the video release A Special from the Spectrum. Dio returned to the Spectrum in 1986; this concert was also filmed, for the video release Sacred Heart "The Video".
  • Bon Jovi regularly performed at the Spectrum in the 1980s, playing six shows there during their Slippery When Wet Tour and three concerts on the New Jersey Syndicate Tour.
  • Kid Rock appeared at the arena on May 9, 2002.[33]
  • KISS performed live during the Crazy Nights tour in 1987. The concert can be seen on the 3rd disk of Kissology Volume Two: 1978–1991, although footage is incomplete.
  • N.W.A performed with Eazy E, Public Enemy, Too Short, Kwame on June 25, 1989.
  • Metallica performed here in 1989 with a proshot show during the Damaged Justice tour of 1988-1989
  • Guns N' Roses performed two shows in 1988, opening for Aerosmith, another show in 1991 and a third show was cancelled in 2002.[34] On June 13, 1991, during the show, Axl Rose erupted after a fan had gotten into a fight with Guns N' Roses photographer Robert John when the fan kicked the camera out of his hands. Axl cursed out the fan, and challenged him to a fight. After the fan was ejected from the concert, the show continued.
  • On the night of December 9, 1980, after learning of the assassination of John Lennon following a performance there the night before, Bruce Springsteen opened the show with a statement regarding Lennon and said, "It's a hard thing to come out and play but there's just nothing else you can do." With members of the E Street Band in tears, Springsteen and his band put on a 34-song marathon which ended nearly 3½ hours later, with a cover of "Twist and Shout". The Spectrum was the first arena Springsteen ever played at in 1976. In the following years, Springsteen would become one of the Spectrum's most popular concert acts, performing 42 shows between 1976 and 2009, thanks in part to the singer's large and devoted fan base in Pennsylvania. For these reasons, the Spectrum is often considered one of Springsteen's iconic venues.
  • Rush performed at the Spectrum as part of their Grace Under Pressure tour on November 5, 1984.
  • Iron Maiden played a sold out show at the Spectrum on January 13, 1987 as part of Somewhere on Tour in support of Somewhere in Time.
  • Van Halen performed at the Spectrum with Gary Cherone on May 24, 1998.
  • Whitney Houston performed at the arena on June 23, 1994, during her successful 1993–94 The Bodyguard World Tour. The concert included her performing a medley of Aretha Franklin's classics and a duet with husband at that time Bobby Brown, performed their R&B hit "Something in Common".
  • Diana Ross & the Supremes ill-fated Return To Love tour kicked off at the Spectrum on June 14, 2000. The tour would be canceled a few weeks later.
  • During the Spectrum's final year, Taylor Swift performed at the arena as part of the Fearless Tour, while P!nk performed at the Spectrum as part of her Funhouse Tour. Both recording artists are Philadelphia-area natives.
  • The last public events at the legendary arena took place on October 27–28 and 30–31, 2009, by Pearl Jam. The band came to the stage each night after a video montage of memorable Spectrum moments followed by the Rocky theme music. Over the four nights, Pearl Jam performed 103 different songs, with its final night on Halloween lasting over 3 hours and 35 minutes and including 41 songs.[35]
  • The final event was a large private cocktail party thrown by Comcast Spectacor chairman Ed Snider on January 16, 2010. Musical acts included a duet of "God Bless America" featuring a recorded Kate Smith alongside a live Lauren Hart, headliner Earth, Wind & Fire, with the last set being a performance by Elvis interpreter Johnny Seaton.[36]

Philadelphia soul groups that performed at the Spectrum include LaBelle in '71 and Hall & Oates in '83. The O'Jays (they were signed to Philadelphia International) performed there in '73, and Lou Rawls (also signed to Philly International) performed there in '69. Boyz II Men from Philly performed there in '95.

Guns N' Roses performed at the Philadelphia Spectrum on August 4, 1988, August 5, 1988, June 13, 1991, December 16 1991, December 17, 1991.[37]

Spectrum Theater

The Spectrum Theater was a venue for acts not big enough to fill the entire Spectrum arena. The stage was placed in the middle of the Spectrum floor, and the other half of the arena behind the stage was closed off with curtains, creating a theater-like environment. Some of the acts that played in this configuration included Frank Zappa in 1973, 1976 and 1977; David Bowie's Diamond Dogs Tour in 1974; The Kinks' Soap Opera Tour in May 1975, Bob Marley's Natty Dread Tour in 1975 and Kaya Tour in 1978; Bruce Springsteen in 1976; The Bee Gees in 1979; Peter Gabriel's tour in 1982; Howard Jones in 1985 and Julian Lennon with Chris Bliss on June 20, 1986.

The Flyers and 76ers' move

The 1995–96 NHL and NBA seasons were the final ones for the Flyers and the 76ers at the Spectrum. The 76ers' last game was a 112–92 loss to the Orlando Magic on April 19; on May 12, Eric Lindros scored the arena's final Flyers goal in the 2nd period, and Mike Hough of the Florida Panthers scored the arena's final official NHL goal in the 2nd overtime of Game 5 of the 1996 Eastern Conference semifinals, a 2-1 Flyers loss. Although both the Flyers and 76ers moved across the parking lot to the new and larger Wells Fargo Center (then CoreStates Center), the arena remained in place and was used by the Philadelphia Phantoms of the AHL, the Philadelphia KiXX of the NISL, the Philadelphia Soul of the Arena Football League for Saturday home games, and a variety of other sporting events and concerts.

The Spectrum had relatively few luxury suites or other amenities common in newer arenas. Additionally, the arena's sight lines were cited as a concern. Some seats in both the hockey and basketball configurations (especially those added in the upper level over the years) had badly obstructed views. There was only one concourse for all three levels, making for somewhat cramped conditions whenever attendance was anywhere near capacity.[citation needed]

Final season

 
A special logo was used for the final season of the Spectrum's use, featuring the arena's original pre-1994 logo and nickname.

On July 14, 2008, Comcast Spectacor Chairman Ed Snider officially announced that the Spectrum would be shuttered and torn down to make way for Philly Live!, a proposed retail, dining and entertainment hub. "This has been one of the hardest decisions I've ever had to make," said Snider. "The Spectrum is my baby. It's one of the greatest things that has ever happened to me."

The Phantoms commemorated the final season of the Spectrum by wearing a special patch on their uniforms, as illustrated on the right. The team also celebrated some of the building's memorable moments throughout the season. The Flyers marked the last season by playing two pre-season games at the Spectrum. They played the Carolina Hurricanes in an NHL pre-season game on September 27, 2008, and the Phantoms on October 7 of that same year. Before the game against Carolina, the Flyers honored the team captains in the franchise's history. Those honored in the pre-game ceremony were Lou Angotti, Ed Van Impe, Bob Clarke, Mel Bridgman, Bill Barber, Dave Poulin, Ron Sutter, Kevin Dineen, Éric Desjardins, Keith Primeau and Derian Hatcher.[38]

 
Wachovia Spectrum during demolition in 2010.

The last NCAA basketball game the Spectrum hosted saw the Villanova Wildcats defeat the Pittsburgh Panthers on January 28, 2009.[39] The Sixers played one regular season game against Chicago Bulls on March 13, 2009, winning by a score of 104–101 in the final NBA game in the Spectrum.[40][41] The game was sold-out and attendance was 17,563.[40][42]

 
Banners for the final regular season hockey game at the Spectrum in Philadelphia, PA, on April 10, 2009. (Philadelphia Phantoms vs. Hershey Bears, 5-2).

The Phantoms' last regular season game at the Spectrum was played April 10, 2009, against the Hershey Bears, as the Phantoms won the game, 5–2, while the last Kixx game was against the Massachusetts Twisters on March 22. The Kixx moved onto the Temple University campus and played the 2009–10 season at the Liacouras Center. The Phantoms were sold to a Pittsburgh-based ownership group, and moved to Glens Falls, New York, for the 2009–10 season.

"With this season being the final season of the Wachovia Spectrum, we will celebrate the history of the Spectrum with an exciting, year-long, celebration of events," Comcast Spectacor President Peter Luukko said. Phish was rumored to be among the acts to commemorate the closing of the arena. "It is our hope and intent to bring back many of the musical acts and entertainers who have made the Spectrum 'America's Showplace.'" Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band played two shows at The Spectrum on April 28 and 29 as part of their Working on a Dream Tour, and returned on October 13–14 and 19–20 for their Spectrum swan song. Springsteen debuted a specially-written version of the song "Wrecking Ball", which he had written in honor of the demolition of Giants Stadium, with revised lyrics to honor the Spectrum. Springsteen's performances were followed by Pearl Jam on October 27, 28, 30 and 31 to close the building; their opening acts included Social Distortion on the 27th and 28th and Bad Religion on the 30th and 31st.

A scheduled concert with Leonard Cohen on October 22 was moved to the Tower Theatre in Upper Darby, instead. On October 23, 2009, Philadelphia area musicians The Hooters, Todd Rundgren and Hall & Oates headlined a concert titled "Last Call".[43] Tickets were as low as $6.00. The remaining members of the Grateful Dead; including Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann performed their final set of shows at the Spectrum on May 1 and 2, 2009; the show of May 2 was their 54th consecutive sell-out at the Spectrum. The Dead closed the show of May 2 with the song "Samson and Delilah". The song contains the fitting refrain "If I had my way, I would tear this old building down." The lyric was changed by the band's singer Bob Weir to say "I wouldn't tear this old building down." With the demolition of The Spectrum, all venues at which The Grateful Dead played through their career within the City of Philadelphia, except for the Irvine Auditorium, have succumbed to the wrecking ball.

The Spectrum and the South Philadelphia Sports Complex

 
An overhead view of the South Philadelphia Sports Complex. The Spectrum is at center left.

Opened in 1967 as the first of the five modern facilities to be built at the South Philadelphia Sports Complex between 1967 and 2004, by the time it closed in 2009 the Spectrum was the oldest of the four venues still standing of the two indoor arenas and four outdoor stadiums built at the South end of Broad Street since 1926. The complex's total area expanded with the addition of each new facility and now takes up the entire SE quadrant of the grounds occupied in 1926 by Philadelphia's Sesqui-Centennial International Exposition, a massive 184-day World's fair built on 700+ acres of until then largely undeveloped city owned swamp and park land (including League Island Park) adjacent to the U.S. Navy Yard bounded by 10th Street, Packer Ave., 23rd Street, and Terminal Avenue. The Spectrum itself occupied the portion of the Exposition's grounds on the south side of Pattison Avenue between Broad and 11th Streets that in 1926 served as the fair's main trolley terminal operated by the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company.[44]

 
The Spectrum, with John F. Kennedy Stadium above it and Veterans Stadium below it

For its first 25 years, the Spectrum overlooked the 102,000-seat John F. Kennedy Stadium (known prior to 1964 as "Municipal Stadium") located roughly 600 feet (180 m) south of the indoor arena. Opened on April 15, 1926, the stadium was also the Sesqui-Centennial Exposition's only intentionally permanent facility.[45] The site of 42 Army–Navy Games between 1936 and 1979, JFK Stadium eventually fell into disuse in favor of the newer nearby Veterans Stadium, was condemned in 1989, and demolished in 1992 to make way for the Wells Fargo Center which opened four years later in August 1996. Known earlier as the "CoreStates Center" (1996–1998), the "First Union Center" (1998–2003), and the "Wachovia Center" (July 2003 – June 2010), the 20,000-plus-seat indoor arena replaced the Spectrum as the home of the Flyers, 76ers, and Philadelphia Wings of the National Lacrosse League beginning with each club's 1996–97 season. With the demolition of the Spectrum, the Wells Fargo Center has now become the oldest of the complex's three current venues.

The Spectrum's closest sports complex neighbor was Veterans Stadium (opened 1971, closed 2003, demolished 2004) which was located north of the arena directly across Pattison Avenue. The 60,000-plus-seat "Vet" accommodated MLB's Philadelphia Phillies and the NFL's Philadelphia Eagles for just over three decades before it was itself replaced by two new facilities. In 2003 the Eagles moved to Lincoln Financial Field, a purpose built football/soccer stadium located SE of the Spectrum site directly across 11th Street from the Wells Fargo Center. The following year, the Phillies relocated to Citizens Bank Park, a dedicated baseball stadium completed in 2004 and located diagonally across from the Spectrum site at the northeast corner of Pattison Ave and Citizens Bank Way (11th St.), immediately east of the former Veterans Stadium site which now serves as a parking lot for the entire complex. In 2017, the Phillies' spring training complex in Clearwater, Florida was renamed Spectrum Field after Bright House Networks was purchased by Charter Communications. While named for Charter's residential service, the name invoked memories of the Spectrum arena.[46]

Another NBA arena (Spectrum Center, the home of the Charlotte Hornets) currently includes "Spectrum" in its name, although again it refers to the Charter residential service whose naming rights are attached to that building.

 
The Spectrum (center) was the oldest (1967) of the four venues which made up the South Philadelphia Sports Complex in this 2004 view from the Wells Fargo Center (1996). Citizens Bank Park (right) is the complex's newest (2004) facility while Lincoln Financial Field (2003) is just out of view to the far right.

Demolition

Although the Spectrum formally closed on October 31, 2009, demolition of the structure did not begin for more than a year with internal work commencing on November 8, 2010.[47] Two weeks later a public "wrecking ball ceremony" attended by some of the athletes who made the building famous such as Hockey Hall of Famers Bernie Parent and Bob Clarke of the Flyers and Hall of Famer Julius Erving of the 76ers, was held in the adjacent parking lot "H" on November 23, 2010, to formally begin its external demolition.[48] However, unlike Veterans Stadium, its one-time neighbor, which had been located immediately across Pattison Avenue from the Spectrum before it was imploded on March 21, 2004, the almost half-year process of demolishing the then-44-year-old arena, done without the use of explosives, was completed in May 2011. This was done to protect its other sports facilities from dust. Water was used to prevent dust from spreading.

 
Composite "before, during and after" image of the Spectrum site. The top image was taken in April 2004, five and a half years before the arena was closed. The middle image was taken seven years later as its demolition was being completed in April 2011. The white areas seen at ground level of this image were the back walls of the hockey and basketball locker rooms used by the Flyers, 76ers, Phantoms, Kixx, and Wings and visiting teams. The parking lot across Pattison Avenue from the Spectrum was the former site of Veterans Stadium (demolished in 2004). The bottom image is how the site appeared in September 2011 after it had been converted to a parking lot. All three images were taken from the same location in the Wells Fargo Center, the arena that replaced the Spectrum. The tallest building visible in the distant Philadelphia skyline (just to the left of the Spectrum site) in the 2011 images is the 59-story Comcast Center (completed in 2008), the headquarters building of the Comcast Corporation which owns both the Spectrum and Wells Fargo Center.

A 300-room hotel is planned to eventually be built on the demolished Spectrum's site (which is now occupied by a parking lot) as an adjunct to the Xfinity Live! project the first portion of which was opened in April 2012, at the SW corner of 11th Street and Pattison Avenue.[49][50]

Statues

A statue of Sylvester Stallone, depicted in his role of Philadelphia boxer Rocky Balboa, stood for many years in front of the main (Pattison Avenue) entrance of the Spectrum, which had been represented in the movie as the site of Rocky's first and second fights with Apollo Creed. (The fight sequences were actually filmed at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena.) The statue was removed several times over the years to be used in the filming of sequels to the original film. In September 2006, it was given a new home in an area near the base of the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art not far from where a spot on the plaza at the top of the Museum's steps where it had appeared in the film Rocky III. Since the statue was not deemed "art,"[citation needed] it was moved around the corner of the museum on Kelly Drive. Other statues that stood in the arena area included:

The statues have been incorporated into the design of Xfinity Live!.[51]

Former tenants

Full-time

Part-time

Notable events

Basketball

Hockey

Soccer

  • NPSL Championship – 2001
  • MISL Championship – 2002

Wrestling

Concerts

Fictional events

  • Rocky Balboa vs Apollo Creed, Heavyweight Championship 1976, 1977

Other events

References

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  22. ^ "1972-73 Philadelphia Flyers Schedule and Results". Hockeydb.com. Retrieved February 25, 2013.
  23. ^ Morreale, Mike G. (October 7, 2008). "Flyers, Phantoms Doubled Philly's Hockey Pleasure". National Hockey League. Retrieved February 25, 2013.
  24. ^ Morganti, Al (December 21, 1979). "Flyers Rally, Tie Penguins--and Record". Boston Globe. Retrieved February 25, 2013.
  25. ^ Morganti, Al (October 13, 1981). "Flyers Fixing No-Shows Problem". The Philadelphia Inquirer. p. C03. Retrieved February 25, 2013.
  26. ^ "Hungry Isles Devour Flyers Before 17,191". The Philadelphia Inquirer. October 31, 1983. p. E01. Retrieved February 25, 2013.
  27. ^ "Win or Lose, Rangers Still Drawing a Crowd". The Philadelphia Inquirer. December 24, 1985. p. C03. Retrieved February 25, 2013.
  28. ^ Juliano, Joe (October 10, 1986). "Flyers Make Opening Night A Winner Tip Oilers, 2-1, With Late Rally". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved February 25, 2013.
  29. ^ Greenberg, Jay (October 9, 1987). "Newest Flyers Get Into Swing". Philadelphia Daily News. Retrieved February 25, 2013.
  30. ^ Bowen, Les (June 9, 1992). "Flyers To Hike Ticket Prices". Philadelphia Daily News. Retrieved February 25, 2013.
  31. ^ Curson, Julie P. (1991). A Guide's Guide to Philadelphia (6th ed.). Philadelphia, PA, US: Curson House. p. 256. ISBN 0913694061. OCLC 894776363.
  32. ^ a b . Archived from the original on August 12, 2008.
  33. ^ "Lit Hooks Up With Kid Rock For Arena Shows". May 10, 2002.
  34. ^ Associated, Press (December 6, 2002). "Guns N' Roses fails to show in Philadelphia". Reuters. Retrieved November 7, 2009.
  35. ^ Cohen, Jonathan (November 3, 2009). "Pearl Jam closes Philly Spectrum with epic set". Reuters. Retrieved November 7, 2009.
  36. ^ Klein, Michael (January 17, 2010). "Spectrum goes out with a bang". Philadelphia Daily News. Retrieved January 17, 2010.
  37. ^ "Search for setlists: Guns n roses philadelphia spectrum | setlist.fm". setlist.fm.
  38. ^ Carchidi, Sam (September 28, 2008). "Flyers Captains Bid Farewell to Spectrum". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved March 13, 2009.
  39. ^ Kern, Mike (January 29, 2009). . Philadelphia Daily News. Archived from the original on January 30, 2009. Retrieved March 13, 2009.
  40. ^ a b Gelston, Dan (March 13, 2009). "76ers Close Spectrum With Win Over Bulls". National Basketball Association. Retrieved March 16, 2009.
  41. ^ "Saying goodbye to the Spectrum". National Basketball Association. March 14, 2009. Retrieved March 16, 2009.
  42. ^ Fernandez, Bernard (March 14, 2009). . Philadelphia Daily News. Archived from the original on March 17, 2009. Retrieved March 15, 2009.
  43. ^ "Philly pop stars rock hard at the Spectrum". Philadelphia Inquirer. October 24, 2009.
  44. ^ Austin, E.L.; Odell Hauser (1929). The Sesqui-Centennial International Exposition. Philadelphia.
  45. ^ Austin, E.L.; Odell Hauser (1929). "Chapter XXX "MUNICIPAL STADIUM"". The Sesqui-Centennial International Exposition. Philadelphia. pp. 419–423.
  46. ^ Todd Zolecki. "Phils' spring home renamed Spectrum Field". Major League Baseball. Retrieved March 4, 2017.
  47. ^ (Press release). Wells Fargo Center. November 3, 2010. Archived from the original on November 7, 2010.
  48. ^ . The Delaware County Daily Times. November 24, 2010. Archived from the original on March 30, 2012.
  49. ^ (PDF). South Philly Review. October 9, 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 25, 2011.
  50. ^ "XFINITY Live! - Philadelphia's Entertainment & Dining Destination". Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  51. ^ Caldwell, Dave (April 27, 2010). "The Spectrum Still Has a Hold". The New York Times.
  52. ^ "Search for setlists: Guns n roses philadelphia spectrum | setlist.fm". setlist.fm.

Further reading

  • Donnellon, Sam (March 14, 2009). "Forever Young, Inside the Old Spectrum". Philadelphia Daily News.
  • Fitzpatrick, Frank (March 13, 2009). "A list of Spectrum Moments to Remember". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved March 13, 2009.
  • Hoffman, Rich (January 29, 2009). "Rich Hofmann: It took a While for Big 5 Fans to Warm Up to Spectrum". Philadelphia Daily News.
  • Rapa, Patrick (November 3, 2009). "Top 20 Spectrum Moments: The Building Wanted Blood". Philadelphia City Paper. Retrieved November 5, 2009.

External links

  • Spectrum: Arena History
  • Remember the Spectrum - a tribute to the arena
Events and tenants
Preceded by
first arena
Home of the
Philadelphia Flyers

1967–1996
Succeeded by
Preceded by Home of the
Philadelphia 76ers

1967–1996
Succeeded by
Preceded by
first arena
Home of the
Philadelphia Phantoms

1996–2009
Succeeded by
Preceded by
first arena
Home of the
Philadelphia Kixx

1996–2009
Succeeded by
Preceded by Host of the
NHL All-Star Game

1976
1992
Succeeded by
Preceded by FIBA Intercontinental Cup
Final Venue

1968
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Aixoise C.C.
Aix-en-Provence
Fed Cup
Final Venue

1976
Succeeded by

spectrum, arena, this, article, about, former, arena, philadelphia, arena, charlotte, spectrum, center, arena, arena, oslo, oslo, spektrum, spectrum, later, known, corestates, spectrum, first, union, spectrum, wachovia, spectrum, indoor, arena, philadelphia, p. This article is about the former arena in Philadelphia For the arena in Charlotte see Spectrum Center arena For the arena in Oslo see Oslo Spektrum The Spectrum later known as CoreStates Spectrum First Union Spectrum and Wachovia Spectrum was an indoor arena in Philadelphia Pennsylvania United States Opened in September 1967 as part of what is now known as the South Philadelphia Sports Complex after several expansions of its seating capacity it accommodated 18 168 for basketball and 17 380 for ice hockey arena football indoor soccer and box lacrosse The Spectrum America s Showplace Broad Street Former namesSpectrum 1967 1994 CoreStates Spectrum 1994 1998 First Union Spectrum 1998 2003 Wachovia Spectrum 2003 2009 Address3601 South Broad StreetLocationPhiladelphia PennsylvaniaCoordinates39 54 15 N 75 10 16 W 39 90417 N 75 17111 W 39 90417 75 17111 Coordinates 39 54 15 N 75 10 16 W 39 90417 N 75 17111 W 39 90417 75 17111OwnerComcast Spectacor L P OperatorGlobal SpectrumCapacityConcerts End stage 18 369 Center stage 19 456 Theater 5 000 8 000Basketball 18 168Ice Hockey 17 380SurfaceMulti surfaceConstructionBroke groundJune 1 1966 1 OpenedSeptember 30 1967Renovated1986ClosedOctober 31 2009DemolishedNovember 23 2010 May 2011ArchitectSkidmore Owings amp MerrillGeneral contractorMcCloskey amp Company Inc TenantsPhiladelphia Flyers NHL 1967 1996 Philadelphia 76ers NBA 1967 1996 2009 Philadelphia Freedoms WTT 1974 Philadelphia Wings NLL 1974 1975 Philadelphia Fever MISL 1978 1981 Philadelphia Wings NLL 1987 1996 Philadelphia Bulldogs RHI 1994 1996 Philadelphia Phantoms AHL 1996 2004 2005 2009 Philadelphia KiXX NPSL MISL NISL 1996 2009 La Salle Explorers NCAA 1996 1998 Philadelphia Soul AFL 2004 2008 select games The last event at the Spectrum was a Pearl Jam concert on October 31 2009 2 The arena was demolished between November 2010 and May 2011 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 Seating capacity 1 3 Flyers and 76ers championships and All Star Games hosted 1 4 College basketball tournaments 1 5 Bull riding 1 6 Notable concerts 1 7 Spectrum Theater 1 8 The Flyers and 76ers move 1 9 Final season 2 The Spectrum and the South Philadelphia Sports Complex 3 Demolition 4 Statues 5 Former tenants 5 1 Full time 5 2 Part time 6 Notable events 6 1 Basketball 6 2 Hockey 6 3 Soccer 6 4 Wrestling 6 5 Concerts 6 6 Fictional events 6 7 Other events 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory EditOpened as the Spectrum in September 1967 Philadelphia s first modern indoor sports arena was built to be the home of the expansion Philadelphia Flyers of the NHL and also to accommodate the existing Philadelphia 76ers of the NBA The building was the second major sports facility built at the south end of Broad Street in an area previously known as East League Island Park and now referred to simply as the South Philadelphia Sports Complex Early years Edit Ground was broken on the arena on June 1 1966 by Jerry Wolman and then Philadelphia Mayor James Tate as the home of the NHL s expansion Philadelphia Flyers 1 The first event at the arena was the Quaker City Jazz Festival on September 30 1967 3 produced by Larry Magid 4 The first sporting event at the arena was an October 17 1967 boxing match featuring Joe Frazier vs Tony Doyle 5 From 1967 through 1972 fifteen fight cards were held at the Spectrum The NBA s 76ers also moved there from Convention Hall as a second major league sports tenant Lou Scheinfeld former President of the Spectrum explained that the name Spectrum was selected to evoke the broad range of events to be held there The SP for sports and South Philadelphia E for entertainment C for circuses T for theatricals R for recreation and UM as um what a nice building Scheinfeld also said that a seat in the city s first superbox initially cost 1 000 a year For every Flyers game Sixers game circus you name it you got 250 events for 1 000 6 The Flyers won their first ever home game in this arena by defeating the Pittsburgh Penguins 1 0 Bill Sutherland scored the arena s first goal On March 1 1968 wind blew part of the covering off the Spectrum s roof during a performance of the Ice Capades forcing the building to close for a month while Mayor Tate fought with then Philadelphia County District Attorney Arlen Specter over responsibility for the construction of the roof and the damage was repaired 7 The 76ers moved their home games to Convention Hall and to the Palestra but neither of those arenas had ice rinks at the time and there were no other NHL quality sites in the Philadelphia area Thus the Flyers hurriedly moved their next home game against the Oakland Seals to Madison Square Garden in New York followed by a meeting with the Boston Bruins played at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto before establishing a base at Le Colisee in Quebec City home of their top minor league team the AHL Quebec Aces for the remainder of their regular season marking the first NHL games in Quebec City in over four decades and years before the Quebec Nordiques joined the NHL The roof was repaired in time to permit the Flyers to return to the Spectrum to open their first Stanley Cup playoffs against the St Louis Blues on April 4 1968 the opening faceoff came just as the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr was transpiring in Memphis Tennessee 8 Similarly in 1993 the Flyers played a day game against the Los Angeles Kings during a blizzard A piece of flying debris smashed out one of the concourse windows cancelling the game just after the first period In the 1970s the venue s location near Broad Street and the reputation for fisticuffs that the Flyers had developed led to the nickname Broad Street Bullies A plaque inside The Spectrum stated that it held the world record for the fastest conversion from Hockey to Basketball The Spectrum along with the Met Center and The Forum was one of the first sports arenas to have a scoreboard with a messageboard Furthermore the messageboards on the Spectrum scoreboard were the first dot matrix screens in pro hockey or basketball capable of photos animation and replays as well as messages This was replaced in 1986 with ArenaVision which consisted of six 9 by 12 foot 2 7 by 3 7 m rear projection videoscreens at the top and a four sided American Sign and Indicator scoreboard at the bottom Inside the videoscreens were General Electric projectors located 15 feet 4 6 m away from each screen 9 Seating capacity Edit Basketball Years Capacity1967 1971 15 244 10 1971 1972 15 304 11 1972 1973 17 3001973 1981 18 276 12 1981 1982 18 364 13 1982 1985 17 921 14 1985 1987 17 941 15 1987 2009 18 168 16 Ice Hockey Years Capacity1967 1968 14 646 17 1968 1969 14 558 18 1969 1970 14 606 19 1970 1971 14 620 20 1971 1972 14 626 21 1972 1973 16 600 22 1973 1975 17 007 23 1975 1981 17 077 24 1981 1983 17 147 25 1983 1985 17 191 26 1985 1986 17 211 27 1986 1987 17 222 28 1987 1990 17 423 29 1990 1991 17 382 16 1991 2009 17 380 30 Flyers and 76ers championships and All Star Games hosted Edit The Spectrum s ice rink The Flyers won their first Stanley Cup at the Spectrum on May 19 1974 defeating the Boston Bruins 1 0 in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Finals in front of a then capacity crowd of 17 007 Perhaps the most important and emotional hockey game or sporting event of any kind ever held there however came at the height of the Cold War on January 11 1976 when the Flyers became the first NHL team to defeat by 4 1 the vaunted hockey team of the Soviet Central Red Army CSKA 1 Two games in the inaugural Canada Cup hockey tournament were also held at the Spectrum in September of that year as the U S took on Czechoslovakia and the USSR Ten NHL or NBA playoff championship series were hosted at the Spectrum The Flyers competed in the Stanley Cup Finals in 1974 1975 1976 1980 1985 and 1987 The 76ers played in the NBA Finals in 1977 1980 1982 and 1983 The 1976 and 1992 NHL and 1970 and 1976 NBA All Star Games were also held here The AHL Phantoms also won their first Calder Cup title on Spectrum ice before a sellout crowd of 17 380 on June 10 1998 by defeating the Saint John Flames 6 1 The only visitors to win the Stanley Cup and NBA championship at the Spectrum were the Montreal Canadiens 1976 and the Los Angeles Lakers 1980 respectively The Spectrum is the only venue to host the NBA and NHL All Star Games in the same season doing so in 1976 when it also hosted that year s Final Four It is also one of a handful of venues to host the Stanley Cup and NBA Finals at the same time doing so in 1980 all four major Philadelphia teams would reach the championship round of their respective sport in 1980 College basketball tournaments Edit The Spectrum was used for many basketball tournaments including Big Five games eight Atlantic 10 Conference tournaments 1977 1983 1997 2002 the 1975 1980 and 1992 NCAA East Regional site of the famous last second shot by Christian Laettner of Duke to beat Kentucky and the 1976 and 1981 Final Fours both won by Bob Knight s Indiana Hoosiers Smaller conferences preferred holding tournament games at this venue over the larger Center nearby Bull riding Edit In 2003 and 2004 the PBR brought their Built Ford Tough Series tour to the Spectrum Notable concerts Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Spectrum arena news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Billboard ad for the arena 1974 Many concerts were staged at the Spectrum often praised for its acoustic properties beginning in the 1960s In the 1970s Electric Factory Concerts became the prominent concert promoter for the facility 31 Cream performed during their farewell tour there supported by Lee Michaels The First Quaker City Rock Festival was an early all star show there featuring Moby Grape The Chambers Brothers Vanilla Fudge and Big Brother amp The Holding Company and Buddy Guy among other acts Depeche Mode performed at the venue 6 times between 1988 and 1998 Led Zeppelin performed on their second American tour in July 1969 The Jimi Hendrix Experience performed April 12 1969 with Fat Mattress opening Noel Redding s solo band The Doors performed a 103 minute show a recording of which was released years later as The Doors Live in Philadelphia 70 The Grateful Dead played the Spectrum 53 times by far the most of any musical act Live albums recorded here include Dick s Picks Volume 36 Road Trips Full Show Spectrum 11 5 79 Road Trips Full Show Spectrum 11 6 79 Road Trips Volume 4 Number 4 Dave s Picks Volume 32 and Dave s Picks Volume 39 Bryan Adams performed during his Waking Up The World tour on May 15 1994 Phish performed at the venue 9 times between 1995 and 2003 most notably two shows on December 2 3 1997 as part of their Phish Destroys America tour Yes played the Spectrum 28 times between 1971 and 2004 including a matinee show in 1974 for their Tales from Topographic Oceans Tour plus 2 dates August 3 1989 and March 19 1990 as Anderson Bruford Wakeman and Howe 32 Yes keyboardist Rick Wakeman also performed solo shows at the Spectrum in 1974 and 1975 Elvis Presley played The Spectrum for five shows between 1971 and 1977 his final performance there was May 28 1977 just months before his death 32 Bob Marley and The Wailers played at the venue on June 20 1975 and June 5 1978 in support of his Natty Dread and Kaya Tour respectively Aerosmith played the venue 23 times between 1976 and 1994 including a few notorious performances in the late 1970s in which rowdy fans injured the band members with glass bottles and M 80s Pink Floyd played the Spectrum in 1972 1973 1975 and 1977 They last played two shows there on June 28 29 1977 during their Animals In the Flesh Tour On the second night June 29 1977 Floyd member Roger Waters fell ill and did most of the show after a painkiller injection However the painkiller wore off and was taken to the hospital and missed the final encore of Us and Them where second guitarist Snowy White had to fill in on bass guitar Unbeknownst to the crowd this was the first time that the rest of Pink Floyd guitarist vocalist David Gilmour drummer Nick Mason and keyboard player Rick Wright performed a song live without Waters they would go on without Waters as of 1986 Waters experience performing while ill at this venue would be documented on Comfortably Numb The Who performed at the Spectrum throughout the 1970s The 1973 show was documented in a famous audio bootleg of their Quadrophenia performance A CD has been released of John Entwistle s performance on March 15 1975 when he opened for Humble Pie 1978 saw the last tour of the original Black Sabbath lineup Opening for them was Van Halen Genesis regularly played the venue during the Phil Collins era from 1977 to 1986 they would play Veterans Stadium on their 1992 We Can t Dance tour and the Wells Fargo Center Philadelphia on their 2007 Turn it On Again and 2021 The Last Domino reunion tours Their three November 1983 performances on the band s Mama Tour were recorded for a US FM radio broadcast and was released as a bootleg entitled Three Nights in Philly Collins would play the Spectrum on his own in September 1985 during his No Jacket Required Tour in a concert rescheduled from May 18 of that year due to an Eastern Conference Finals game between the 76ers and the Boston Celtics Queen performed at The Spectrum on August 22 1980 during The Game Tour The Jacksons performed at The Spectrum multiple times between 1973 amp 1981 Dio performed at The Spectrum in 1984 with Twisted Sister as opener This concert was filmed for the video release A Special from the Spectrum Dio returned to the Spectrum in 1986 this concert was also filmed for the video release Sacred Heart The Video Bon Jovi regularly performed at the Spectrum in the 1980s playing six shows there during their Slippery When Wet Tour and three concerts on the New Jersey Syndicate Tour Kid Rock appeared at the arena on May 9 2002 33 KISS performed live during the Crazy Nights tour in 1987 The concert can be seen on the 3rd disk of Kissology Volume Two 1978 1991 although footage is incomplete N W A performed with Eazy E Public Enemy Too Short Kwame on June 25 1989 Metallica performed here in 1989 with a proshot show during the Damaged Justice tour of 1988 1989 Guns N Roses performed two shows in 1988 opening for Aerosmith another show in 1991 and a third show was cancelled in 2002 34 On June 13 1991 during the show Axl Rose erupted after a fan had gotten into a fight with Guns N Roses photographer Robert John when the fan kicked the camera out of his hands Axl cursed out the fan and challenged him to a fight After the fan was ejected from the concert the show continued On the night of December 9 1980 after learning of the assassination of John Lennon following a performance there the night before Bruce Springsteen opened the show with a statement regarding Lennon and said It s a hard thing to come out and play but there s just nothing else you can do With members of the E Street Band in tears Springsteen and his band put on a 34 song marathon which ended nearly 3 hours later with a cover of Twist and Shout The Spectrum was the first arena Springsteen ever played at in 1976 In the following years Springsteen would become one of the Spectrum s most popular concert acts performing 42 shows between 1976 and 2009 thanks in part to the singer s large and devoted fan base in Pennsylvania For these reasons the Spectrum is often considered one of Springsteen s iconic venues Rush performed at the Spectrum as part of their Grace Under Pressure tour on November 5 1984 Iron Maiden played a sold out show at the Spectrum on January 13 1987 as part of Somewhere on Tour in support of Somewhere in Time Van Halen performed at the Spectrum with Gary Cherone on May 24 1998 Whitney Houston performed at the arena on June 23 1994 during her successful 1993 94 The Bodyguard World Tour The concert included her performing a medley of Aretha Franklin s classics and a duet with husband at that time Bobby Brown performed their R amp B hit Something in Common Diana Ross amp the Supremes ill fated Return To Love tour kicked off at the Spectrum on June 14 2000 The tour would be canceled a few weeks later During the Spectrum s final year Taylor Swift performed at the arena as part of the Fearless Tour while P nk performed at the Spectrum as part of her Funhouse Tour Both recording artists are Philadelphia area natives The last public events at the legendary arena took place on October 27 28 and 30 31 2009 by Pearl Jam The band came to the stage each night after a video montage of memorable Spectrum moments followed by the Rocky theme music Over the four nights Pearl Jam performed 103 different songs with its final night on Halloween lasting over 3 hours and 35 minutes and including 41 songs 35 The final event was a large private cocktail party thrown by Comcast Spectacor chairman Ed Snider on January 16 2010 Musical acts included a duet of God Bless America featuring a recorded Kate Smith alongside a live Lauren Hart headliner Earth Wind amp Fire with the last set being a performance by Elvis interpreter Johnny Seaton 36 Philadelphia soul groups that performed at the Spectrum include LaBelle in 71 and Hall amp Oates in 83 The O Jays they were signed to Philadelphia International performed there in 73 and Lou Rawls also signed to Philly International performed there in 69 Boyz II Men from Philly performed there in 95 Guns N Roses performed at the Philadelphia Spectrum on August 4 1988 August 5 1988 June 13 1991 December 16 1991 December 17 1991 37 Spectrum Theater Edit The Spectrum Theater was a venue for acts not big enough to fill the entire Spectrum arena The stage was placed in the middle of the Spectrum floor and the other half of the arena behind the stage was closed off with curtains creating a theater like environment Some of the acts that played in this configuration included Frank Zappa in 1973 1976 and 1977 David Bowie s Diamond Dogs Tour in 1974 The Kinks Soap Opera Tour in May 1975 Bob Marley s Natty Dread Tour in 1975 and Kaya Tour in 1978 Bruce Springsteen in 1976 The Bee Gees in 1979 Peter Gabriel s tour in 1982 Howard Jones in 1985 and Julian Lennon with Chris Bliss on June 20 1986 The Flyers and 76ers move Edit The 1995 96 NHL and NBA seasons were the final ones for the Flyers and the 76ers at the Spectrum The 76ers last game was a 112 92 loss to the Orlando Magic on April 19 on May 12 Eric Lindros scored the arena s final Flyers goal in the 2nd period and Mike Hough of the Florida Panthers scored the arena s final official NHL goal in the 2nd overtime of Game 5 of the 1996 Eastern Conference semifinals a 2 1 Flyers loss Although both the Flyers and 76ers moved across the parking lot to the new and larger Wells Fargo Center then CoreStates Center the arena remained in place and was used by the Philadelphia Phantoms of the AHL the Philadelphia KiXX of the NISL the Philadelphia Soul of the Arena Football League for Saturday home games and a variety of other sporting events and concerts The Spectrum had relatively few luxury suites or other amenities common in newer arenas Additionally the arena s sight lines were cited as a concern Some seats in both the hockey and basketball configurations especially those added in the upper level over the years had badly obstructed views There was only one concourse for all three levels making for somewhat cramped conditions whenever attendance was anywhere near capacity citation needed Final season Edit A special logo was used for the final season of the Spectrum s use featuring the arena s original pre 1994 logo and nickname On July 14 2008 Comcast Spectacor Chairman Ed Snider officially announced that the Spectrum would be shuttered and torn down to make way for Philly Live a proposed retail dining and entertainment hub This has been one of the hardest decisions I ve ever had to make said Snider The Spectrum is my baby It s one of the greatest things that has ever happened to me The Phantoms commemorated the final season of the Spectrum by wearing a special patch on their uniforms as illustrated on the right The team also celebrated some of the building s memorable moments throughout the season The Flyers marked the last season by playing two pre season games at the Spectrum They played the Carolina Hurricanes in an NHL pre season game on September 27 2008 and the Phantoms on October 7 of that same year Before the game against Carolina the Flyers honored the team captains in the franchise s history Those honored in the pre game ceremony were Lou Angotti Ed Van Impe Bob Clarke Mel Bridgman Bill Barber Dave Poulin Ron Sutter Kevin Dineen Eric Desjardins Keith Primeau and Derian Hatcher 38 Wachovia Spectrum during demolition in 2010 The last NCAA basketball game the Spectrum hosted saw the Villanova Wildcats defeat the Pittsburgh Panthers on January 28 2009 39 The Sixers played one regular season game against Chicago Bulls on March 13 2009 winning by a score of 104 101 in the final NBA game in the Spectrum 40 41 The game was sold out and attendance was 17 563 40 42 Banners for the final regular season hockey game at the Spectrum in Philadelphia PA on April 10 2009 Philadelphia Phantoms vs Hershey Bears 5 2 The Phantoms last regular season game at the Spectrum was played April 10 2009 against the Hershey Bears as the Phantoms won the game 5 2 while the last Kixx game was against the Massachusetts Twisters on March 22 The Kixx moved onto the Temple University campus and played the 2009 10 season at the Liacouras Center The Phantoms were sold to a Pittsburgh based ownership group and moved to Glens Falls New York for the 2009 10 season With this season being the final season of the Wachovia Spectrum we will celebrate the history of the Spectrum with an exciting year long celebration of events Comcast Spectacor President Peter Luukko said Phish was rumored to be among the acts to commemorate the closing of the arena It is our hope and intent to bring back many of the musical acts and entertainers who have made the Spectrum America s Showplace Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band played two shows at The Spectrum on April 28 and 29 as part of their Working on a Dream Tour and returned on October 13 14 and 19 20 for their Spectrum swan song Springsteen debuted a specially written version of the song Wrecking Ball which he had written in honor of the demolition of Giants Stadium with revised lyrics to honor the Spectrum Springsteen s performances were followed by Pearl Jam on October 27 28 30 and 31 to close the building their opening acts included Social Distortion on the 27th and 28th and Bad Religion on the 30th and 31st A scheduled concert with Leonard Cohen on October 22 was moved to the Tower Theatre in Upper Darby instead On October 23 2009 Philadelphia area musicians The Hooters Todd Rundgren and Hall amp Oates headlined a concert titled Last Call 43 Tickets were as low as 6 00 The remaining members of the Grateful Dead including Bob Weir Phil Lesh Mickey Hart Bill Kreutzmann performed their final set of shows at the Spectrum on May 1 and 2 2009 the show of May 2 was their 54th consecutive sell out at the Spectrum The Dead closed the show of May 2 with the song Samson and Delilah The song contains the fitting refrain If I had my way I would tear this old building down The lyric was changed by the band s singer Bob Weir to say I wouldn t tear this old building down With the demolition of The Spectrum all venues at which The Grateful Dead played through their career within the City of Philadelphia except for the Irvine Auditorium have succumbed to the wrecking ball The Spectrum and the South Philadelphia Sports Complex Edit An overhead view of the South Philadelphia Sports Complex The Spectrum is at center left Opened in 1967 as the first of the five modern facilities to be built at the South Philadelphia Sports Complex between 1967 and 2004 by the time it closed in 2009 the Spectrum was the oldest of the four venues still standing of the two indoor arenas and four outdoor stadiums built at the South end of Broad Street since 1926 The complex s total area expanded with the addition of each new facility and now takes up the entire SE quadrant of the grounds occupied in 1926 by Philadelphia s Sesqui Centennial International Exposition a massive 184 day World s fair built on 700 acres of until then largely undeveloped city owned swamp and park land including League Island Park adjacent to the U S Navy Yard bounded by 10th Street Packer Ave 23rd Street and Terminal Avenue The Spectrum itself occupied the portion of the Exposition s grounds on the south side of Pattison Avenue between Broad and 11th Streets that in 1926 served as the fair s main trolley terminal operated by the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company 44 The Spectrum with John F Kennedy Stadium above it and Veterans Stadium below it For its first 25 years the Spectrum overlooked the 102 000 seat John F Kennedy Stadium known prior to 1964 as Municipal Stadium located roughly 600 feet 180 m south of the indoor arena Opened on April 15 1926 the stadium was also the Sesqui Centennial Exposition s only intentionally permanent facility 45 The site of 42 Army Navy Games between 1936 and 1979 JFK Stadium eventually fell into disuse in favor of the newer nearby Veterans Stadium was condemned in 1989 and demolished in 1992 to make way for the Wells Fargo Center which opened four years later in August 1996 Known earlier as the CoreStates Center 1996 1998 the First Union Center 1998 2003 and the Wachovia Center July 2003 June 2010 the 20 000 plus seat indoor arena replaced the Spectrum as the home of the Flyers 76ers and Philadelphia Wings of the National Lacrosse League beginning with each club s 1996 97 season With the demolition of the Spectrum the Wells Fargo Center has now become the oldest of the complex s three current venues The Spectrum s closest sports complex neighbor was Veterans Stadium opened 1971 closed 2003 demolished 2004 which was located north of the arena directly across Pattison Avenue The 60 000 plus seat Vet accommodated MLB s Philadelphia Phillies and the NFL s Philadelphia Eagles for just over three decades before it was itself replaced by two new facilities In 2003 the Eagles moved to Lincoln Financial Field a purpose built football soccer stadium located SE of the Spectrum site directly across 11th Street from the Wells Fargo Center The following year the Phillies relocated to Citizens Bank Park a dedicated baseball stadium completed in 2004 and located diagonally across from the Spectrum site at the northeast corner of Pattison Ave and Citizens Bank Way 11th St immediately east of the former Veterans Stadium site which now serves as a parking lot for the entire complex In 2017 the Phillies spring training complex in Clearwater Florida was renamed Spectrum Field after Bright House Networks was purchased by Charter Communications While named for Charter s residential service the name invoked memories of the Spectrum arena 46 Another NBA arena Spectrum Center the home of the Charlotte Hornets currently includes Spectrum in its name although again it refers to the Charter residential service whose naming rights are attached to that building The Spectrum center was the oldest 1967 of the four venues which made up the South Philadelphia Sports Complex in this 2004 view from the Wells Fargo Center 1996 Citizens Bank Park right is the complex s newest 2004 facility while Lincoln Financial Field 2003 is just out of view to the far right Demolition EditAlthough the Spectrum formally closed on October 31 2009 demolition of the structure did not begin for more than a year with internal work commencing on November 8 2010 47 Two weeks later a public wrecking ball ceremony attended by some of the athletes who made the building famous such as Hockey Hall of Famers Bernie Parent and Bob Clarke of the Flyers and Hall of Famer Julius Erving of the 76ers was held in the adjacent parking lot H on November 23 2010 to formally begin its external demolition 48 However unlike Veterans Stadium its one time neighbor which had been located immediately across Pattison Avenue from the Spectrum before it was imploded on March 21 2004 the almost half year process of demolishing the then 44 year old arena done without the use of explosives was completed in May 2011 This was done to protect its other sports facilities from dust Water was used to prevent dust from spreading Composite before during and after image of the Spectrum site The top image was taken in April 2004 five and a half years before the arena was closed The middle image was taken seven years later as its demolition was being completed in April 2011 The white areas seen at ground level of this image were the back walls of the hockey and basketball locker rooms used by the Flyers 76ers Phantoms Kixx and Wings and visiting teams The parking lot across Pattison Avenue from the Spectrum was the former site of Veterans Stadium demolished in 2004 The bottom image is how the site appeared in September 2011 after it had been converted to a parking lot All three images were taken from the same location in the Wells Fargo Center the arena that replaced the Spectrum The tallest building visible in the distant Philadelphia skyline just to the left of the Spectrum site in the 2011 images is the 59 story Comcast Center completed in 2008 the headquarters building of the Comcast Corporation which owns both the Spectrum and Wells Fargo Center A 300 room hotel is planned to eventually be built on the demolished Spectrum s site which is now occupied by a parking lot as an adjunct to the Xfinity Live project the first portion of which was opened in April 2012 at the SW corner of 11th Street and Pattison Avenue 49 50 Statues Edit Philadelphia portal Pennsylvania portalA statue of Sylvester Stallone depicted in his role of Philadelphia boxer Rocky Balboa stood for many years in front of the main Pattison Avenue entrance of the Spectrum which had been represented in the movie as the site of Rocky s first and second fights with Apollo Creed The fight sequences were actually filmed at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena The statue was removed several times over the years to be used in the filming of sequels to the original film In September 2006 it was given a new home in an area near the base of the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art not far from where a spot on the plaza at the top of the Museum s steps where it had appeared in the film Rocky III Since the statue was not deemed art citation needed it was moved around the corner of the museum on Kelly Drive Other statues that stood in the arena area included Score a statue depicting Flyers right wing Gary Dornhoefer s game winning overtime goal in Game 5 of the 1973 Stanley Cup Quarterfinals against the Minnesota North Stars A statue of Kate Smith the Flyers good luck charm whose rendition of God Bless America is believed to have helped the Flyers become back to back Stanley Cup Champions in 1974 and 1975 A statue of Julius Erving who played for the Philadelphia 76ers from 1976 to 1987 The statues have been incorporated into the design of Xfinity Live 51 Former tenants EditFull time Edit Philadelphia Flyers of the NHL Philadelphia 76ers of the NBA Two of the three incarnations of the Philadelphia Wings NLL I Original franchise 1974 75 and Eagle League MILL NLL II Second franchise 1987 1996 Philadelphia Phantoms of the AHL Philadelphia KiXX of the NPSL Philadelphia Bulldogs of the RHI Philadelphia Freedoms of World Team Tennis 1974 Philadelphia Fever of the original Major Indoor Soccer LeaguePart time Edit Villanova University Wildcats of the NCAA Big East Conference some high attendance men s basketball home games which the on campus arena The Pavilion was too small to accommodate Philadelphia Soul of the Arena Football League when the Wells Fargo Center was not available typically on Saturday home dates Notable events EditBasketball Edit NBA All Star Game 1970 1976 NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament 1976 and 1981 Men s Final Four both won by Indiana 1980 East Regional won by Iowa and 1992 East Regional won by Duke NBA Finals 1977 1980 1982 1983 The Los Angeles Lakers won the 1979 80 NBA Championship at the Spectrum winning Game 6 and the series 4 2 Hockey Edit NHL Stanley Cup Finals 1974 1975 1976 1980 1985 1987 The Flyers won the 1973 74 Stanley Cup at the Spectrum defeating the Boston Bruins in Game 6 and winning the series 4 2 The Montreal Canadiens won the 1975 76 Stanley Cup at the Spectrum winning Game 4 and the series 4 0 NHL All Star Game 1976 1992 Philadelphia Flyers vs Soviet Central Red Army Hockey Team exhibition 1976 1976 Canada Cup two games AHL Calder Cup Finals 1998 The Phantoms won the Calder Cup at the Spectrum defeating the Saint John Flames in Game 6 and winning the series 4 2 Soccer Edit NPSL Championship 2001 MISL Championship 2002Wrestling Edit WWF SummerSlam 90 1990 WWF King of the Ring 1995 WCW Monday Nitro April 14 1997 November 3 1997 March 3 1998 October 18 1999 WCW Thunder June 18 1998 February 16 2000 Concerts Edit Ten Years After 1970 Elvis Presley 1971 1977 The Doors The Doors Live in Philadelphia 70 1970 The Rolling Stones 1969 1972 1975 The Who Quadrophenia 1973 Alice Cooper 1973 J Geils Band 1973 Marshall Tucker Band 1973 Emerson Lake amp Palmer 1973 Foghat 1973 Grateful Dead 50 shows including Dick s Picks Volume 36 Elton John 1973 Frank Sinatra 1973 Edgar Winter 1973 Yes 1974 Fleetwood Mac 1977 Pink Floyd In the Flesh Tour 1977 Billy Joel including songs recorded for Songs in the Attic 1980 Queen The Game Tour amp Hot Space Tour 1980 amp 1982 Dio A Special from the Spectrum 1984 Rush Power Windows tour 1986 Dio Sacred Heart The Video 1986 Iron Maiden Somewhere on Tour 1987 Van Halen OU812 Tour 1988 Metallica 1989 Damaged Justice Tour Skid Row 1992 Slave to the grind world tour Mariah Carey Music Box Tour 1993 Nine Inch Nails Further Down The Spiral Tour 1994 Whitney Houston The Bodyguard World Tour 1994 Madonna Blond Ambition World Tour 1990 Pearl Jam Backspacer tour 2009 Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band October 20 2009 Guns N Roses August 4 1988 August 5 1988 June 13 1991 December 16 1991 December 17 1991 52 Fictional events Edit Rocky Balboa vs Apollo Creed Heavyweight Championship 1976 1977Other events Edit U S Figure Skating Championships 1968 MILL Championship 1989 1992 1995 Enon Tabernacle Baptist Church Resurrection Sunday 2000 Monster Jam 2009References Edit a b Hochman Stan March 17 2009 Snider Wolman Feud Outliving Spectrum The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved April 25 2012 Cohen Jonathan November 2 2009 Pearl Jam Closes Philly Spectrum With Epic Set Billboard Prometheus Global Media LLC Retrieved May 22 2020 Bulls game at Wachovia Spectrum highlights Sixers 2008 09 schedule Philadelphia 76ers Retrieved August 15 2008 Klein Michael September 15 2008 Inqlings Spectrum Last Blasts Deafening of Course The Philadelphia Inquirer Archived from the original on October 23 2008 Retrieved October 19 2008 The Spectrum phillyboxinghistory com Retrieved April 28 2018 October 19 2009 Talk Philly CBS3 Johnson William April 1 1968 A Heavy Blow In A Windy City Sports Illustrated Retrieved March 18 2009 This Date In Flyers History March 1 PhiladelphiaFlyers com March 1 2005 Retrieved December 20 2012 Juliano Joe September 16 1986 Spectrum to Unveil New Scoreboard The Philadelphia Inquirer Archived from the original on September 13 2015 Vecsey George March 31 1970 Bucks Trounce 76ers 156 120 on Record Playoff Score and Lead Series 2 1 The New York Times p 45 Retrieved February 25 2013 Logan Bob March 25 1972 Ailing Bulls Wallop 76ers 116 99 Chicago Tribune Retrieved February 25 2013 Dietz Doyle May 12 1980 Dawkins Keys Sixers Reading Eagle p 20 Retrieved February 25 2013 Shirk George November 7 1981 Sixers Finally Lose to Hawks 106 99 The Philadelphia Inquirer p C01 Retrieved February 25 2013 Sixers Ring in Season Philadelphia Daily News October 29 1983 p 48 Retrieved February 25 2013 76ers Double Team Events to Contain Attendance Slide The Philadelphia Inquirer December 7 1985 p D11 a b Bowen Les June 11 1991 The Tenants Can t Lose New Arena Offers Big Benefits To Both The Flyers And Sixers Philadelphia Daily News Retrieved February 25 2013 Philadelphia 4 Toronto 1 Record Journal Meriden CT Associated Press February 5 1968 Retrieved February 25 2013 1968 69 Philadelphia Flyers Schedule and Results Hockeydb com Retrieved February 25 2013 Fitzgerald Tom March 7 1970 Flvers No 1 Attraction for Philly s Sports Fans Boston Globe Retrieved February 25 2013 Flyers Gain Tie on Hillman Goal Boston Globe December 14 1970 Retrieved February 25 2013 1971 72 Philadelphia Flyers Schedule and Results Hockeydb com Retrieved February 25 2013 1972 73 Philadelphia Flyers Schedule and Results Hockeydb com Retrieved February 25 2013 Morreale Mike G October 7 2008 Flyers Phantoms Doubled Philly s Hockey Pleasure National Hockey League Retrieved February 25 2013 Morganti Al December 21 1979 Flyers Rally Tie Penguins and Record Boston Globe Retrieved February 25 2013 Morganti Al October 13 1981 Flyers Fixing No Shows Problem The Philadelphia Inquirer p C03 Retrieved February 25 2013 Hungry Isles Devour Flyers Before 17 191 The Philadelphia Inquirer October 31 1983 p E01 Retrieved February 25 2013 Win or Lose Rangers Still Drawing a Crowd The Philadelphia Inquirer December 24 1985 p C03 Retrieved February 25 2013 Juliano Joe October 10 1986 Flyers Make Opening Night A Winner Tip Oilers 2 1 With Late Rally The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved February 25 2013 Greenberg Jay October 9 1987 Newest Flyers Get Into Swing Philadelphia Daily News Retrieved February 25 2013 Bowen Les June 9 1992 Flyers To Hike Ticket Prices Philadelphia Daily News Retrieved February 25 2013 Curson Julie P 1991 A Guide s Guide to Philadelphia 6th ed Philadelphia PA US Curson House p 256 ISBN 0913694061 OCLC 894776363 a b Remember the Spectrum History Concerts Archived from the original on August 12 2008 Lit Hooks Up With Kid Rock For Arena Shows May 10 2002 Associated Press December 6 2002 Guns N Roses fails to show in Philadelphia Reuters Retrieved November 7 2009 Cohen Jonathan November 3 2009 Pearl Jam closes Philly Spectrum with epic set Reuters Retrieved November 7 2009 Klein Michael January 17 2010 Spectrum goes out with a bang Philadelphia Daily News Retrieved January 17 2010 Search for setlists Guns n roses philadelphia spectrum setlist fm setlist fm Carchidi Sam September 28 2008 Flyers Captains Bid Farewell to Spectrum The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved March 13 2009 Kern Mike January 29 2009 Nice Parting Gift for Spectrum Villanova Beats No 3 Pitt Philadelphia Daily News Archived from the original on January 30 2009 Retrieved March 13 2009 a b Gelston Dan March 13 2009 76ers Close Spectrum With Win Over Bulls National Basketball Association Retrieved March 16 2009 Saying goodbye to the Spectrum National Basketball Association March 14 2009 Retrieved March 16 2009 Fernandez Bernard March 14 2009 Sixers Edge Bulls for Thrilling Spectrum Finale Philadelphia Daily News Archived from the original on March 17 2009 Retrieved March 15 2009 Philly pop stars rock hard at the Spectrum Philadelphia Inquirer October 24 2009 Austin E L Odell Hauser 1929 The Sesqui Centennial International Exposition Philadelphia Austin E L Odell Hauser 1929 Chapter XXX MUNICIPAL STADIUM The Sesqui Centennial International Exposition Philadelphia pp 419 423 Todd Zolecki Phils spring home renamed Spectrum Field Major League Baseball Retrieved March 4 2017 Preparations For Spectrum Demolition To Begin On November 8 Press release Wells Fargo Center November 3 2010 Archived from the original on November 7 2010 With pomp and circumstances and a wrecking ball the Spectrum starts to come down The Delaware County Daily Times November 24 2010 Archived from the original on March 30 2012 Going Live A hotel will take the Spectrum s place as details of the retail dining entertainment district to come are unveiled PDF South Philly Review October 9 2008 Archived from the original PDF on August 25 2011 XFINITY Live Philadelphia s Entertainment amp Dining Destination Retrieved June 2 2016 Caldwell Dave April 27 2010 The Spectrum Still Has a Hold The New York Times Search for setlists Guns n roses philadelphia spectrum setlist fm setlist fm Further reading EditDonnellon Sam March 14 2009 Forever Young Inside the Old Spectrum Philadelphia Daily News Fitzpatrick Frank March 13 2009 A list of Spectrum Moments to Remember The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved March 13 2009 Hoffman Rich January 29 2009 Rich Hofmann It took a While for Big 5 Fans to Warm Up to Spectrum Philadelphia Daily News Rapa Patrick November 3 2009 Top 20 Spectrum Moments The Building Wanted Blood Philadelphia City Paper Retrieved November 5 2009 External links EditSpectrum Arena History Remember the Spectrum a tribute to the arenaEvents and tenantsPreceded byfirst arena Home of thePhiladelphia Flyers1967 1996 Succeeded byWells Fargo CenterPreceded byPhiladelphia Arena Home of thePhiladelphia 76ers1967 1996 Succeeded byWells Fargo CenterPreceded byfirst arena Home of thePhiladelphia Phantoms1996 2009 Succeeded byGlens Falls Civic CenterPreceded byfirst arena Home of thePhiladelphia Kixx1996 2009 Succeeded byLiacouras CenterPreceded byMontreal ForumChicago Stadium Host of theNHL All Star Game19761992 Succeeded byPacific ColiseumMontreal ForumPreceded byPalazzo dello SportRome FIBA Intercontinental Cup Final Venue1968 Succeeded byMacon ColiseumMaconPreceded byAixoise C C Aix en Provence Fed Cup Final Venue1976 Succeeded byDevonshire ParkEastbourne Retrieved from https en 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