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Wikipedia

Kingdome

The Kingdome (officially the King County Stadium)[4][note 1] was a multi-purpose stadium located in the Industrial District (later SoDo)[7] neighborhood of Seattle, Washington, United States. Owned and operated by King County, it was best known as the home stadium of the Seattle Seahawks of the National Football League (NFL) and the Seattle Mariners of Major League Baseball (MLB); it was also home to the Seattle SuperSonics of the National Basketball Association (NBA) and additionally served as both the home outdoor and indoor venue for the Seattle Sounders of the North American Soccer League (NASL). The Kingdome measured 660 feet (200 m) wide from its inside walls.[8]

Kingdome
King County Stadium
Exterior of the Kingdome from the north parking lot in 1996
Full nameKing County Stadium
Address201 South King Street
LocationSeattle, Washington, U.S.
Coordinates47°35′43″N 122°19′53″W / 47.59528°N 122.33139°W / 47.59528; -122.33139
Public transit King Street Station
Parking~1,100 spaces
OwnerKing County
OperatorKing County Department of Stadium Administration
Executive suites46
CapacityBaseball: 59,166
Football: 66,000
Basketball: 40,000
SurfaceAstroTurf
ScoreboardDiamond Vision
Construction
Broke groundNovember 2, 1972
OpenedMarch 27, 1976
ClosedJanuary 9, 2000
DemolishedMarch 26, 2000
Construction cost$67 million
($345 million in 2022 dollars[1])
ArchitectNaramore, Skilling & Praeger
Structural engineerSkilling, Helle, Christiansen & Robertson, Inc.[2]
General contractorDonald M. Drake Company (1972–74)
Peter Kiewit Sons Construction Company (1974–76)[3]
Tenants
Seattle Seahawks (NFL) (1976–1999)
Seattle Sounders (NASL) (1976–1983)
Seattle Mariners (MLB) (1977–1999)
Seattle SuperSonics (NBA) (1978–1985)
This 1996 map of the Pioneer Square-Skid Road Historic District shows the location of the Kingdome (at the lower right in the map).

The idea of constructing a covered stadium for a major league football or baseball team was first proposed to Seattle officials in 1959. Voters rejected separate measures to approve public funding for such a stadium in 1960 and 1966, but the outcome was different in 1968; King County voters approved the issue of $40 million in municipal bonds to construct the stadium. Construction began in 1972 and it opened in 1976 as the home of the Sounders and Seahawks.[9] The Mariners moved in the following year, and the SuperSonics moved in the year after that, only to move back to the Seattle Center Coliseum in 1985. The stadium hosted several major sports events, including the Soccer Bowl in August 1976, the Pro Bowl in January 1977, the Major League Baseball All-Star Game in July 1979, the NBA All-Star Game in 1987, and the NCAA Final Four in 1984, 1989, and 1995.

During the 1990s, the Seahawks' and Mariners' respective ownership groups began to question the suitability of the Kingdome as a venue for each team, threatening to relocate unless new, publicly funded stadiums were built. An issue was that neither team saw their shared tenancy as profitable; both teams also questioned the integrity of the stadium's roof as highlighted by the collapse of ceiling tiles onto the seating area before a scheduled Mariners game in 1994. As a result, public funding packages for new, purpose-built stadiums for the Mariners and Seahawks were respectively approved in 1995 and 1997.

The Mariners moved to Safeco Field, now known as T-Mobile Park, midway through the 1999 season, and the Seahawks temporarily moved to Husky Stadium after the 1999 season. On March 26, 2000, the Kingdome was demolished by implosion. The Seahawks' new stadium, now known as Lumen Field, was built on the site and opened in 2002. King County finally paid off the bonds used to build and repair the Kingdome in 2015, fifteen years after its demolition.[10]

Concept and construction Edit

In 1959, Seattle restaurateur David L. Cohn wrote a letter to the Seattle City Council suggesting the city needed a covered stadium for a major professional sports franchise.[11][12] A domed stadium was thought to be a must because of Seattle's frequent rain. At the time, the city had Husky Stadium and Sick's Stadium for college football and minor league baseball, respectively, but both were deemed inadequate for a major league team.[11]

 
Concept drawing of a floating stadium on the Seattle waterfront, 1963

In 1960, King County commissioners placed a $15 million bond issue measure on the ballot to fund construction of a stadium, but voters on November 8 defeated it with only 48 percent approval because of doubt the stadium could be built within that budget, and lack of a guarantee the city would have a team to play in the stadium.[11][13] By 1966, the National Football League and the American League were both considering granting the city an expansion franchise, and as a result, the King County Council placed another bond issue measure on the ballot for a September vote. While it received 51.5 percent approval, it did not reach the 60 percent required to proceed; the requirement was due to a 1932 initiative that mandated a supermajority for tax levies over 40 mills.[11][14][15]

In 1967, the American League granted Seattle an expansion franchise that would be known as the Seattle Pilots. The league clearly stated Sick's Stadium was not adequate as a major-league stadium, and stipulated that as a condition of being awarded the franchise, bonds had to be issued to fund construction of a domed stadium that had to be completed by 1970; additionally, the capacity at Sick's Stadium had to be expanded from 11,000 to 30,000 by Opening Day 1969, when the team was scheduled to begin playing. The Pilots were supposed to begin play in 1971 along with the Kansas City Royals. However, when Senator Stuart Symington of Missouri got wind of those plans, he demanded both teams begin play in 1969. The American League had birthed the Royals and Pilots as a result of the Kansas City Athletics moving to Oakland, and Symington would not accept the prospect of Kansas City waiting three years for baseball's return.[16]

On February 13, 1968, King County voters approved the issue of $40 million in bonds to fund construction of the "King County Multipurpose Domed Stadium" with 62 percent in favor; it was part of the Forward Thrust group of bond propositions that, among other items, had a regional rapid transit system rejected.[11][17] That year, a committee considered over 100 sites throughout Seattle and King County for the stadium; they unanimously decided the best site would be on the grounds of Seattle Center, site of the 1962 World's Fair. Community members decried the idea, claiming the committee was influenced by special interest groups.[14][18][19]

The Pilots began play as planned in 1969, but Sick's Stadium proved to be a problematic venue for fans, media, and visiting players alike. The Pilots only drew 677,000 fans that season, not nearly enough to break even. It soon became apparent that the Pilots would not survive long enough to move to their new stadium without new ownership. It was also obvious that the timetable for a new stadium would have to be significantly advanced, as Sick's Stadium was completely unsuitable even for temporary use. However, a petition by stadium opponents brought the dome project to a halt. The Pilots' ownership group ran out of money by the end of the season, and with the stadium plans in limbo, the team was forced to declare bankruptcy. Despite efforts by Seattle-area businessmen to buy the team as well as an attempt to keep the team in Seattle through the court system, the Pilots were sold to Milwaukee businessman Bud Selig, who relocated the team to Milwaukee and renamed it the Milwaukee Brewers a week before the start of the 1970 season.[14][20]

 
The stadium under construction circa 1973

The push to build the domed stadium continued despite the lack of a major league sports team to occupy it. In May 1970 voters rejected the proposal to build the stadium at Seattle Center.[19][21] From 1970 to 1972, the commission studied the feasibility and economic impact of building the stadium on King Street adjacent to Pioneer Square and the International District—a site that ranked at the bottom when the commission originally narrowed the field of possible sites in 1968.[19] This drew sharp opposition primarily from the International District community, which feared the impact of the stadium on neighborhood businesses located east of the site. The King Street site was approved 8–1 by the county council in late 1971,[22] and the groundbreaking ceremony in 1972 was held on November 2.[23] Several protesters attended the ceremony, disrupted the speakers, and at one point threw mud balls at them.[19][23]

In bidding for construction of the stadium, which had separate offers for the dome and the rest of the stadium, Donald M. Drake Construction Company of Portland, Oregon, was the winning contractor for both with respective bids of $28.9 million and $5.9 million. Peter Kiewit Sons Construction Company was the only other bidder, offering $30.57 million for the stadium and $5.8 million for the roof; the latter came with the caveat of the company using its own design consultant.[24] To help alleviate tension between the International District community and county officials, Drake emphasized the hiring of minorities, with minorities eventually representing 13 percent of the workers at the site; a community center and a shelter were also built in the neighborhood. However, the stadium's construction encountered numerous issues; in January 1973, six support beams for the roof were toppled as one or two of them buckled, bringing down the others in a domino effect. By January 1974, the stadium reached 50 percent completion; only reaching 60 percent completion in July, it was clear that Drake would not reach the December deadline at that point. It was also apparent that Drake was ill-prepared to work on a project with such scale, with numerous errors, delays, and short-staffing slowing down construction. Efforts to renegotiate the contract failed, and on November 22, Drake stopped work on the Kingdome. The county fired Drake on December 10, bringing in Kiewit to finish construction on the stadium.[3][25]

 
Exterior of the Kingdome in 1985.

On December 5, 1974, the NFL awarded Seattle an expansion franchise to occupy the new stadium; the team was later named the Seattle Seahawks.[11][26] Construction lasted another two years, and the stadium held an opening ceremony on March 27, 1976.[19][27] It hosted its first professional sporting event two weeks later on April 9, an exhibition soccer game between the Seattle Sounders and New York Cosmos of the NASL. It set a record for the largest soccer audience in North America at 58,120.[28] The stadium was finished at $20 million over budget, with part of the cost overrun covered by a $12.8 million out-of-court settlement in 1980 between the county and Drake's liability insurers.[29]

Surface Edit

Like virtually all other multi-purpose stadiums, the Kingdome featured AstroTurf artificial turf for its playing surface, with its baseball configuration featuring dirt sliding pits around each base.[30][31] When it was constructed, artificial turf was considered a must because the roof was likely to inhibit the growth of natural grass, like the Astrodome's roof.[32]

The AstroTurf surface was first replaced in July 1983 during the MLB All-Star break; Monsanto, the then-owner of AstroTurf, won the turf replacement contract over SuperTurf (then used by the Metrodome) with a bid of $1.2 million.[33][34] By request of the Mariners and Seahawks, it was replaced again in October and December 1990 at a cost of $2.56 million; the previous surface was sold off thereafter, with 25 rolls of it sold to the Tacoma Dome for $108,200.[35][36] A strip 40 feet by 4 inches was ripped off left field near second base during a field invasion by celebrating fans after the Mariners won the AL West tiebreaker game in 1995; it was replaced before the first Mariners home game in the ALDS.[37]

Before the 1990 replacement, the AstroTurf surface was converted from baseball to football configuration via the covering of the infield with turf strips; a one-piece surface was placed over the infield after the conclusion of the Mariners season.[38] The surface was attached together via both Velcro and Ziploc fasteners.[39] After the 1990 replacement, separate surfaces were installed for each team; the Seahawks specifically wanted a stiffer variation of AstroTurf. The replacement surfaces were attached together via zippers.[38]

The underlying base of the surface was asphalt, with the AstroTurf essentially consisting of a carpet on top of a pad with respective thicknesses of one-half inch and five-eights inch.[32] Lumps, holes, and ridges were also present in the surface along with gaps within its seams.[40] These factors combined to create a playing surface that was despised by both football and baseball players alike; after the 1998 season, a survey by the NFL Players Association found that 56.7 percent of Seahawks players rated the surface as "poor" or "fair", and was the worst-rated one in the AFC West.[40][41]

Injuries from playing at the Kingdome and its contemporaries occurred more often compared to stadiums with natural grass.[42] Of note, Seahawks running backs Sherman Smith and Curt Warner respectively suffered season-ending knee injuries in 1980 and 1984 during games at the Kingdome; additionally, the Kingdome's surface is partly blamed for Ken Griffey Jr.'s subsequent injuries and decline in performance after the Mariners traded him to the Cincinnati Reds at the end of the 1999 season.[43][44][45]

Football Edit

Seahawks Edit

The expansion Seattle Seahawks of the National Football League (NFL) played their first game ever on August 1, 1976, a preseason game against the San Francisco 49ers at the Kingdome in which they lost 27–20 before a crowd of 60,825.[46] The Seahawks' first regular season game was against the St. Louis Cardinals at the Kingdome on September 12; they were defeated 30-24 with 58,441 in attendance.[47] At the end of that season, the venue hosted the Pro Bowl, the NFL's all-star game, on January 17, 1977.[48]

The Seahawks hosted Monday Night Football games at the Kingdome twelve times in their history and were 9–3 in those games. The Seahawks and the Oakland/Los Angeles Raiders played five Monday Night games in the Dome in the 1980s with Seattle holding a 3–2 edge including a 37–0 blowout victory in 1986.[49] The next year, in 1987, Bo Jackson of the Los Angeles Raiders rushed for 221 yards, the most ever on MNF, and scored 2 touchdowns. One of his scores was a 91-yard touchdown and the other was a historic plowing into Seahawks high-profile rookie linebacker Brian "The Boz" Bosworth.

The Seahawks regularly sold out games at the Kingdome from its inception and throughout the 1980s; 117 consecutive regular-season home games were sold out between 1979 and 1993. However, after Ken Behring took over ownership of the team from the Nordstrom family in 1988, the team began to decline in performance; after winning the AFC West that year, it suffered a franchise-worst 2–14 record in 1992. Season ticket sales, which had reached 62,000 that year with a waiting list of 30,000, gradually decreased to 46,000 in 1995, with the team averaging 46,218 in attendance over five games at the Kingdome in 1994; as a result, the Seahawks began failing to sell out games, resulting in their blackout in the Seattle market. After the blackout of the October 24, 1993 game versus the New England Patriots, one more game was blacked out that year, with five games blacked out the following year; KING-TV, which as Seattle's NBC affiliate was the Seahawks' local broadcast home at the time, prevented further blackouts by purchasing all remaining unsold tickets for three games in 1993 and two games in 1994.[50]

In the Seahawks' heyday, the Kingdome was known as one of the loudest stadiums in the league. Opposing teams were known to practice with jet engine sounds blaring at full blast to prepare for the painfully high decibel levels typical of Seahawks games.[51] It was where Seahawks fans, who were long called "the 12th Man" and led the Seahawks to retire the number 12 in honor of them in 1984, made their reputation as one of the most ravenous fan bases in the NFL, a reputation that has carried over to what is now Lumen Field.[50] The Kingdome's reputation contributed to the NFL's 1989 vote in favor of enacting a rule penalizing home teams for excessive crowd noise; it was especially loathed by Seahawks fans during preseason games, with fan displeasure throughout the league leading commissioner Pete Rozelle to soften enforcement of the rule before the start of the regular season.[52] Raucous Seahawk fans at the Kingdome were also some of the earliest performers of The Wave.[53]

The city of Seattle made numerous bids to host the Super Bowl during the Seahawks' tenure at the Kingdome. However, despite five bids over 12 years, the Kingdome was never awarded the opportunity to host a Super Bowl; its closest chance was in 1989 for Super Bowl XXVI, which was awarded to the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome in Minneapolis, Minnesota.[54][55] In its 1982 bid for Super Bowl XIX, the Seattle City Council voted to give tax exemptions to the NFL if the league selected the Kingdome to host the game.[56]

The Seahawks played their final game at the Kingdome on January 9, 2000, suffering a first-round playoff loss to the Miami Dolphins in their first playoff appearance since the 1988 season. The Dolphins scored a fourth-quarter touchdown to win 20–17; it marked the first home playoff loss for the Seahawks as well as the first road playoff win in 28 years for the Dolphins.[57][58] It was the last NFL victory for Hall of Fame quarterback Dan Marino and head coach Jimmy Johnson, and it was also the last event the Kingdome ever hosted before its implosion.[59][60] The Seahawks had an overall record of 101–83 (.549) in the Kingdome, and were 2–1 in the postseason.[61]

Amateur Edit

College Edit

The first football (and college football by extension) game played in the Kingdome occurred just after it opened in 1976, when the Washington Huskies varsity team won 10–7 against a team of Husky alumni on May 1 before 20,470 fans.[62][63] The Huskies looked into temporarily renting the Kingdome for the 1987 season when the north grandstand of Husky Stadium collapsed during construction on February 25; however, the Kingdome was ultimately not needed as the grandstand was completed in time for the team's first home game against the Stanford Cardinal on September 5.[64][65]

The Kingdome also hosted a game between the Washington State Cougars and USC Trojans on October 9, 1976.[66] With 37,268 in attendance, USC running back Ricky Bell rushed for 346 yards and set the Pac-8 single-game rushing record; the Trojans won by nine points, 23–14.[67][68][69] In 1994, under then-new athletic director Rick Dickson, the Cougars flirted with the idea of hosting an additional home game at the Kingdome starting in 1997; however, the plan never came to fruition.[70]

In the late 1970s, the Kingdome hosted both instances of a Pacific-10 Conference all-star game called the Challenge Bowl; the bowl, sponsored by the Olympia Brewing Company, pitted an all-star team of Pac-10 players against a similar team from another conference. The Pac-10 went undefeated with a 27–20 victory (as the Pac-8) over the Big Ten on January 15, 1978, and a 36–23 victory over the Big Eight on January 13, 1979.[47]

During the same period, the University of Puget Sound Loggers and Pacific Lutheran University Lutes also faced off at the Kingdome twice; the Loggers won both contests, defeating the Lutes 23–21 on September 17, 1977, with 13,167 in attendance, and then defeating them again 27–14 on September 23, 1978, before a crowd of 8,329.[71][72] The 1977 game set a series attendance record at the time.[73]

Other levels Edit

The stadium also hosted the annual WIAA high school football state championships in an event called the Kingbowl from 1977 through 1994;[74][75] the title games were moved to the Tacoma Dome in nearby Tacoma in 1995.[76][77]

The Seattle and Tacoma Police Departments played a yearly game named the Bacon Bowl to raise money for charity from 1980 to 2005; the Kingdome hosted it from the beginning until 1982, then had a one-off in 1985 during a nine-year span in which the Tacoma Dome hosted the rest of the games. The Kingdome hosted the game again from 1992 to 1994 before it returned to the Tacoma Dome; the game came back for one final time in 1999 before the stadium was demolished.[78][79][80]

Baseball Edit

Shortly after the Pilots' departure for Milwaukee, the city of Seattle, King County, and the state of Washington sued the American League, claiming a breach of contract. The league agreed to grant Seattle another franchise in exchange for dropping the lawsuit, and the team that would later be known as the Seattle Mariners was born.[81]

The Mariners held their first game in franchise history at the Kingdome on April 6, 1977, as the visiting California Angels shut out the Mariners 7–0 in front of a sellout crowd of 57,762.[82][83] The first pitch was a strike thrown by the Mariners' Diego Seguí to Jerry Remy.[82][84][note 2] In the top of the first inning, Don Baylor registered the first hit at the stadium with a double that scored Remy, who had stolen second and third base after drawing a walk from Seguí.[82] The Mariners' first batter, Dave Collins, struck out; however, the next batter, José Báez, singled for the franchise's first ever hit.[82][86] The first home run at the venue was hit in the top of the third inning by Joe Rudi; designated hitter Juan Bernhardt scored the Mariners' first home run in their fifth game at the Kingdome on April 10.[82][87][88] The Mariners had their first win at the Kingdome two games after the opener (they were also shut out in their second game 2–0), defeating the Angels 7–6 on April 8 via a walk-off double from Larry Milbourne.[87][89] The venue hosted the All-Star Game on July 17, 1979.[90]

The Kingdome was somewhat problematic as a baseball venue. Foul territory was quite large, and seats in the upper deck as far as 617 feet (188 m) from home plate.[91] Part of the problem was that the Kingdome was not a multipurpose stadium in the truest sense. Instead, it was built as a football stadium that could convert into a baseball stadium. For instance, most fans in the outfield seats on the 300 level were unable to see parts of right and center field; these areas were not part of the football playing field.

 
Hosting the Kansas City Royals in July 1997

For most of the Mariners' first 18 years, their poor play (they did not have a winning season until 1991) combined with the Kingdome's design, led to poor attendance. Some writers and fans called it "the Tomb" (because of its gray concrete and lack of noise) and "Puget Puke."[91] After their inaugural home opener, the Mariners didn't have another sellout for the next 1,018 home games until their 1990 home opener on April 13.[81][92] At one point the Mariners covered seats in the upper decks in right and right-center with a tarp in order to make the stadium feel "less empty".[93] Additionally, the Kingdome's acoustics created problems for stadium announcers, who had to deal with significant echo issues.[94] However, when the team's fortunes began to change in the mid-1990s and they began drawing larger crowds, especially in the post-season, the noise created an electric atmosphere and gave the home team a distinct advantage similar to the effect on football games.[95] The average attendance of 22,064 in 1995 was the lowest in three years with the removal of nine home games for the season, but when put in perspective, it was still higher compared to any of the Mariners' first 14 seasons.[96]

Despite its cavernous interior, the Kingdome's field dimensions were relatively small. It had a reputation as a hitter's park, especially in the 1990s when Ken Griffey Jr., Edgar Martínez, Jay Buhner, Alex Rodriguez, and other sluggers played there.[97][98]

The large number of in-play objects—speakers, roof support wires and streamers—contributed to an "arena baseball" feel.[99] The Kingdome was somewhat improved in 1982 with the addition of a 23-foot (7.0 m) wall in right field nicknamed the "Walla Walla" (after the city in southeastern Washington); a nearly $100,000 Daktronics out-of-town scoreboard was later installed on it in 1990.[83][100][101] In 1990 and 1991, the moving of home plate closer to the backstop, the addition of box seats down the third base line and the removal of a few rows of seats in left field reduced foul territory and made the outfield dimensions longer and asymmetrical.[93][102]

In its early years, the outfield was symmetrical with a uniform wall height: deep in center, and short elsewhere. For the All-Star Game in 1979, center field was 410 feet (120 m), power alleys were 357 feet (109 m), and the foul lines were 316 feet (96 m);[90] the unpadded wall was green with a top yellow stripe, approximately twelve feet (3.7 m) in height and did not have the power alley distances listed on it.[103] Down the lines, the distance was also listed in fathoms (52.7 fm), presumably to maintain a nautical theme in line with the team name; however, this practice was ditched after the 1980 season.[83] Like the Kingdome's contemporaries, the bullpens were located in foul territory adjacent to the baselines and the stands.[104][105]

The longest game in the Kingdome took place on July 30, 1998, when the Cleveland Indians defeated the Mariners 9–8 in 17 innings via a three-run homer from Manny Ramirez off Bob Wells; Paul Shuey staved off a comeback by the Mariners in the bottom of the inning to end the game the next morning after five hours and 23 minutes.[106][107]

The most noteworthy baseball game in the Kingdome's history took place on October 8, 1995; in the rubber game of the ALDS, the Mariners defeated the New York Yankees 6–5 in 11 innings in front of 57,411 raucous fans. In the bottom of the 11th, Martinez doubled to left, sending Joey Cora and Griffey home with the winning runs and vaulting the Mariners into the ALCS for the first time in franchise history.[81]

On May 2, 1996, a game at the Kingdome between the Mariners and the Cleveland Indians was suspended in the bottom of the seventh inning because of a minor earthquake. The earthquake, estimated at a magnitude of 5.3 to 5.4, occurred during a pitching change as Indians' pitcher Orel Hershiser was walking off the mound following a home run by Edgar Martínez.[108][109] After an inspection by engineers, the game was continued the next evening, resulting in a 6-4 win for the Indians.[110]

Seguí, who retired from professional baseball after the 1977 season, was invited by the Mariners to throw the ceremonial last pitch after the final Mariners game at the Kingdome in 1999. However, while they were able to make the tickets and reservations for Seguí, a payment mix-up prevented him from boarding the flight out of Kansas City International Airport on the day of the game; the incident made him irate such that he refused to visit Seattle again until 2012, when he was invited as part of the Mariners' 35th anniversary celebration.[111] Despite the disappointment from Seguí's son, then-Mariners first baseman David Segui, the ceremony went on as planned; David's son, then-seven-year-old Cory Segui, threw the last pitch to Bob Stinson, who was the Mariners' catcher in their first game.[112]

In 1989, Griffey Jr. hit a home run in his first-ever plate appearance at the Kingdome on April 10. On June 27, 1999, Griffey Jr. hit the last home run ever at the Kingdome against the Texas Rangers.[113] The Mariners played 1,755 games at the Kingdome, compiling an overall home record of 852–903 (.485) during their 22½-season tenure there.[114]

Basketball Edit

SuperSonics Edit

 
In 1980, the Seattle SuperSonics total attendance exceeded that of all other sports or shows held in the Kingdome.

Besides the Mariners and Seahawks, the stadium also hosted the Seattle SuperSonics of the National Basketball Association (NBA) for seven seasons. The SuperSonics, having previously played at the Seattle Center Coliseum, announced on July 29, 1977, that they intended to move into the Kingdome for the 1978–79 season after the expiration of their contract with the city of Seattle, the owner of the Coliseum; the team pushed for a move to the Kingdome after the city balked at a $30 million plan to expand the Coliseum to 20,000 seats the previous year.[115] On August 22, the King County Council voted 7–2 to approve a 17-year lease with the SuperSonics, with the agreement signed the following day.[116] The following week, the council unanimously voted on August 29 to spend $1.5 million on improvements to the Kingdome in preparation for the team; the team would pay the same amount over the first seven years as part of the agreement.[117] Additional terms of the agreement had the SuperSonics pay the county 10 percent of ticket sale proceeds (not including admissions taxes) and $2,539 in personnel costs per game; the county additionally kept all game concession and parking revenue.[115] On the same day as the agreement signing, longtime Kingdome critic Frank Ruano filed a referendum petition in an attempt to halt the move, but he announced on September 17 that he would withdraw support from the petition for lack of support.[116][118]

While the SuperSonics had played a few games at the Kingdome over the previous two seasons, their full-time tenancy required the addition of 5,000 portable stadium seats added onto the floor of the arena as well as additional scoreboards and a new basketball court.[119][120] The center circle of the court was positioned over first base, with the court itself laid parallel and adjacent to the right-field seats; the portable seats were positioned across the court with one end hovering over home plate.[121]

The first SuperSonics game in the Kingdome under the agreement was an exhibition game versus the Portland Trail Blazers on September 22, 1978.[122] A few weeks later, a crowd of 15,219 watched as the SuperSonics defeated the Chicago Bulls, 104–86, on October 14 in their first regular-season game as a tenant.[123] Captain Fred Brown and leading scorer Gus Williams helped lead the team to their first and only championship that season, defeating the Washington Bullets in the Finals and avenging their Finals loss to them the previous season.[124] At the time, the Kingdome was known in the NBA for being the noisiest arena for basketball and for having the largest crowds, with stadium vendor Bill Scott (a.k.a. Bill the Beerman) taking the duties as cheerleader.[125][126]

In the 1979–80 season, the SuperSonics set an NBA record average attendance of 21,725 fans per game (since broken).[127][128] The SuperSonics set the NBA single-game playoff attendance record at 39,457 during Game 4 of the 1978 NBA Finals; they set it again on April 15, 1980, during a conference semifinal game against the Milwaukee Bucks with an attendance record of 40,172 (also since broken).[128][129][130] The Kingdome regular season, single-game attendance record of 38,067 was set on November 22, 1991, when the SuperSonics faced the Chicago Bulls.[131]

While leaving a SuperSonics game on February 16, 1983, a 21-year-old man from Olympia fell off a ramp and plunged 47 feet to his death; this was despite the installation of signs warning about the chest-level barriers the previous year.[132]

Logistics would be a problem throughout the team's tenure at the Kingdome because the Seahawks and Mariners had scheduling priority over them, especially during the playoffs when the Mariners were playing there at the same time in the spring.[133] As part of the 1977 agreement, King County agreed to pay the SuperSonics $15,000 for each game (up to five) that was moved elsewhere because of booking issues.[115] Even then, the scheduling priority meant that the SuperSonics would only play home playoff games at the Kingdome while the Mariners were on the road, with most of the games played at the Coliseum; the team even had to use Hec Edmundson Pavilion at the University of Washington for a few games when both the Kingdome and the Coliseum were unavailable.[134]

Along with the scheduling issues, as with other multipurpose stadiums used by the NBA the Kingdome proved itself to be a less-than-ideal venue for basketball.[133][135][136] Although the Kingdome's capacity allowed the SuperSonics to set attendance records, the vast space it afforded meant that it did not have the intimate environment of a dedicated arena; furthermore, fans were displeased about the poor sight lines and cold temperatures in the Kingdome. All these factors, plus dwindling attendance due to poor team performance towards the end of their tenancy at the Kingdome, led SuperSonics general manager Zollie Volchok to sign a 10-year contract with the city of Seattle in 1983, agreeing to have the team move back to the Coliseum after the 1984–85 season in exchange for upgrades there.[133]

The SuperSonics faced the Phoenix Suns at the Kingdome on April 7, 1985, in their final game as a regular tenant, losing 110–125 with 5,672 in attendance.[137] However, exemplifying the scheduling issues, it was not their final home game of the season; the SuperSonics were forced to play at the Tacoma Dome on April 11 because the Mariners hosted the Oakland Athletics at the Kingdome that day.[133] By that point, the SuperSonics had an average attendance of 7,399, failing to surpass 10,000 seats sold in 29 of 37 games held at the Kingdome in their final season there.[138]

Despite calling the Coliseum home again, the SuperSonics still played occasionally at the Kingdome over the next few years when large crowds were anticipated; as such, the SuperSonics hosted the 1987 NBA All-Star Game there, having previously hosted the 1974 game at the Coliseum before the Kingdome opened.[139][140][141] However, SuperSonics owner Barry Ackerley, who had bought the team from Sam Schulman in October 1983 after the Coliseum deal was signed, started seeking a new arena for them in 1989; team president Bob Whitsitt claimed that the Coliseum was outdated and leaking.[133][142][143] Ackerley proposed to build a new arena south of the Kingdome (where T-Mobile Park stands today[144]), but the plan was initially rejected by King County because of objections from the Seahawks and Mariners over inadequate parking.[145] The plan was eventually approved by the Seattle City Council 7–1 on May 30, 1990, but it was ultimately scrapped the following year on June 26 because of issues in financing it; as a compromise measure, the Coliseum was rebuilt as KeyArena during the 1994–95 season, with the SuperSonics playing home games at the Tacoma Dome instead of the closer Kingdome in the meantime.[146][147][148] The SuperSonics played at KeyArena until they were controversially relocated to Oklahoma City by owner Clay Bennett after the 2007–08 season.[149]

The SuperSonics played 303 games at the Kingdome in total, including 14 playoff games; they held an overall record of 208–95 (.686) and a playoff record of 8–6 (.571) at the stadium. Of those games, 20 of them had attendances of 30,000 or more.[138]

College Edit

The first men's college basketball game at the Kingdome was held on January 9, 1984, when the Washington Huskies defeated the Notre Dame Fighting Irish, 63–61, in the second overtime in front of 7,466 fans.[150][138] The Huskies held their only other basketball game at the Kingdome more than a decade later, defeating the Old Dominion Monarchs 71–61 on December 22, 1994, with 4,187 in attendance.[151][138]

The only women's basketball game at the Kingdome was held on December 6, 1979, when the Seattle Chieftains were crushed by the Soviet national team, 45–135, before 7,239 spectators.[152][138]

Final Four Edit

The NCAA Final Four of men's college basketball was held three times at the Kingdome, with the stadium hosting the 1984, 1989, and 1995 editions. The 1984 championship game saw the Georgetown Hoyas defeat the Houston Cougars, 84–75.[153] Meanwhile, the 1989 championship game had the Michigan Wolverines beat the Seton Hall Pirates, 80–79, in overtime because of a controversial last-second foul call against the Pirates.[154] Finally, with the 1995 championship game, the UCLA Bruins defeated the Arkansas Razorbacks, 89–78, to win their first championship since the retirement of coach John Wooden twenty years earlier in 1975.[155]

The Kingdome was not the first venue in Seattle to host the Final Four; Hec Edmundson Pavilion had previously hosted it in 1949 and 1952. However, the Kingdome is credited with helping shape the Final Four into an event with a stature comparable to that of the Super Bowl because of its large capacity. It was the only such capable venue on the West Coast of the United States; the last time a non-Seattle West Coast site hosted the game was when the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena hosted it in 1972. The 1995 edition was the last time that Seattle hosted a Final Four, and it will likely remain that way for the foreseeable future since the Kingdome's successors were not designed with a controlled environment in mind; it also remains the last time that the Final Four was held on the West Coast.[156] The Final Four was not held again in the Western United States until 2017, when University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, hosted it for the Phoenix area.[157][158]

Other Edit

On February 18, 1979, the Harlem Globetrotters held an exhibition game at the Kingdome with close to 23,000 in attendance, of which around 3,500 were under 12 years old.[159]

As a result of the boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics by the United States, the U.S. Olympic team faced off against a squad of NBA players in a six-game exhibition tournament called the "Gold Medal Series" that June. On June 20, the NBA All-Stars defeated the U.S. Olympic team, 78–76, before a crowd of 10,902; it was the only victory by the NBA squad in the tournament.[160][161]

The Washington Interscholastic Activities Association (WIAA) held their 3A and 4A high school basketball state tournament five times at the Kingdome between 1993 and 1999. The boys' and girls' games were held simultaneously until the championship, at which point they took turns playing on a single court.[138]

Soccer Edit

Sounders Edit

The Seattle Sounders of the North American Soccer League (NASL) were the first tenant to move into the Kingdome upon its opening, having played at Memorial Stadium for their first two seasons.[162] As a result, they held the honor of hosting the first sporting event at the Kingdome with an exhibition game versus the New York Cosmos on April 9, 1976; the Cosmos defeated them 3–1 with 58,128 fans in attendance. Highlighting the secondary treatment of the Sounders, about 5,000 seats were not yet installed when the game occurred.[163][164][165] Just weeks later, they hosted their first regular-season game in the Kingdome on April 26, defeating the Portland Timbers 1–0 via a Geoff Hurst penalty kick in the second overtime before 24,983 spectators.[166]

The largest crowd to attend a Sounders match, regular or postseason, occurred on August 25, 1977, when 56,256 spectators watched as they defeated the Los Angeles Aztecs 1–0 in the second game of the Pacific Conference Final to advance to their first Soccer Bowl.[167] The Sounders' regular-season attendance record was set on August 9, 1980, when the Cosmos defeated them 1–0 in front of 49,606 fans.[168] Overall, the team drew an average attendance of 20,183 from 1975 to 1982, peaking in the 1980 season with an average attendance of 24,247.[169][170]

Along with traditional soccer, the Sounders participated in NASL indoor soccer for the 1980–81 and 1981–82 seasons.[171][172] However, the 1983 outdoor season proved to be a dire one for the Sounders; with the team's front office heavily cutting costly foreign players from the roster, the team suffered their worst season ever performance-wise, resulting in a record low average attendance of 8,181.[170] That season additionally saw the smallest crowd to attend a Sounders game, with only 4,270 spectators on hand to witness their 3–1 victory over the Tulsa Roughnecks on July 27.[170] With the cuts not enough to keep the team afloat, the owners ultimately elected to fold it that year on September 6; their final home game was a 3–2 victory over the San Diego Sockers on August 25 with 7,331 fans in attendance.[173][174]

College Edit

The Kingdome hosted the NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship Finals twice in consecutive years. The final on December 17, 1984, featured the Clemson Tigers, coached by Dr. I. M. Ibrahim, and defending national champion Indiana Hoosiers, headed by coach Jerry Yeagley; 7,926 spectators watched as the Tigers won 2–1 in regulation to bring home their first national championship in soccer and deny the Hoosiers a third straight title.[175] A year later, on December 14, 1985, a crowd of 5,986 watched as the UCLA Bruins defeated the American Eagles 1–0 after eight overtime periods to win their first national soccer championship; Bruin coach Sigi Schmid went on to coach the Seattle Sounders FC of Major League Soccer (MLS), a phoenix club of the NASL Sounders, from its inaugural season in 2009 to 2016.[176][177]

Other professional games Edit

A game of the 1976 U.S.A. Bicentennial Cup tournament was held at the Kingdome on May 28, with Brazil defeating Team America 2–0 before 20,245 spectators.[178]

The Kingdome also hosted the NASL's championship game, the Soccer Bowl, between the Minnesota Kicks and the Toronto Metros-Croatia on August 28, 1976; the Metros-Croatia defeated the Kicks 3–0 before a crowd of 25,765, setting an NASL championship attendance record at the time.[179][180]

A CONCACAF Championship qualifier for the 1978 FIFA World Cup was hosted at the Kingdome on October 20, 1976; the game, which saw the United States defeat Canada 2–0 before a crowd of 17,675, was the first instance of a World Cup qualifier that was held indoors.[181][182]

A doubleheader featuring both the U.S. Olympic and national squads was held at the Kingdome on February 3, 1979.[183] The U.S. Olympic team defeated the Canadian Olympic team 2–0 in the first game, while the Soviet national team defeated the U.S. national team 3–1 in the second game; 13,317 spectators were present for both games.[184]

The Kingdome was additionally considered in Seattle's bid to be a host city for the 1994 FIFA World Cup, but it was rejected in favor of Husky Stadium because of concerns over its indoor environment and its turf; the bid ultimately failed in part because of apprehension from the University of Washington.[185]

Other events Edit

Upon its opening, the Kingdome served as one of the main convention centers in Seattle alongside the Seattle Center Coliseum.[186] During preliminary studies for the then-proposed Washington State Convention Center (now the Seattle Convention Center) in the early 1980s, a proposal to build it on the stadium's northern parking lot was floated, but it was never seriously considered and ultimately rejected by the convention center board in favor of building it in the Downtown area.[187][188]

The largest crowd to attend a single event in the Kingdome came early, during an eight-day Billy Graham crusade in 1976. The Friday night edition on May 14 drew 74,000 and featured singer Johnny Cash; 5,000 were turned away.[19][165][189][190] The stadium was also part of Seattle's bid to host the 1988 Republican National Convention, but it ultimately failed because of a scheduling conflict with the Mariners.[191]

Country singer CW McCall performed 8 shows during the 4-day Custom Van, Truck, 4-Wheel Drive and Motorcycle Show, March 17–20, 1977. [192]

The Kingdome hosted a round of the AMA Supercross Championship from 1978 to 1999.[193][194]

Concerts Edit

Numerous rock concerts were held in the venue, despite significant echo and sound delay problems attributable to the structure's cavernous size.[195]

Date Artist Opening act(s) Tour / Concert name Attendance Revenue Notes
June 10, 1976 Wings Wings Over America Tour 67,053 $536,424 The concert set the national indoor attendance record for a single act.[196] It also marked the first time Paul McCartney had toured America since The Beatles stopped touring in 1966.[109] The performance was filmed and included in the concert movie Rockshow.[197]
August 6, 1976 Eagles Linda Ronstadt
JD Souther
48,843 $398,744 [198]
September 3, 1976 Aerosmith Jeff Beck
Rick Derringer
Rocks Tour 51,091 $422,698 [199]
June 27, 1977 Peter Frampton Foghat
J. Geils Band
Blondie Chaplin
- 39,549 [200]
July 17, 1977 Led Zeppelin North American Tour 1977 68,954 The performance is available on VOIO and ROIO.[109][201]
October 14, 1981 The Rolling Stones Greg Kihn Band
J. Geils Band
American Tour 1981 69,132 [201][202]
October 15, 1981 68,028 Before the concert, a 16-year-old girl from Renton fell backward from a concrete guard rail at the outside 200-level ramp and plunged fifty feet (15 m) onto a loading area; she died at Harborview Medical Center despite medics immediately rushing her there.[203][204][205]
July 23, 1982 Bryan Adams
Joan Jett and the Blackhearts
Blue Öyster Cult
Loverboy
Foreigner
The Rock and Roll Grand Slam 1982 38,201 / 70,000 $635,352 [206]
October 20, 1982 The Who The Clash
T Bone Burnett
The Who Tour 1982 55,217 [195][207]
May 22, 1983 The Beach Boys 37,807 $320,000 The concert followed a Mariners game.[208][209]
July 15, 1987 Madonna Level 42
Bhundu Boys
Hue and Cry
Who's That Girl World Tour 30,000 [195][210]
December 8, 1987 Pink Floyd A Momentary Lapse of Reason Tour 33,700 / 40,000 $710,382 [211]
July 27, 1988 Van Halen
Scorpions
Metallica
Dokken
Kingdom Come
Monsters of Rock 37,000 While Scorpions was on stage, lead singer Klaus Meine was hit in the throat by a camera thrown out of the audience. He ranted for around five minutes about having respect for the bands, then did one more song with the band before they left the stage.[109][212]
March 29, 1990 Paul McCartney The Paul McCartney World Tour 50,000 [195][213]
September 6, 1990 New Kids on The Block Perfect Gentlemen
Rick Wes
The Magic Summer Tour 42,929 / 52,619 $1,015,300 [214]
October 6, 1992 Guns N' Roses
Metallica
Motörhead Guns N' Roses/Metallica Stadium Tour 37,226 / 40,000 $1,023,715 [215]
December 15, 1994 The Rolling Stones Spin Doctors Voodoo Lounge Tour 49,303 / 49,303 $2,311,900 [216]
November 28, 1997 The Rolling Stones Third Eye Blind Bridges to Babylon Tour 42,258 / 42,258 $2,411,261 [217]
December 12, 1997 U2 Smash Mouth PopMart Tour 30,260 / 35,000 $1,539,105 [217]

Final years Edit

By the 1990s, multi-purpose stadiums fell out of favor with the public, and the Kingdome's suitability as an NFL and MLB venue came into doubt as a result. Neither the Seahawks' nor the Mariners' respective ownership groups saw the shared stadium arrangement as economically feasible because the Kingdome was unable to meet the needs of both tenants; they also noted the lack of revenue-generating luxury suites prominent in newer stadiums.[11][218] After several years of threats to relocate the Mariners because of poor attendance and revenue, then-owner Jeff Smulyan put the team up for sale on December 6, 1991; he subsequently received approval by MLB to sell the team to an ownership group led by Nintendo president Hiroshi Yamauchi on June 10, 1992.[219] Almost immediately, the new ownership group began campaigning with local and state governments to secure public funding for a new baseball-only stadium. In March 1994, King County Executive Gary Locke appointed a task force to study the need for a baseball-only stadium.[220]

1994 ceiling collapse Edit

The Kingdome's roof had been problematic from the beginning because of a design flaw. With the stadium's limited budget compared to its contemporaries, its architects had the roof's acoustic ceiling tiles serve a dual purpose as forms to pour concrete over for the roof sections. They were firmly placed via six metal clips on their edges, but the effectiveness of the clips was weakened as moisture from the polyurethane insulation accumulated in the tiles because it lacked proper water vapor management. As a result, leaks were discovered in the roof three months before the stadium opened, and several attempts at repairs made the situation worse or were quickly undone.[221]

In 1993, the county decided to strip off the outer roof coating and replace it with a special coating. Sandblasting failed to strip the old roof material off, and the contractor changed its method to pressure washing. This pressure-washing resulted in water seepage through the roof, and on July 19, 1994, four 26-pound (12 kg), waterlogged acoustic ceiling tiles fell into the seating area. The tiles fell while the Mariners were on the field preparing for a scheduled game against the Baltimore Orioles, a half-hour before the gates were to open for fans to enter the stadium. As a result, the Kingdome was closed for repairs.[221][222]

The Mariners were forced to play the last 20 games of the 1994 season on the road after the players' union vetoed playing the "home" games at Cheney Stadium in Tacoma, BC Place Stadium in Vancouver, British Columbia, or a neutral site because the union believed that its members should play only in major-league venues. The extended road trip could have lasted over two months, but it was shortened because of the 1994–95 Major League Baseball strike, which began on August 12 and ended up canceling the remainder of the 1994 MLB season; the strike also resulted in a delay to the start of the 1995 season. The Seahawks had to play both their two preseason home games and their first three regular-season home games of the 1994 season at nearby Husky Stadium.[222]

The Kingdome held a reopening ceremony the weekend of November 4–6, 1994, which culminated with the Seahawks returning to the stadium for a regular-season game against the Cincinnati Bengals.[223] Repairing the roof ultimately cost US$51 million, and two construction workers lost their lives in a crane accident on August 17 during the repair. The incident also motivated plans to replace the stadium.[222]

Replacement Edit

 
The Kingdome imploding in March 2000

On September 19, 1995, King County voters defeated a ballot measure that would have funded the construction of a new baseball-only stadium for the Mariners. However, the following month, the Mariners made it to the MLB postseason for the first time and, on October 8, defeated the New York Yankees in the decisive fifth game of the 1995 ALDS on the heels of a walk-off game-winning double hit by Edgar Martínez. The Mariners' postseason run demonstrated that there was a fan base in Seattle that wanted the team to stay in town, and as a result, the Washington State Legislature approved a separate funding package for a new stadium on October 14.[218][81][224]

In January 1996, Seahawks owner Ken Behring announced he was moving the team to Los Angeles and the team would play at Anaheim Stadium, which had recently been vacated as a football venue when the Los Angeles Rams moved to St. Louis. His rationale for the decision included unfounded safety concerns surrounding the seismic stability of the Kingdome. Behring went so far as to relocate team headquarters to Anaheim, California, but his plans were defeated when lawyers found out that the Seahawks could not break their lease on the Kingdome until 2005. As a result, Behring tried to sell the team. He found a potential buyer in Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, who stipulated that a new publicly funded stadium had to be built as a condition of his purchase of the team.[225] Allen funded a special election held on June 17, 1997, that featured a measure that would allocate public funding for a new stadium for the Seahawks on the Kingdome site. The measure passed, Allen officially purchased the team, and the Kingdome's fate was sealed.[226][227]

Despite the intention of the Mariners to start playing at their new home at the beginning of the 1999 season, construction delays meant that installation of its retractable roof would not occur on time, leading to another sale threat by the team's owners.[228] However, the team eventually agreed to play at the Kingdome from the start of the season until after the All-Star Game, with construction on the new home starting on March 8, 1997.[229][230] Two years later, a sold-out crowd of 56,530 watched as the Mariners defeated the Texas Rangers 5–2 in their final game at the Kingdome on June 27, 1999; they played their first game at their new home, Safeco Field, nearly three weeks later on July 15.[218][231][232]

Meanwhile, the Seahawks temporarily relocated to Husky Stadium for two seasons following the 1999 season.[231] To make way for construction of their new stadium, the Kingdome was stripped down and prepared for demolition. During the process, a security incident occurred on February 21, 2000, when a skateboarder disguised himself as a construction worker, climbed up onto the roof, and skated on it with two friends filming him on the nearby Alaskan Way Viaduct; demolition crews were unimpressed by the incident and implemented tighter security measures in response.[233][234] On the morning of March 26, 2000 at 8:30 AM, the Kingdome was demolished by Controlled Demolition, Inc. via implosion, just one day short of 24 years after the stadium's opening; it set a record recognized by Guinness World Records for the largest building, by volume, ever by implosion.[235] The Kingdome was the first large, domed stadium to be demolished in the United States; its demolition was also the first live event covered by ESPN Classic.[236][237] The new stadium, Seahawks Stadium, eventually opened on July 20, 2002, in time for the beginning of the NFL season that year.[226]

The Kingdome was demolished before the debt issued to finance its construction was fully paid, and as of September 2010, residents of King County were still responsible for more than $80 million in debt on the demolished stadium.[238][239] The debt was retired on March 2015, nine months ahead of the original bond maturity and 15 years after the stadium's demolition. The 2% of the 15.6% hotel/motel tax earmarked for the Kingdome debt no longer needed went instead to the county's 4Culture program for arts, heritage, and preservation.[10]

Seating capacity Edit

In popular culture Edit

Because of its versatility and its prominent position in the Seattle skyline for close to a quarter-century, the Kingdome was featured in numerous forms of media during and after its existence. On television, it served as the backdrop for a rescue in the 1978 TV movie "Most Deadly Passage" of NBC's Emergency! series, which featured the work of Seattle Medic One paramedics.[245] It was also mentioned in 1992 with the airing of "Crushed", the sixteenth episode of the fifth season of ABC sitcom Full House; in the episode, guest star Tommy Page boasted to Jesse Katsopolis about playing there.[246] The Kingdome was mentioned again in 1998 during the sixth season of NBC sitcom Frasier, which was set in Seattle. In the sixth episode, "Secret Admirer", Martin describes Daphne's frustrating driving that repeatedly takes them right into various traffic delays, ending with them encountering traffic from the Kingdome.[247] Furthermore, the Kingdome's demolition was featured on The History Channel's Modern Marvels series with their "Concrete" episode that first aired on May 31, 2000.[248]

The Kingdome was not limited to just television mentions; numerous songs mentioned it in their lyrics. Rock band Foo Fighters mentioned it in the refrain of "New Way Home", which was featured on their 1997 album, The Colour and the Shape.[249] Rapper Macklemore also mentioned the Kingdome in "My Oh My", a 2011 song that paid tribute to Dave Niehaus, the longtime play-by-play announcer of the Mariners who had recently died; in it, he talks about growing up in Seattle and going to the Kingdome. The song mentions the Double in the Mariners–Yankees 1995 ALDS, and its accompanying music video also contains footage of the Kingdome's demolition.[250][251][252]

With the rise of 3D computer graphics, video games started to depict the Kingdome as well. The Gran Turismo series of racing games on the PlayStation line of consoles featured the Kingdome in the Seattle Circuit race track, a street circuit based on the roads of Seattle.[253] Seattle Circuit is featured in Gran Turismo 2, Gran Turismo 3: A-Spec, Gran Turismo 4, Tourist Trophy, and Gran Turismo PSP. Despite the Kingdome's demolition occurring before the game was released, Gran Turismo 3: A-Spec still featured it in the track.[254] The Kingdome also made an appearance in the 2007 RTS game World in Conflict, in which it was destroyed by Soviet artillery during a Soviet invasion of Seattle in an alternate timeline.[255]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ It was also legally known as the King County Multipurpose Domed Stadium, the King County Multipurpose Stadium, and the King County Domed Stadium.[5][6]
  2. ^ Incidentally, Seguí was a relief pitcher for the Pilots in their first game when they faced the Angels at Anaheim Stadium on April 8, 1969.[85]

References Edit

  1. ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved May 28, 2023.
  2. ^ "King County, Department of Stadium Administration, Domed Stadium, Pioneer Square, Seattle, WA". Pacific Coast Architecture Database. University of Washington. Retrieved October 28, 2012.
  3. ^ a b Ledbetter, Les (December 5, 1977). "Seattle Stadium Suit a Legal Test on Cost Overruns". The New York Times. p. 18. Retrieved February 24, 2021.
  4. ^ "AN ORDINANCE relating to the multi-purpose public stadium specified in King County Resolution No. 34567; providing a name therefore.". Ordinance No. 2483 of August 25, 1975 (PDF). King County Council.
  5. ^ "Name". King County Code Title 22 (Stadium), Section No. 4 of March 26, 2012. King County Council.
  6. ^ Macintosh, Heather (January 1, 2001). "Kingdome opens to a crowd of 54,000 on March 27, 1976". HistoryLink. Retrieved April 3, 2010.
  7. ^ Upchurch, Michael (July 22, 2010). "Seattle's slightly amphibious Sodo subject of new photo-history". The Seattle Times. Retrieved March 17, 2021.
  8. ^ . King County. March 27, 2000. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  9. ^ Baker, Tony (December 10, 1976). "Seattle's own Cardiac Hill?". Lewiston Morning Tribune. Associated Press. p. 3B.
  10. ^ a b Baker, Geoff (March 26, 2015). . The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved July 11, 2015.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Crowley, Walt (February 2, 2006). "National Football League awards Seattle a franchise for future Seahawks on December 5, 1974". HistoryLink.org. Retrieved March 15, 2011.
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  13. ^ Mullins 2013, pp. 26–27
  14. ^ a b c Mullins, William H. (2009). "Not Quite Big League: The Pilots and Seattle in the 1960s". Pacific Northwest Quarterly. 100 (3): 120–133. ISSN 0030-8803. JSTOR 40492203. OCLC 2392232.
  15. ^ Mullins 2013, pp. 46–47
  16. ^ Mullins 2013, pp. 52–58
  17. ^ Mullins 2013, pp. 85–86
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  21. ^ "Voters in Seattle reject proposals". Spokesman-Review. Associated Press. May 20, 1970. p. 1 – via Google News.
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  24. ^ Mullins 2013, p. 253
  25. ^ Mullins 2013, pp. 256–261
  26. ^ "NFL selects Seattle group". Spokane Daily Chronicle. Associated Press. December 5, 1974. p. 49 – via Google News.
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  28. ^ "Huge crowd views Pele". Spokane Daily Chronicle. Associated Press. April 10, 1976. p. 10 – via Google News.
  29. ^ Mullins 2013, p. 263
  30. ^ Divish, Ryan (March 17, 2019). "'The slowest surface I've ever seen': Tokyo Dome turf yet another adjustment for Mariners in Japan". The Seattle Times. Retrieved April 1, 2021.
  31. ^ Moore, Jack (July 2, 2015). "Throwback Thursday: Cincinnati's Riverfront Stadium And The Era Of Multipurpose Mistakes". Vice. Retrieved April 1, 2021.
  32. ^ a b Farrey, Tom (November 14, 1991). "A Return To Football's Grass Roots? -- Artificial Turf May Not Make Sense, Even Here". The Seattle Times. Retrieved April 1, 2021.
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  40. ^ a b Kelley, Steve (September 8, 1984). "Necessary evil: Kingdome's 'chamber of horrors' artificial surface needs improving". The Seattle Times. p. C1. Retrieved May 22, 2021 – via NewsBank.
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  42. ^ Underwood, John (August 12, 1985). "Just An Awful Toll". Sports Illustrated. Time Inc. Retrieved April 1, 2021.
  43. ^ Lyons, Gil (September 5, 1984). "Knox says Curt's skills, not Astroturf, caused injury". The Seattle Times. p. E1. Retrieved May 22, 2021 – via NewsBank.
  44. ^ Lyons, Gil (September 23, 1980). "Hawks' Smith out for season with knee injury". The Seattle Times. p. D1. Retrieved May 22, 2021 – via NewsBank.
  45. ^ "Skip the what-ifs, and celebrate what Ken Griffey Jr. is on the verge of doing". The Seattle Times. June 3, 2008. Retrieved April 1, 2021.
  46. ^ Baker, Tony (August 2, 1976). "Seahawks lose opening game". Spokane Daily Chronicle. Associated Press. p. 15.
  47. ^ a b Hill, Craig (September 12, 2016). "Remembering Kingdome football, 40 years after first Seahawks game". The News Tribune. Retrieved March 19, 2021.
  48. ^ "Pro battle of pride set in Dome tonight". Spokane Daily Chronicle. January 17, 1977. p. 15.
  49. ^ "All Matchups, Seattle Seahawks vs. Las Vegas/LA/Oakland Raiders". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Sports Reference. Retrieved April 14, 2021.
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Bibliography Edit

  • Mullins, William H. (2013). Becoming Big League: Seattle, the Pilots, and Stadium Politics. Seattle: University of Washington Press. ISBN 978-0-295-99425-3. Retrieved March 26, 2021 – via Google Books.

External links Edit

  • at the Wayback Machine (archived October 22, 1999)
  • The Story behind the implosion of The Seattle Kingdome
  • Kingdome: The Controversial Birth of a Seattle Icon (1959–1976)
  • Video of Kingdome implosion via KING-TV
Events and tenants
Preceded by
first stadium
Home of the
Seattle Seahawks

1976 – 1999
Succeeded by
Preceded by
first ballpark
Home of the
Seattle Mariners

1977 – 1999
Succeeded by
Preceded by Home of the
Seattle SuperSonics

1978 – 1985
Succeeded by
Preceded by NCAA Men's Division I
Basketball tournament
Finals Venue

1984
1989
1995
Succeeded by
Preceded by Host of the NFL Pro Bowl
1977
Succeeded by
Preceded by Host of the MLB All-Star Game
1979
Succeeded by
Preceded by Host of the
NBA All-Star Game

1987
Succeeded by
Preceded by Host of the College Cup
1984–1985
Succeeded by

kingdome, this, article, about, stadium, seattle, arena, sydney, sydney, entertainment, centre, arena, davao, king, dome, officially, king, county, stadium, note, multi, purpose, stadium, located, industrial, district, later, sodo, neighborhood, seattle, washi. This article is about the stadium in Seattle For the arena in Sydney see Sydney Entertainment Centre For the arena in Davao see KJC King Dome The Kingdome officially the King County Stadium 4 note 1 was a multi purpose stadium located in the Industrial District later SoDo 7 neighborhood of Seattle Washington United States Owned and operated by King County it was best known as the home stadium of the Seattle Seahawks of the National Football League NFL and the Seattle Mariners of Major League Baseball MLB it was also home to the Seattle SuperSonics of the National Basketball Association NBA and additionally served as both the home outdoor and indoor venue for the Seattle Sounders of the North American Soccer League NASL The Kingdome measured 660 feet 200 m wide from its inside walls 8 KingdomeKing County StadiumExterior of the Kingdome from the north parking lot in 1996Full nameKing County StadiumAddress201 South King StreetLocationSeattle Washington U S Coordinates47 35 43 N 122 19 53 W 47 59528 N 122 33139 W 47 59528 122 33139Public transitKing Street StationParking 1 100 spacesOwnerKing CountyOperatorKing County Department of Stadium AdministrationExecutive suites46CapacityBaseball 59 166Football 66 000Basketball 40 000SurfaceAstroTurfScoreboardDiamond VisionConstructionBroke groundNovember 2 1972OpenedMarch 27 1976ClosedJanuary 9 2000DemolishedMarch 26 2000Construction cost 67 million 345 million in 2022 dollars 1 ArchitectNaramore Skilling amp PraegerStructural engineerSkilling Helle Christiansen amp Robertson Inc 2 General contractorDonald M Drake Company 1972 74 Peter Kiewit Sons Construction Company 1974 76 3 TenantsSeattle Seahawks NFL 1976 1999 Seattle Sounders NASL 1976 1983 Seattle Mariners MLB 1977 1999 Seattle SuperSonics NBA 1978 1985 This 1996 map of the Pioneer Square Skid Road Historic District shows the location of the Kingdome at the lower right in the map The idea of constructing a covered stadium for a major league football or baseball team was first proposed to Seattle officials in 1959 Voters rejected separate measures to approve public funding for such a stadium in 1960 and 1966 but the outcome was different in 1968 King County voters approved the issue of 40 million in municipal bonds to construct the stadium Construction began in 1972 and it opened in 1976 as the home of the Sounders and Seahawks 9 The Mariners moved in the following year and the SuperSonics moved in the year after that only to move back to the Seattle Center Coliseum in 1985 The stadium hosted several major sports events including the Soccer Bowl in August 1976 the Pro Bowl in January 1977 the Major League Baseball All Star Game in July 1979 the NBA All Star Game in 1987 and the NCAA Final Four in 1984 1989 and 1995 During the 1990s the Seahawks and Mariners respective ownership groups began to question the suitability of the Kingdome as a venue for each team threatening to relocate unless new publicly funded stadiums were built An issue was that neither team saw their shared tenancy as profitable both teams also questioned the integrity of the stadium s roof as highlighted by the collapse of ceiling tiles onto the seating area before a scheduled Mariners game in 1994 As a result public funding packages for new purpose built stadiums for the Mariners and Seahawks were respectively approved in 1995 and 1997 The Mariners moved to Safeco Field now known as T Mobile Park midway through the 1999 season and the Seahawks temporarily moved to Husky Stadium after the 1999 season On March 26 2000 the Kingdome was demolished by implosion The Seahawks new stadium now known as Lumen Field was built on the site and opened in 2002 King County finally paid off the bonds used to build and repair the Kingdome in 2015 fifteen years after its demolition 10 Contents 1 Concept and construction 2 Surface 3 Football 3 1 Seahawks 3 2 Amateur 3 2 1 College 3 2 2 Other levels 4 Baseball 5 Basketball 5 1 SuperSonics 5 2 College 5 2 1 Final Four 5 3 Other 6 Soccer 6 1 Sounders 6 2 College 6 3 Other professional games 7 Other events 7 1 Concerts 8 Final years 8 1 1994 ceiling collapse 8 2 Replacement 9 Seating capacity 10 In popular culture 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Bibliography 14 External linksConcept and construction EditIn 1959 Seattle restaurateur David L Cohn wrote a letter to the Seattle City Council suggesting the city needed a covered stadium for a major professional sports franchise 11 12 A domed stadium was thought to be a must because of Seattle s frequent rain At the time the city had Husky Stadium and Sick s Stadium for college football and minor league baseball respectively but both were deemed inadequate for a major league team 11 Concept drawing of a floating stadium on the Seattle waterfront 1963In 1960 King County commissioners placed a 15 million bond issue measure on the ballot to fund construction of a stadium but voters on November 8 defeated it with only 48 percent approval because of doubt the stadium could be built within that budget and lack of a guarantee the city would have a team to play in the stadium 11 13 By 1966 the National Football League and the American League were both considering granting the city an expansion franchise and as a result the King County Council placed another bond issue measure on the ballot for a September vote While it received 51 5 percent approval it did not reach the 60 percent required to proceed the requirement was due to a 1932 initiative that mandated a supermajority for tax levies over 40 mills 11 14 15 In 1967 the American League granted Seattle an expansion franchise that would be known as the Seattle Pilots The league clearly stated Sick s Stadium was not adequate as a major league stadium and stipulated that as a condition of being awarded the franchise bonds had to be issued to fund construction of a domed stadium that had to be completed by 1970 additionally the capacity at Sick s Stadium had to be expanded from 11 000 to 30 000 by Opening Day 1969 when the team was scheduled to begin playing The Pilots were supposed to begin play in 1971 along with the Kansas City Royals However when Senator Stuart Symington of Missouri got wind of those plans he demanded both teams begin play in 1969 The American League had birthed the Royals and Pilots as a result of the Kansas City Athletics moving to Oakland and Symington would not accept the prospect of Kansas City waiting three years for baseball s return 16 On February 13 1968 King County voters approved the issue of 40 million in bonds to fund construction of the King County Multipurpose Domed Stadium with 62 percent in favor it was part of the Forward Thrust group of bond propositions that among other items had a regional rapid transit system rejected 11 17 That year a committee considered over 100 sites throughout Seattle and King County for the stadium they unanimously decided the best site would be on the grounds of Seattle Center site of the 1962 World s Fair Community members decried the idea claiming the committee was influenced by special interest groups 14 18 19 The Pilots began play as planned in 1969 but Sick s Stadium proved to be a problematic venue for fans media and visiting players alike The Pilots only drew 677 000 fans that season not nearly enough to break even It soon became apparent that the Pilots would not survive long enough to move to their new stadium without new ownership It was also obvious that the timetable for a new stadium would have to be significantly advanced as Sick s Stadium was completely unsuitable even for temporary use However a petition by stadium opponents brought the dome project to a halt The Pilots ownership group ran out of money by the end of the season and with the stadium plans in limbo the team was forced to declare bankruptcy Despite efforts by Seattle area businessmen to buy the team as well as an attempt to keep the team in Seattle through the court system the Pilots were sold to Milwaukee businessman Bud Selig who relocated the team to Milwaukee and renamed it the Milwaukee Brewers a week before the start of the 1970 season 14 20 The stadium under construction circa 1973The push to build the domed stadium continued despite the lack of a major league sports team to occupy it In May 1970 voters rejected the proposal to build the stadium at Seattle Center 19 21 From 1970 to 1972 the commission studied the feasibility and economic impact of building the stadium on King Street adjacent to Pioneer Square and the International District a site that ranked at the bottom when the commission originally narrowed the field of possible sites in 1968 19 This drew sharp opposition primarily from the International District community which feared the impact of the stadium on neighborhood businesses located east of the site The King Street site was approved 8 1 by the county council in late 1971 22 and the groundbreaking ceremony in 1972 was held on November 2 23 Several protesters attended the ceremony disrupted the speakers and at one point threw mud balls at them 19 23 In bidding for construction of the stadium which had separate offers for the dome and the rest of the stadium Donald M Drake Construction Company of Portland Oregon was the winning contractor for both with respective bids of 28 9 million and 5 9 million Peter Kiewit Sons Construction Company was the only other bidder offering 30 57 million for the stadium and 5 8 million for the roof the latter came with the caveat of the company using its own design consultant 24 To help alleviate tension between the International District community and county officials Drake emphasized the hiring of minorities with minorities eventually representing 13 percent of the workers at the site a community center and a shelter were also built in the neighborhood However the stadium s construction encountered numerous issues in January 1973 six support beams for the roof were toppled as one or two of them buckled bringing down the others in a domino effect By January 1974 the stadium reached 50 percent completion only reaching 60 percent completion in July it was clear that Drake would not reach the December deadline at that point It was also apparent that Drake was ill prepared to work on a project with such scale with numerous errors delays and short staffing slowing down construction Efforts to renegotiate the contract failed and on November 22 Drake stopped work on the Kingdome The county fired Drake on December 10 bringing in Kiewit to finish construction on the stadium 3 25 Exterior of the Kingdome in 1985 On December 5 1974 the NFL awarded Seattle an expansion franchise to occupy the new stadium the team was later named the Seattle Seahawks 11 26 Construction lasted another two years and the stadium held an opening ceremony on March 27 1976 19 27 It hosted its first professional sporting event two weeks later on April 9 an exhibition soccer game between the Seattle Sounders and New York Cosmos of the NASL It set a record for the largest soccer audience in North America at 58 120 28 The stadium was finished at 20 million over budget with part of the cost overrun covered by a 12 8 million out of court settlement in 1980 between the county and Drake s liability insurers 29 Surface EditLike virtually all other multi purpose stadiums the Kingdome featured AstroTurf artificial turf for its playing surface with its baseball configuration featuring dirt sliding pits around each base 30 31 When it was constructed artificial turf was considered a must because the roof was likely to inhibit the growth of natural grass like the Astrodome s roof 32 The AstroTurf surface was first replaced in July 1983 during the MLB All Star break Monsanto the then owner of AstroTurf won the turf replacement contract over SuperTurf then used by the Metrodome with a bid of 1 2 million 33 34 By request of the Mariners and Seahawks it was replaced again in October and December 1990 at a cost of 2 56 million the previous surface was sold off thereafter with 25 rolls of it sold to the Tacoma Dome for 108 200 35 36 A strip 40 feet by 4 inches was ripped off left field near second base during a field invasion by celebrating fans after the Mariners won the AL West tiebreaker game in 1995 it was replaced before the first Mariners home game in the ALDS 37 Before the 1990 replacement the AstroTurf surface was converted from baseball to football configuration via the covering of the infield with turf strips a one piece surface was placed over the infield after the conclusion of the Mariners season 38 The surface was attached together via both Velcro and Ziploc fasteners 39 After the 1990 replacement separate surfaces were installed for each team the Seahawks specifically wanted a stiffer variation of AstroTurf The replacement surfaces were attached together via zippers 38 The underlying base of the surface was asphalt with the AstroTurf essentially consisting of a carpet on top of a pad with respective thicknesses of one half inch and five eights inch 32 Lumps holes and ridges were also present in the surface along with gaps within its seams 40 These factors combined to create a playing surface that was despised by both football and baseball players alike after the 1998 season a survey by the NFL Players Association found that 56 7 percent of Seahawks players rated the surface as poor or fair and was the worst rated one in the AFC West 40 41 Injuries from playing at the Kingdome and its contemporaries occurred more often compared to stadiums with natural grass 42 Of note Seahawks running backs Sherman Smith and Curt Warner respectively suffered season ending knee injuries in 1980 and 1984 during games at the Kingdome additionally the Kingdome s surface is partly blamed for Ken Griffey Jr s subsequent injuries and decline in performance after the Mariners traded him to the Cincinnati Reds at the end of the 1999 season 43 44 45 Football EditSeahawks Edit The expansion Seattle Seahawks of the National Football League NFL played their first game ever on August 1 1976 a preseason game against the San Francisco 49ers at the Kingdome in which they lost 27 20 before a crowd of 60 825 46 The Seahawks first regular season game was against the St Louis Cardinals at the Kingdome on September 12 they were defeated 30 24 with 58 441 in attendance 47 At the end of that season the venue hosted the Pro Bowl the NFL s all star game on January 17 1977 48 The Seahawks hosted Monday Night Football games at the Kingdome twelve times in their history and were 9 3 in those games The Seahawks and the Oakland Los Angeles Raiders played five Monday Night games in the Dome in the 1980s with Seattle holding a 3 2 edge including a 37 0 blowout victory in 1986 49 The next year in 1987 Bo Jackson of the Los Angeles Raiders rushed for 221 yards the most ever on MNF and scored 2 touchdowns One of his scores was a 91 yard touchdown and the other was a historic plowing into Seahawks high profile rookie linebacker Brian The Boz Bosworth The Seahawks regularly sold out games at the Kingdome from its inception and throughout the 1980s 117 consecutive regular season home games were sold out between 1979 and 1993 However after Ken Behring took over ownership of the team from the Nordstrom family in 1988 the team began to decline in performance after winning the AFC West that year it suffered a franchise worst 2 14 record in 1992 Season ticket sales which had reached 62 000 that year with a waiting list of 30 000 gradually decreased to 46 000 in 1995 with the team averaging 46 218 in attendance over five games at the Kingdome in 1994 as a result the Seahawks began failing to sell out games resulting in their blackout in the Seattle market After the blackout of the October 24 1993 game versus the New England Patriots one more game was blacked out that year with five games blacked out the following year KING TV which as Seattle s NBC affiliate was the Seahawks local broadcast home at the time prevented further blackouts by purchasing all remaining unsold tickets for three games in 1993 and two games in 1994 50 In the Seahawks heyday the Kingdome was known as one of the loudest stadiums in the league Opposing teams were known to practice with jet engine sounds blaring at full blast to prepare for the painfully high decibel levels typical of Seahawks games 51 It was where Seahawks fans who were long called the 12th Man and led the Seahawks to retire the number 12 in honor of them in 1984 made their reputation as one of the most ravenous fan bases in the NFL a reputation that has carried over to what is now Lumen Field 50 The Kingdome s reputation contributed to the NFL s 1989 vote in favor of enacting a rule penalizing home teams for excessive crowd noise it was especially loathed by Seahawks fans during preseason games with fan displeasure throughout the league leading commissioner Pete Rozelle to soften enforcement of the rule before the start of the regular season 52 Raucous Seahawk fans at the Kingdome were also some of the earliest performers of The Wave 53 The city of Seattle made numerous bids to host the Super Bowl during the Seahawks tenure at the Kingdome However despite five bids over 12 years the Kingdome was never awarded the opportunity to host a Super Bowl its closest chance was in 1989 for Super Bowl XXVI which was awarded to the Hubert H Humphrey Metrodome in Minneapolis Minnesota 54 55 In its 1982 bid for Super Bowl XIX the Seattle City Council voted to give tax exemptions to the NFL if the league selected the Kingdome to host the game 56 The Seahawks played their final game at the Kingdome on January 9 2000 suffering a first round playoff loss to the Miami Dolphins in their first playoff appearance since the 1988 season The Dolphins scored a fourth quarter touchdown to win 20 17 it marked the first home playoff loss for the Seahawks as well as the first road playoff win in 28 years for the Dolphins 57 58 It was the last NFL victory for Hall of Fame quarterback Dan Marino and head coach Jimmy Johnson and it was also the last event the Kingdome ever hosted before its implosion 59 60 The Seahawks had an overall record of 101 83 549 in the Kingdome and were 2 1 in the postseason 61 Amateur Edit College Edit The first football and college football by extension game played in the Kingdome occurred just after it opened in 1976 when the Washington Huskies varsity team won 10 7 against a team of Husky alumni on May 1 before 20 470 fans 62 63 The Huskies looked into temporarily renting the Kingdome for the 1987 season when the north grandstand of Husky Stadium collapsed during construction on February 25 however the Kingdome was ultimately not needed as the grandstand was completed in time for the team s first home game against the Stanford Cardinal on September 5 64 65 The Kingdome also hosted a game between the Washington State Cougars and USC Trojans on October 9 1976 66 With 37 268 in attendance USC running back Ricky Bell rushed for 346 yards and set the Pac 8 single game rushing record the Trojans won by nine points 23 14 67 68 69 In 1994 under then new athletic director Rick Dickson the Cougars flirted with the idea of hosting an additional home game at the Kingdome starting in 1997 however the plan never came to fruition 70 In the late 1970s the Kingdome hosted both instances of a Pacific 10 Conference all star game called the Challenge Bowl the bowl sponsored by the Olympia Brewing Company pitted an all star team of Pac 10 players against a similar team from another conference The Pac 10 went undefeated with a 27 20 victory as the Pac 8 over the Big Ten on January 15 1978 and a 36 23 victory over the Big Eight on January 13 1979 47 During the same period the University of Puget Sound Loggers and Pacific Lutheran University Lutes also faced off at the Kingdome twice the Loggers won both contests defeating the Lutes 23 21 on September 17 1977 with 13 167 in attendance and then defeating them again 27 14 on September 23 1978 before a crowd of 8 329 71 72 The 1977 game set a series attendance record at the time 73 Other levels Edit The stadium also hosted the annual WIAA high school football state championships in an event called the Kingbowl from 1977 through 1994 74 75 the title games were moved to the Tacoma Dome in nearby Tacoma in 1995 76 77 The Seattle and Tacoma Police Departments played a yearly game named the Bacon Bowl to raise money for charity from 1980 to 2005 the Kingdome hosted it from the beginning until 1982 then had a one off in 1985 during a nine year span in which the Tacoma Dome hosted the rest of the games The Kingdome hosted the game again from 1992 to 1994 before it returned to the Tacoma Dome the game came back for one final time in 1999 before the stadium was demolished 78 79 80 Baseball EditShortly after the Pilots departure for Milwaukee the city of Seattle King County and the state of Washington sued the American League claiming a breach of contract The league agreed to grant Seattle another franchise in exchange for dropping the lawsuit and the team that would later be known as the Seattle Mariners was born 81 The Mariners held their first game in franchise history at the Kingdome on April 6 1977 as the visiting California Angels shut out the Mariners 7 0 in front of a sellout crowd of 57 762 82 83 The first pitch was a strike thrown by the Mariners Diego Segui to Jerry Remy 82 84 note 2 In the top of the first inning Don Baylor registered the first hit at the stadium with a double that scored Remy who had stolen second and third base after drawing a walk from Segui 82 The Mariners first batter Dave Collins struck out however the next batter Jose Baez singled for the franchise s first ever hit 82 86 The first home run at the venue was hit in the top of the third inning by Joe Rudi designated hitter Juan Bernhardt scored the Mariners first home run in their fifth game at the Kingdome on April 10 82 87 88 The Mariners had their first win at the Kingdome two games after the opener they were also shut out in their second game 2 0 defeating the Angels 7 6 on April 8 via a walk off double from Larry Milbourne 87 89 The venue hosted the All Star Game on July 17 1979 90 The Kingdome was somewhat problematic as a baseball venue Foul territory was quite large and seats in the upper deck as far as 617 feet 188 m from home plate 91 Part of the problem was that the Kingdome was not a multipurpose stadium in the truest sense Instead it was built as a football stadium that could convert into a baseball stadium For instance most fans in the outfield seats on the 300 level were unable to see parts of right and center field these areas were not part of the football playing field Hosting the Kansas City Royals in July 1997For most of the Mariners first 18 years their poor play they did not have a winning season until 1991 combined with the Kingdome s design led to poor attendance Some writers and fans called it the Tomb because of its gray concrete and lack of noise and Puget Puke 91 After their inaugural home opener the Mariners didn t have another sellout for the next 1 018 home games until their 1990 home opener on April 13 81 92 At one point the Mariners covered seats in the upper decks in right and right center with a tarp in order to make the stadium feel less empty 93 Additionally the Kingdome s acoustics created problems for stadium announcers who had to deal with significant echo issues 94 However when the team s fortunes began to change in the mid 1990s and they began drawing larger crowds especially in the post season the noise created an electric atmosphere and gave the home team a distinct advantage similar to the effect on football games 95 The average attendance of 22 064 in 1995 was the lowest in three years with the removal of nine home games for the season but when put in perspective it was still higher compared to any of the Mariners first 14 seasons 96 Despite its cavernous interior the Kingdome s field dimensions were relatively small It had a reputation as a hitter s park especially in the 1990s when Ken Griffey Jr Edgar Martinez Jay Buhner Alex Rodriguez and other sluggers played there 97 98 The large number of in play objects speakers roof support wires and streamers contributed to an arena baseball feel 99 The Kingdome was somewhat improved in 1982 with the addition of a 23 foot 7 0 m wall in right field nicknamed the Walla Walla after the city in southeastern Washington a nearly 100 000 Daktronics out of town scoreboard was later installed on it in 1990 83 100 101 In 1990 and 1991 the moving of home plate closer to the backstop the addition of box seats down the third base line and the removal of a few rows of seats in left field reduced foul territory and made the outfield dimensions longer and asymmetrical 93 102 In its early years the outfield was symmetrical with a uniform wall height deep in center and short elsewhere For the All Star Game in 1979 center field was 410 feet 120 m power alleys were 357 feet 109 m and the foul lines were 316 feet 96 m 90 the unpadded wall was green with a top yellow stripe approximately twelve feet 3 7 m in height and did not have the power alley distances listed on it 103 Down the lines the distance was also listed in fathoms 52 7 fm presumably to maintain a nautical theme in line with the team name however this practice was ditched after the 1980 season 83 Like the Kingdome s contemporaries the bullpens were located in foul territory adjacent to the baselines and the stands 104 105 The longest game in the Kingdome took place on July 30 1998 when the Cleveland Indians defeated the Mariners 9 8 in 17 innings via a three run homer from Manny Ramirez off Bob Wells Paul Shuey staved off a comeback by the Mariners in the bottom of the inning to end the game the next morning after five hours and 23 minutes 106 107 The most noteworthy baseball game in the Kingdome s history took place on October 8 1995 in the rubber game of the ALDS the Mariners defeated the New York Yankees 6 5 in 11 innings in front of 57 411 raucous fans In the bottom of the 11th Martinez doubled to left sending Joey Cora and Griffey home with the winning runs and vaulting the Mariners into the ALCS for the first time in franchise history 81 On May 2 1996 a game at the Kingdome between the Mariners and the Cleveland Indians was suspended in the bottom of the seventh inning because of a minor earthquake The earthquake estimated at a magnitude of 5 3 to 5 4 occurred during a pitching change as Indians pitcher Orel Hershiser was walking off the mound following a home run by Edgar Martinez 108 109 After an inspection by engineers the game was continued the next evening resulting in a 6 4 win for the Indians 110 Segui who retired from professional baseball after the 1977 season was invited by the Mariners to throw the ceremonial last pitch after the final Mariners game at the Kingdome in 1999 However while they were able to make the tickets and reservations for Segui a payment mix up prevented him from boarding the flight out of Kansas City International Airport on the day of the game the incident made him irate such that he refused to visit Seattle again until 2012 when he was invited as part of the Mariners 35th anniversary celebration 111 Despite the disappointment from Segui s son then Mariners first baseman David Segui the ceremony went on as planned David s son then seven year old Cory Segui threw the last pitch to Bob Stinson who was the Mariners catcher in their first game 112 In 1989 Griffey Jr hit a home run in his first ever plate appearance at the Kingdome on April 10 On June 27 1999 Griffey Jr hit the last home run ever at the Kingdome against the Texas Rangers 113 The Mariners played 1 755 games at the Kingdome compiling an overall home record of 852 903 485 during their 22 season tenure there 114 Basketball EditSuperSonics Edit In 1980 the Seattle SuperSonics total attendance exceeded that of all other sports or shows held in the Kingdome Besides the Mariners and Seahawks the stadium also hosted the Seattle SuperSonics of the National Basketball Association NBA for seven seasons The SuperSonics having previously played at the Seattle Center Coliseum announced on July 29 1977 that they intended to move into the Kingdome for the 1978 79 season after the expiration of their contract with the city of Seattle the owner of the Coliseum the team pushed for a move to the Kingdome after the city balked at a 30 million plan to expand the Coliseum to 20 000 seats the previous year 115 On August 22 the King County Council voted 7 2 to approve a 17 year lease with the SuperSonics with the agreement signed the following day 116 The following week the council unanimously voted on August 29 to spend 1 5 million on improvements to the Kingdome in preparation for the team the team would pay the same amount over the first seven years as part of the agreement 117 Additional terms of the agreement had the SuperSonics pay the county 10 percent of ticket sale proceeds not including admissions taxes and 2 539 in personnel costs per game the county additionally kept all game concession and parking revenue 115 On the same day as the agreement signing longtime Kingdome critic Frank Ruano filed a referendum petition in an attempt to halt the move but he announced on September 17 that he would withdraw support from the petition for lack of support 116 118 While the SuperSonics had played a few games at the Kingdome over the previous two seasons their full time tenancy required the addition of 5 000 portable stadium seats added onto the floor of the arena as well as additional scoreboards and a new basketball court 119 120 The center circle of the court was positioned over first base with the court itself laid parallel and adjacent to the right field seats the portable seats were positioned across the court with one end hovering over home plate 121 The first SuperSonics game in the Kingdome under the agreement was an exhibition game versus the Portland Trail Blazers on September 22 1978 122 A few weeks later a crowd of 15 219 watched as the SuperSonics defeated the Chicago Bulls 104 86 on October 14 in their first regular season game as a tenant 123 Captain Fred Brown and leading scorer Gus Williams helped lead the team to their first and only championship that season defeating the Washington Bullets in the Finals and avenging their Finals loss to them the previous season 124 At the time the Kingdome was known in the NBA for being the noisiest arena for basketball and for having the largest crowds with stadium vendor Bill Scott a k a Bill the Beerman taking the duties as cheerleader 125 126 In the 1979 80 season the SuperSonics set an NBA record average attendance of 21 725 fans per game since broken 127 128 The SuperSonics set the NBA single game playoff attendance record at 39 457 during Game 4 of the 1978 NBA Finals they set it again on April 15 1980 during a conference semifinal game against the Milwaukee Bucks with an attendance record of 40 172 also since broken 128 129 130 The Kingdome regular season single game attendance record of 38 067 was set on November 22 1991 when the SuperSonics faced the Chicago Bulls 131 While leaving a SuperSonics game on February 16 1983 a 21 year old man from Olympia fell off a ramp and plunged 47 feet to his death this was despite the installation of signs warning about the chest level barriers the previous year 132 Logistics would be a problem throughout the team s tenure at the Kingdome because the Seahawks and Mariners had scheduling priority over them especially during the playoffs when the Mariners were playing there at the same time in the spring 133 As part of the 1977 agreement King County agreed to pay the SuperSonics 15 000 for each game up to five that was moved elsewhere because of booking issues 115 Even then the scheduling priority meant that the SuperSonics would only play home playoff games at the Kingdome while the Mariners were on the road with most of the games played at the Coliseum the team even had to use Hec Edmundson Pavilion at the University of Washington for a few games when both the Kingdome and the Coliseum were unavailable 134 Along with the scheduling issues as with other multipurpose stadiums used by the NBA the Kingdome proved itself to be a less than ideal venue for basketball 133 135 136 Although the Kingdome s capacity allowed the SuperSonics to set attendance records the vast space it afforded meant that it did not have the intimate environment of a dedicated arena furthermore fans were displeased about the poor sight lines and cold temperatures in the Kingdome All these factors plus dwindling attendance due to poor team performance towards the end of their tenancy at the Kingdome led SuperSonics general manager Zollie Volchok to sign a 10 year contract with the city of Seattle in 1983 agreeing to have the team move back to the Coliseum after the 1984 85 season in exchange for upgrades there 133 The SuperSonics faced the Phoenix Suns at the Kingdome on April 7 1985 in their final game as a regular tenant losing 110 125 with 5 672 in attendance 137 However exemplifying the scheduling issues it was not their final home game of the season the SuperSonics were forced to play at the Tacoma Dome on April 11 because the Mariners hosted the Oakland Athletics at the Kingdome that day 133 By that point the SuperSonics had an average attendance of 7 399 failing to surpass 10 000 seats sold in 29 of 37 games held at the Kingdome in their final season there 138 Despite calling the Coliseum home again the SuperSonics still played occasionally at the Kingdome over the next few years when large crowds were anticipated as such the SuperSonics hosted the 1987 NBA All Star Game there having previously hosted the 1974 game at the Coliseum before the Kingdome opened 139 140 141 However SuperSonics owner Barry Ackerley who had bought the team from Sam Schulman in October 1983 after the Coliseum deal was signed started seeking a new arena for them in 1989 team president Bob Whitsitt claimed that the Coliseum was outdated and leaking 133 142 143 Ackerley proposed to build a new arena south of the Kingdome where T Mobile Park stands today 144 but the plan was initially rejected by King County because of objections from the Seahawks and Mariners over inadequate parking 145 The plan was eventually approved by the Seattle City Council 7 1 on May 30 1990 but it was ultimately scrapped the following year on June 26 because of issues in financing it as a compromise measure the Coliseum was rebuilt as KeyArena during the 1994 95 season with the SuperSonics playing home games at the Tacoma Dome instead of the closer Kingdome in the meantime 146 147 148 The SuperSonics played at KeyArena until they were controversially relocated to Oklahoma City by owner Clay Bennett after the 2007 08 season 149 The SuperSonics played 303 games at the Kingdome in total including 14 playoff games they held an overall record of 208 95 686 and a playoff record of 8 6 571 at the stadium Of those games 20 of them had attendances of 30 000 or more 138 College Edit The first men s college basketball game at the Kingdome was held on January 9 1984 when the Washington Huskies defeated the Notre Dame Fighting Irish 63 61 in the second overtime in front of 7 466 fans 150 138 The Huskies held their only other basketball game at the Kingdome more than a decade later defeating the Old Dominion Monarchs 71 61 on December 22 1994 with 4 187 in attendance 151 138 The only women s basketball game at the Kingdome was held on December 6 1979 when the Seattle Chieftains were crushed by the Soviet national team 45 135 before 7 239 spectators 152 138 Final Four Edit The NCAA Final Four of men s college basketball was held three times at the Kingdome with the stadium hosting the 1984 1989 and 1995 editions The 1984 championship game saw the Georgetown Hoyas defeat the Houston Cougars 84 75 153 Meanwhile the 1989 championship game had the Michigan Wolverines beat the Seton Hall Pirates 80 79 in overtime because of a controversial last second foul call against the Pirates 154 Finally with the 1995 championship game the UCLA Bruins defeated the Arkansas Razorbacks 89 78 to win their first championship since the retirement of coach John Wooden twenty years earlier in 1975 155 The Kingdome was not the first venue in Seattle to host the Final Four Hec Edmundson Pavilion had previously hosted it in 1949 and 1952 However the Kingdome is credited with helping shape the Final Four into an event with a stature comparable to that of the Super Bowl because of its large capacity It was the only such capable venue on the West Coast of the United States the last time a non Seattle West Coast site hosted the game was when the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena hosted it in 1972 The 1995 edition was the last time that Seattle hosted a Final Four and it will likely remain that way for the foreseeable future since the Kingdome s successors were not designed with a controlled environment in mind it also remains the last time that the Final Four was held on the West Coast 156 The Final Four was not held again in the Western United States until 2017 when University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale Arizona hosted it for the Phoenix area 157 158 Other Edit On February 18 1979 the Harlem Globetrotters held an exhibition game at the Kingdome with close to 23 000 in attendance of which around 3 500 were under 12 years old 159 As a result of the boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics by the United States the U S Olympic team faced off against a squad of NBA players in a six game exhibition tournament called the Gold Medal Series that June On June 20 the NBA All Stars defeated the U S Olympic team 78 76 before a crowd of 10 902 it was the only victory by the NBA squad in the tournament 160 161 The Washington Interscholastic Activities Association WIAA held their 3A and 4A high school basketball state tournament five times at the Kingdome between 1993 and 1999 The boys and girls games were held simultaneously until the championship at which point they took turns playing on a single court 138 Soccer EditSounders Edit The Seattle Sounders of the North American Soccer League NASL were the first tenant to move into the Kingdome upon its opening having played at Memorial Stadium for their first two seasons 162 As a result they held the honor of hosting the first sporting event at the Kingdome with an exhibition game versus the New York Cosmos on April 9 1976 the Cosmos defeated them 3 1 with 58 128 fans in attendance Highlighting the secondary treatment of the Sounders about 5 000 seats were not yet installed when the game occurred 163 164 165 Just weeks later they hosted their first regular season game in the Kingdome on April 26 defeating the Portland Timbers 1 0 via a Geoff Hurst penalty kick in the second overtime before 24 983 spectators 166 The largest crowd to attend a Sounders match regular or postseason occurred on August 25 1977 when 56 256 spectators watched as they defeated the Los Angeles Aztecs 1 0 in the second game of the Pacific Conference Final to advance to their first Soccer Bowl 167 The Sounders regular season attendance record was set on August 9 1980 when the Cosmos defeated them 1 0 in front of 49 606 fans 168 Overall the team drew an average attendance of 20 183 from 1975 to 1982 peaking in the 1980 season with an average attendance of 24 247 169 170 Along with traditional soccer the Sounders participated in NASL indoor soccer for the 1980 81 and 1981 82 seasons 171 172 However the 1983 outdoor season proved to be a dire one for the Sounders with the team s front office heavily cutting costly foreign players from the roster the team suffered their worst season ever performance wise resulting in a record low average attendance of 8 181 170 That season additionally saw the smallest crowd to attend a Sounders game with only 4 270 spectators on hand to witness their 3 1 victory over the Tulsa Roughnecks on July 27 170 With the cuts not enough to keep the team afloat the owners ultimately elected to fold it that year on September 6 their final home game was a 3 2 victory over the San Diego Sockers on August 25 with 7 331 fans in attendance 173 174 College Edit The Kingdome hosted the NCAA Division I Men s Soccer Championship Finals twice in consecutive years The final on December 17 1984 featured the Clemson Tigers coached by Dr I M Ibrahim and defending national champion Indiana Hoosiers headed by coach Jerry Yeagley 7 926 spectators watched as the Tigers won 2 1 in regulation to bring home their first national championship in soccer and deny the Hoosiers a third straight title 175 A year later on December 14 1985 a crowd of 5 986 watched as the UCLA Bruins defeated the American Eagles 1 0 after eight overtime periods to win their first national soccer championship Bruin coach Sigi Schmid went on to coach the Seattle Sounders FC of Major League Soccer MLS a phoenix club of the NASL Sounders from its inaugural season in 2009 to 2016 176 177 Other professional games Edit A game of the 1976 U S A Bicentennial Cup tournament was held at the Kingdome on May 28 with Brazil defeating Team America 2 0 before 20 245 spectators 178 The Kingdome also hosted the NASL s championship game the Soccer Bowl between the Minnesota Kicks and the Toronto Metros Croatia on August 28 1976 the Metros Croatia defeated the Kicks 3 0 before a crowd of 25 765 setting an NASL championship attendance record at the time 179 180 A CONCACAF Championship qualifier for the 1978 FIFA World Cup was hosted at the Kingdome on October 20 1976 the game which saw the United States defeat Canada 2 0 before a crowd of 17 675 was the first instance of a World Cup qualifier that was held indoors 181 182 A doubleheader featuring both the U S Olympic and national squads was held at the Kingdome on February 3 1979 183 The U S Olympic team defeated the Canadian Olympic team 2 0 in the first game while the Soviet national team defeated the U S national team 3 1 in the second game 13 317 spectators were present for both games 184 The Kingdome was additionally considered in Seattle s bid to be a host city for the 1994 FIFA World Cup but it was rejected in favor of Husky Stadium because of concerns over its indoor environment and its turf the bid ultimately failed in part because of apprehension from the University of Washington 185 Other events EditUpon its opening the Kingdome served as one of the main convention centers in Seattle alongside the Seattle Center Coliseum 186 During preliminary studies for the then proposed Washington State Convention Center now the Seattle Convention Center in the early 1980s a proposal to build it on the stadium s northern parking lot was floated but it was never seriously considered and ultimately rejected by the convention center board in favor of building it in the Downtown area 187 188 The largest crowd to attend a single event in the Kingdome came early during an eight day Billy Graham crusade in 1976 The Friday night edition on May 14 drew 74 000 and featured singer Johnny Cash 5 000 were turned away 19 165 189 190 The stadium was also part of Seattle s bid to host the 1988 Republican National Convention but it ultimately failed because of a scheduling conflict with the Mariners 191 Country singer CW McCall performed 8 shows during the 4 day Custom Van Truck 4 Wheel Drive and Motorcycle Show March 17 20 1977 192 The Kingdome hosted a round of the AMA Supercross Championship from 1978 to 1999 193 194 Concerts Edit Numerous rock concerts were held in the venue despite significant echo and sound delay problems attributable to the structure s cavernous size 195 Date Artist Opening act s Tour Concert name Attendance Revenue NotesJune 10 1976 Wings Wings Over America Tour 67 053 536 424 The concert set the national indoor attendance record for a single act 196 It also marked the first time Paul McCartney had toured America since The Beatles stopped touring in 1966 109 The performance was filmed and included in the concert movie Rockshow 197 August 6 1976 Eagles Linda RonstadtJD Souther 48 843 398 744 198 September 3 1976 Aerosmith Jeff BeckRick Derringer Rocks Tour 51 091 422 698 199 June 27 1977 Peter Frampton FoghatJ Geils Band Blondie Chaplin 39 549 200 July 17 1977 Led Zeppelin North American Tour 1977 68 954 The performance is available on VOIO and ROIO 109 201 October 14 1981 The Rolling Stones Greg Kihn BandJ Geils Band American Tour 1981 69 132 201 202 October 15 1981 68 028 Before the concert a 16 year old girl from Renton fell backward from a concrete guard rail at the outside 200 level ramp and plunged fifty feet 15 m onto a loading area she died at Harborview Medical Center despite medics immediately rushing her there 203 204 205 July 23 1982 Bryan AdamsJoan Jett and the BlackheartsBlue Oyster CultLoverboyForeigner The Rock and Roll Grand Slam 1982 38 201 70 000 635 352 206 October 20 1982 The Who The ClashT Bone Burnett The Who Tour 1982 55 217 195 207 May 22 1983 The Beach Boys 37 807 320 000 The concert followed a Mariners game 208 209 July 15 1987 Madonna Level 42Bhundu BoysHue and Cry Who s That Girl World Tour 30 000 195 210 December 8 1987 Pink Floyd A Momentary Lapse of Reason Tour 33 700 40 000 710 382 211 July 27 1988 Van HalenScorpions MetallicaDokkenKingdom Come Monsters of Rock 37 000 While Scorpions was on stage lead singer Klaus Meine was hit in the throat by a camera thrown out of the audience He ranted for around five minutes about having respect for the bands then did one more song with the band before they left the stage 109 212 March 29 1990 Paul McCartney The Paul McCartney World Tour 50 000 195 213 September 6 1990 New Kids on The Block Perfect GentlemenRick Wes The Magic Summer Tour 42 929 52 619 1 015 300 214 October 6 1992 Guns N RosesMetallica Motorhead Guns N Roses Metallica Stadium Tour 37 226 40 000 1 023 715 215 December 15 1994 The Rolling Stones Spin Doctors Voodoo Lounge Tour 49 303 49 303 2 311 900 216 November 28 1997 The Rolling Stones Third Eye Blind Bridges to Babylon Tour 42 258 42 258 2 411 261 217 December 12 1997 U2 Smash Mouth PopMart Tour 30 260 35 000 1 539 105 217 Final years EditBy the 1990s multi purpose stadiums fell out of favor with the public and the Kingdome s suitability as an NFL and MLB venue came into doubt as a result Neither the Seahawks nor the Mariners respective ownership groups saw the shared stadium arrangement as economically feasible because the Kingdome was unable to meet the needs of both tenants they also noted the lack of revenue generating luxury suites prominent in newer stadiums 11 218 After several years of threats to relocate the Mariners because of poor attendance and revenue then owner Jeff Smulyan put the team up for sale on December 6 1991 he subsequently received approval by MLB to sell the team to an ownership group led by Nintendo president Hiroshi Yamauchi on June 10 1992 219 Almost immediately the new ownership group began campaigning with local and state governments to secure public funding for a new baseball only stadium In March 1994 King County Executive Gary Locke appointed a task force to study the need for a baseball only stadium 220 1994 ceiling collapse Edit The Kingdome s roof had been problematic from the beginning because of a design flaw With the stadium s limited budget compared to its contemporaries its architects had the roof s acoustic ceiling tiles serve a dual purpose as forms to pour concrete over for the roof sections They were firmly placed via six metal clips on their edges but the effectiveness of the clips was weakened as moisture from the polyurethane insulation accumulated in the tiles because it lacked proper water vapor management As a result leaks were discovered in the roof three months before the stadium opened and several attempts at repairs made the situation worse or were quickly undone 221 In 1993 the county decided to strip off the outer roof coating and replace it with a special coating Sandblasting failed to strip the old roof material off and the contractor changed its method to pressure washing This pressure washing resulted in water seepage through the roof and on July 19 1994 four 26 pound 12 kg waterlogged acoustic ceiling tiles fell into the seating area The tiles fell while the Mariners were on the field preparing for a scheduled game against the Baltimore Orioles a half hour before the gates were to open for fans to enter the stadium As a result the Kingdome was closed for repairs 221 222 The Mariners were forced to play the last 20 games of the 1994 season on the road after the players union vetoed playing the home games at Cheney Stadium in Tacoma BC Place Stadium in Vancouver British Columbia or a neutral site because the union believed that its members should play only in major league venues The extended road trip could have lasted over two months but it was shortened because of the 1994 95 Major League Baseball strike which began on August 12 and ended up canceling the remainder of the 1994 MLB season the strike also resulted in a delay to the start of the 1995 season The Seahawks had to play both their two preseason home games and their first three regular season home games of the 1994 season at nearby Husky Stadium 222 The Kingdome held a reopening ceremony the weekend of November 4 6 1994 which culminated with the Seahawks returning to the stadium for a regular season game against the Cincinnati Bengals 223 Repairing the roof ultimately cost US 51 million and two construction workers lost their lives in a crane accident on August 17 during the repair The incident also motivated plans to replace the stadium 222 Replacement Edit The Kingdome imploding in March 2000On September 19 1995 King County voters defeated a ballot measure that would have funded the construction of a new baseball only stadium for the Mariners However the following month the Mariners made it to the MLB postseason for the first time and on October 8 defeated the New York Yankees in the decisive fifth game of the 1995 ALDS on the heels of a walk off game winning double hit by Edgar Martinez The Mariners postseason run demonstrated that there was a fan base in Seattle that wanted the team to stay in town and as a result the Washington State Legislature approved a separate funding package for a new stadium on October 14 218 81 224 In January 1996 Seahawks owner Ken Behring announced he was moving the team to Los Angeles and the team would play at Anaheim Stadium which had recently been vacated as a football venue when the Los Angeles Rams moved to St Louis His rationale for the decision included unfounded safety concerns surrounding the seismic stability of the Kingdome Behring went so far as to relocate team headquarters to Anaheim California but his plans were defeated when lawyers found out that the Seahawks could not break their lease on the Kingdome until 2005 As a result Behring tried to sell the team He found a potential buyer in Microsoft co founder Paul Allen who stipulated that a new publicly funded stadium had to be built as a condition of his purchase of the team 225 Allen funded a special election held on June 17 1997 that featured a measure that would allocate public funding for a new stadium for the Seahawks on the Kingdome site The measure passed Allen officially purchased the team and the Kingdome s fate was sealed 226 227 Despite the intention of the Mariners to start playing at their new home at the beginning of the 1999 season construction delays meant that installation of its retractable roof would not occur on time leading to another sale threat by the team s owners 228 However the team eventually agreed to play at the Kingdome from the start of the season until after the All Star Game with construction on the new home starting on March 8 1997 229 230 Two years later a sold out crowd of 56 530 watched as the Mariners defeated the Texas Rangers 5 2 in their final game at the Kingdome on June 27 1999 they played their first game at their new home Safeco Field nearly three weeks later on July 15 218 231 232 Meanwhile the Seahawks temporarily relocated to Husky Stadium for two seasons following the 1999 season 231 To make way for construction of their new stadium the Kingdome was stripped down and prepared for demolition During the process a security incident occurred on February 21 2000 when a skateboarder disguised himself as a construction worker climbed up onto the roof and skated on it with two friends filming him on the nearby Alaskan Way Viaduct demolition crews were unimpressed by the incident and implemented tighter security measures in response 233 234 On the morning of March 26 2000 at 8 30 AM the Kingdome was demolished by Controlled Demolition Inc via implosion just one day short of 24 years after the stadium s opening it set a record recognized by Guinness World Records for the largest building by volume ever by implosion 235 The Kingdome was the first large domed stadium to be demolished in the United States its demolition was also the first live event covered by ESPN Classic 236 237 The new stadium Seahawks Stadium eventually opened on July 20 2002 in time for the beginning of the NFL season that year 226 The Kingdome was demolished before the debt issued to finance its construction was fully paid and as of September 2010 residents of King County were still responsible for more than 80 million in debt on the demolished stadium 238 239 The debt was retired on March 2015 nine months ahead of the original bond maturity and 15 years after the stadium s demolition The 2 of the 15 6 hotel motel tax earmarked for the Kingdome debt no longer needed went instead to the county s 4Culture program for arts heritage and preservation 10 Seating capacity EditBaseball Years Capacity1976 1980 59 059 240 1981 1987 59 438 240 1988 1990 58 850 240 1991 1993 57 748 240 1994 1999 59 166 240 Football Years Capacity1976 1979 64 7521980 1983 64 759 241 1984 1992 64 984 242 1993 2000 66 400 243 Basketball Capacity40 192 244 In popular culture EditBecause of its versatility and its prominent position in the Seattle skyline for close to a quarter century the Kingdome was featured in numerous forms of media during and after its existence On television it served as the backdrop for a rescue in the 1978 TV movie Most Deadly Passage of NBC s Emergency series which featured the work of Seattle Medic One paramedics 245 It was also mentioned in 1992 with the airing of Crushed the sixteenth episode of the fifth season of ABC sitcom Full House in the episode guest star Tommy Page boasted to Jesse Katsopolis about playing there 246 The Kingdome was mentioned again in 1998 during the sixth season of NBC sitcom Frasier which was set in Seattle In the sixth episode Secret Admirer Martin describes Daphne s frustrating driving that repeatedly takes them right into various traffic delays ending with them encountering traffic from the Kingdome 247 Furthermore the Kingdome s demolition was featured on The History Channel s Modern Marvels series with their Concrete episode that first aired on May 31 2000 248 The Kingdome was not limited to just television mentions numerous songs mentioned it in their lyrics Rock band Foo Fighters mentioned it in the refrain of New Way Home which was featured on their 1997 album The Colour and the Shape 249 Rapper Macklemore also mentioned the Kingdome in My Oh My a 2011 song that paid tribute to Dave Niehaus the longtime play by play announcer of the Mariners who had recently died in it he talks about growing up in Seattle and going to the Kingdome The song mentions the Double in the Mariners Yankees 1995 ALDS and its accompanying music video also contains footage of the Kingdome s demolition 250 251 252 With the rise of 3D computer graphics video games started to depict the Kingdome as well The Gran Turismo series of racing games on the PlayStation line of consoles featured the Kingdome in the Seattle Circuit race track a street circuit based on the roads of Seattle 253 Seattle Circuit is featured in Gran Turismo 2 Gran Turismo 3 A Spec Gran Turismo 4 Tourist Trophy and Gran Turismo PSP Despite the Kingdome s demolition occurring before the game was released Gran Turismo 3 A Spec still featured it in the track 254 The Kingdome also made an appearance in the 2007 RTS game World in Conflict in which it was destroyed by Soviet artillery during a Soviet invasion of Seattle in an alternate timeline 255 See also EditDelta Dome Thin shell structure List of thin shell structuresNotes Edit It was also legally known as the King County Multipurpose Domed Stadium the King County Multipurpose Stadium and the King County Domed Stadium 5 6 Incidentally Segui was a relief pitcher for the Pilots in their first game when they faced the Angels at Anaheim Stadium on April 8 1969 85 References Edit 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved May 28 2023 King County Department of Stadium Administration Domed Stadium Pioneer Square Seattle WA Pacific Coast Architecture Database University of Washington Retrieved October 28 2012 a b Ledbetter Les December 5 1977 Seattle Stadium Suit a Legal Test on Cost Overruns The New York Times p 18 Retrieved February 24 2021 AN ORDINANCE relating to the multi purpose public stadium specified in King County Resolution No 34567 providing a name therefore Ordinance No 2483 of August 25 1975 PDF King County Council Name King County Code Title 22 Stadium Section No 4 of March 26 2012 King County Council Macintosh Heather January 1 2001 Kingdome opens to a crowd of 54 000 on March 27 1976 HistoryLink Retrieved April 3 2010 Upchurch Michael July 22 2010 Seattle s slightly amphibious Sodo subject of new photo history The Seattle Times Retrieved March 17 2021 24 years of Kingdome facts amp figures King County March 27 2000 Archived from the original on March 3 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Baker Tony December 10 1976 Seattle s own Cardiac Hill Lewiston Morning Tribune Associated Press p 3B a b Baker Geoff March 26 2015 Kingdome debt to be retired 15 years after implosion The Seattle Times Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved July 11 2015 a b c d e f g Crowley Walt February 2 2006 National Football League awards Seattle a franchise for future Seahawks on December 5 1974 HistoryLink org Retrieved March 15 2011 Kaiman Beth September 10 2003 David Cohn 85 top restaurateur major booster of UW athletics The Seattle Times Retrieved March 26 2021 Mullins 2013 pp 26 27 a b c Mullins William H 2009 Not Quite Big League The Pilots and Seattle in the 1960s Pacific Northwest Quarterly 100 3 120 133 ISSN 0030 8803 JSTOR 40492203 OCLC 2392232 Mullins 2013 pp 46 47 Mullins 2013 pp 52 58 Mullins 2013 pp 85 86 Mullins 2013 pp 173 174 a b c d e f MacIntosh Heather March 1 2000 Kingdome The Controversial Birth of a Seattle Icon 1959 1976 HistoryLink org Retrieved March 15 2011 Mullins 2013 pp 190 194 229 233 Voters in Seattle reject proposals Spokesman Review Associated Press May 20 1970 p 1 via Google News Stadium okehed inside Seattle Lewiston Morning Tribune Associated Press December 1 1971 p 15 via Google News a b Protesters halt groundbreaking at Seattle domed stadium site Lewiston Morning Tribune Associated Press November 3 1972 p 15 via Google News Mullins 2013 p 253 Mullins 2013 pp 256 261 NFL selects Seattle group Spokane Daily Chronicle Associated Press December 5 1974 p 49 via Google News Ledbetter Les March 27 1976 Seattle Awaits Debut Of Kingdome Tonight The New York Times p 43 Retrieved March 26 2021 Huge crowd views Pele Spokane Daily Chronicle Associated Press April 10 1976 p 10 via Google News Mullins 2013 p 263 Divish Ryan March 17 2019 The slowest surface I ve ever seen Tokyo Dome turf yet another adjustment for Mariners in Japan The Seattle Times Retrieved April 1 2021 Moore Jack July 2 2015 Throwback Thursday Cincinnati s Riverfront Stadium And The Era Of Multipurpose Mistakes Vice Retrieved April 1 2021 a b Farrey Tom November 14 1991 A Return To Football s Grass Roots Artificial Turf May Not Make Sense Even Here The Seattle Times Retrieved April 1 2021 Finnigan Bob March 31 1983 Kingdome to get new rug during M s season The Seattle Times p D1 Retrieved May 22 2021 via NewsBank Smith Craig July 13 1983 Sounder psych ironing board and rock The Seattle Times p E3 Retrieved May 22 2021 via NewsBank Farrey Tom October 14 1990 Boz poster still a hit with fans The Seattle Times p C4 Retrieved May 22 2021 via NewsBank Rocket s agent says 13 2 million is NFL price tag The Seattle Times January 26 1991 p B2 Retrieved May 22 2021 via NewsBank Fans Tear Turf From Kingdome Tacoma News Tribune October 3 1995 Retrieved April 1 2021 via The Spokesman Review a b Farrey Tom September 6 1990 Hawks M s may get separate Dome turf The Seattle Times p E2 Retrieved May 22 2021 via NewsBank Withers Bud January 15 1990 Baseball players bugged the most by Kingdome s hard rug Seattle Post Intelligencer p D2 Retrieved May 22 2021 via NewsBank a b Kelley Steve September 8 1984 Necessary evil Kingdome s chamber of horrors artificial surface needs improving The Seattle Times p C1 Retrieved May 22 2021 via NewsBank Kingdome turf rated worst in AFC West but if the money s right Kitsap Sun January 30 1999 Retrieved April 1 2021 Underwood John August 12 1985 Just An Awful Toll Sports Illustrated Time Inc Retrieved April 1 2021 Lyons Gil September 5 1984 Knox says Curt s skills not Astroturf caused injury The Seattle Times p E1 Retrieved May 22 2021 via NewsBank Lyons Gil September 23 1980 Hawks Smith out for season with knee injury The Seattle Times p D1 Retrieved May 22 2021 via NewsBank Skip the what ifs and celebrate what Ken Griffey Jr is on the verge of doing The Seattle Times June 3 2008 Retrieved April 1 2021 Baker Tony August 2 1976 Seahawks lose opening game Spokane Daily Chronicle Associated Press p 15 a b Hill Craig September 12 2016 Remembering Kingdome football 40 years after first Seahawks game The News Tribune Retrieved March 19 2021 Pro battle of pride set in Dome tonight Spokane Daily Chronicle January 17 1977 p 15 All Matchups Seattle Seahawks vs Las Vegas LA Oakland Raiders Pro Football Reference com Sports Reference Retrieved April 14 2021 a b Newberry Ron August 18 1995 In Search Of An Audience Seahawks Ticket Sales Hit All Time Low One Longtime Fan Couldn t Give Seats Away The Spokesman Review Retrieved March 18 2021 Arnold Kirby December 27 1999 Noisy farewell bid the Dome Kitsap Sun Retrieved March 25 2021 Jenks Jayson December 11 2019 Remembering the time the NFL tried to silence its fans The Athletic Retrieved March 19 2021 Barber Michael A December 19 1983 First rate reason to party Seahawks in the playoffs Seattle Post Intelligencer pp A1 A3 They were part of The Wave yesterday that unique Seahawk expression of fan unity a spontaneous cheer that sweeps over the crowd as they stand and yell in unintelligible tongues for each one believes my football team There s also The Wave No one has figured out what triggered this phenomenon of football It begins as a roar in one end of the stadium and continues around as each section of fans fumes up and yells to keep The Wave going No one has figured out what all those people say when they yell either It is nothing intelligible They just scream their hearts out Krawczynski Jon February 3 2018 How the 1992 Super Bowl came to be and paved the way for another big game in the Twin Cities The Athletic Retrieved March 24 2021 Hill Craig January 25 2014 Don t rule out possibility of Super Bowl in Seattle just yet The News Tribune Retrieved March 24 2021 Sports Briefs United Press International June 2 1982 Retrieved March 24 2021 King Peter January 17 2000 Like Old Times Playing as if he were still in his prime Dan Marino led Miami over Seattle with a vintage fourth quarter drive Sports Illustrated Time Inc Retrieved March 24 2021 Nobles Charlie January 9 2000 N F L WILD CARD PLAYOFFS Whistling Past The Graveyard In the Kingdome The New York Times Retrieved March 24 2021 Murray Ken January 16 2000 Jaguars flay Dolphins 62 7 2nd worst playoff loss Marino sad farewell The Baltimore Sun Retrieved March 24 2021 The Ballparks Seattle Kingdome This Great Game Retrieved October 1 2018 Shortly after the Kingdome s final event a Seahawks playoff game on January 9 2000 the same blueprints used to erect the stadium were dusted off to give demolition crews a good idea of how to bring it down Seattle Kingdome History Pro Football Reference com Sports Reference Retrieved April 14 2021 Taylor Phil May 2 1976 Varsity Wins No Fireworks Seattle Post Intelligencer p C1 Retrieved May 22 2021 via NewsBank Rockne Dick May 2 1976 Varsity tops Alumni 10 7 The Seattle Times p H1 Retrieved May 22 2021 via NewsBank Rockne Dick February 26 1987 After The Fall The collapse at Husky Stadium leaves answered questions for the university the project coordinator and UW football fans The Seattle Times p D4 Retrieved May 22 2021 via NewsBank Lange Greg January 18 2001 Husky Stadium collapses on February 25 1987 HistoryLink Retrieved May 22 2021 Missildine Harry October 9 1976 Thompson s key in Dome Bowl The Spokesman Review p 13 via Google News Bell runs for 346 yards as USC clips Cougars Eugene Register Guard Associated Press October 10 1976 p 6C via Google News Missildine Harry October 10 1976 Ricky Bell leads SC s 23 14 win The Spokesman Review p D1 via Google News Perry Jim Ricky Bell The Bulldog Archived from the original on November 17 2007 Retrieved November 9 2007 Rockne Dick September 7 1994 Cougar Notebook WSU Football In Kingdome Ad Studies Possibility The Seattle Times Retrieved March 19 2021 O Keefe Vince September 18 1977 U P S nips Lutes before 13 167 in Kingdome The Seattle Times p H11 Retrieved May 22 2021 via NewsBank Rudman Steve September 24 1978 Small Crowd Sees UPS Win Seattle Post Intelligencer p D8 Retrieved May 22 2021 via NewsBank 1983 Reunion Sets Attendance Record University of Puget Sound vs Pacific Lutheran University Official Program 1984 PDF Tacoma Athletic Commission 1984 p 1 Kingbowl forecast is 30 000 Spokesman Review November 29 1977 p 19 Derrick Merle December 5 1977 What a show Spokane Daily Chronicle p 19 Washington moves games to Tacoma Eugene Register Guard Associated Press May 25 1995 p 2D Trimmer Dave June 15 1995 Tacoma Dome plan brings up questions about sites of semis Spokesman Review p C3 1998 Seattle vs Tacoma Police Football Bacon Bowl Tacoma Bacon Bowl Association 1998 p 72 Retrieved March 24 2021 via Issuu Seattle Vs Tacoma In Charity Bacon Bowl The Seattle Times October 21 1999 Retrieved March 24 2021 Castro Hector October 10 2003 Police play for charity in Bacon Bowl Seattle Post Intelligencer Retrieved March 24 2021 a b c d Verducci Tom February 5 1996 Marinermania How A Tottering Team s Bid For A Wild Card Berth Turned Into A Late Season Frenzy And Saved Baseball In Seattle Sports Illustrated Time Warner Retrieved March 25 2021 a b c d e California Angels at Seattle Mariners Box Score April 6 1977 Baseball Reference com Sports Reference Retrieved May 16 2021 a b c Finnigan Bob June 27 1999 The Fun House The Kingdome Holds Many Memories Good Bad And Zany For The Mariners And Their Fans The Seattle Times Retrieved March 25 2021 Brock Corey April 6 2020 The one game they didn t have The tale of the lost Mariners tapes The Athletic Retrieved May 17 2021 Stein Alan J April 8 1999 Seattle Pilots play their first game on April 8 1969 HistoryLink Retrieved May 17 2021 Wilma David July 2 2001 Seattle Mariners play their first baseball game in Seattle on April 6 1977 HistoryLink Retrieved May 17 2021 a b Club Firsts Mariners com MLB Advanced Media Retrieved May 12 2019 M s 1st HR And Win At Safeco CBS News Associated Press July 17 1999 Retrieved March 25 2021 California Angels at Seattle Mariners Box Score April 8 1977 Baseball Reference com Sports Reference Retrieved May 17 2021 a b Feeney Charley July 17 1979 50th All Star Game tonight Pittsburgh Post Gazette p 13 via Google News a b Smith Curt 2001 Storied Stadiums New York City Carroll amp Graf ISBN 0 7867 1187 6 Sherwin Bob April 14 1990 My Oh My Just Like Old Times First M s Sellout Witnesses A 15 7 Drubbing In Opener The Seattle Times Retrieved March 25 2021 a b LaRue Larry November 12 1989 Kingdome Like Mariners May Get a Facelift Los Angeles Times McClatchy News Service Retrieved March 25 2021 A Conversation With Mariners Announcer Tom Hutyler 1995mariners com Archived from the original on June 18 2009 Sullivan Paul October 17 1995 MARINERS COUNT ON EAR SPLITTING DOME FIELD EDGE Chicago Tribune Retrieved March 19 2021 Despite Huge Crowds Late M S Attendance Hits Three Year Low The Spokesman Review October 1 1995 Retrieved March 19 2021 Swift E M May 18 1981 At Home In The Dome Sports Illustrated Time Inc pp 57 58 Retrieved March 25 2021 They re called Domeruns in acknowledgment that a home run United Press International April 15 1981 Retrieved March 25 2021 Anderson Dave April 8 1982 Sports of The Times Domeball It s Not Baseball The New York Times p B17 Retrieved March 25 2021 Green Tom January 6 1982 Left handed power hitters should find home runs a little United Press International Retrieved March 25 2021 Sherwin Bob March 12 1990 Scoreboard To Put Mariner Fans On Line The Seattle Times p D2 Retrieved March 25 2021 via NewsBank THE SIDELINES Kingdome Stretching Its Left Los Angeles Times December 5 1990 Retrieved March 25 2021 1979 MLB All Star Game Seattle Original TV broadcast NBC July 12 2017 July 17 1979 Archived from the original on December 21 2021 Retrieved May 4 2020 via YouTube Pennington Bill 2019 Chapter 29 Did That Just Happen Chumps to Champs How the Worst Teams in Yankees History Led to the 90s Dynasty Boston Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 263 ISBN 9781328849878 Retrieved March 25 2021 McDowell was one of ten Yankees pitchers or coaches in the bullpen which was no more than three benches a tub of Gatorade and a pitcher s mound in foul territory near the right field stands Bernstein Dan August 27 2019 Behind the demise of on field bullpens in MLB and their lasting imprint on the game Sporting News DAZN Group Retrieved March 25 2021 Wittenmyer Gordon July 31 1998 M s endure a long night s journey to defeat Kitsap Sun Retrieved April 1 2021 Griffey Hits 41st But Loses In 17th CBS News July 31 1998 Retrieved April 1 2021 Saperstein Aliya March 27 2000 Not even a quake could crack the Dome Seattle Post Intelligencer p E11 Retrieved March 25 2021 via NewsBank a b c d Condotta Bob March 26 2020 Take a trip down memory lane with the best and worst memories of the Kingdome The Seattle Times Retrieved February 23 2021 Kingdome Not Damaged By Quake Experts Say The Washington Post Seattle Associated Press May 4 1996 p H5 ProQuest 1030603929 Retrieved March 20 2021 Mosher Terry September 10 2013 Segui forever linked to Seattle Kitsap Sun Retrieved May 17 2021 Cour Jim June 27 1999 Diego Segui Misses Kingdome Farewell Associated Press Retrieved May 17 2021 24 for No 24 Ken Griffey Jr s most memorable moments The News Tribune July 22 2016 Retrieved March 25 2021 Andriesen David April 20 2002 Rangers DL lineup impressive back spasms force Pudge to stay behind Seattle Post Intelligencer p C3 Retrieved August 28 2021 via NewsBank a b c Heberlein Greg July 30 1977 Kingdome gets new tenant The Seattle Times p D2 Retrieved May 19 2021 via NewsBank a b MacLeod Alex August 23 1977 Ruano seeks referendum on Sonics move The Seattle Times p 1 Retrieved May 19 2021 via NewsBank Katz Dean August 30 1977 Fund OK d for Sonics shift The Seattle Times p A14 Retrieved May 19 2021 via NewsBank Heberlein Greg September 18 1977 Ruano quits fighting Sonics move The Seattle Times p 1 Retrieved May 19 2021 via NewsBank Attner Paul October 25 1978 Bullets Sonics Meet Again The Washington Post Retrieved March 23 2021 Meyers Georg N February 19 1978 11 last chances for Sonics in old home The Seattle Times p G1 Retrieved May 18 2021 via NewsBank The cozy Kingdome The Seattle Times February 19 1978 p G10 Retrieved May 18 2021 via NewsBank Heberlein Greg September 22 1978 Sonics debut tonight in Dome The Seattle Times p C1 Retrieved May 19 2021 via NewsBank Heberlein Greg October 14 1978 Whoosh Sonics fly past Bulls 104 86 The Seattle Times p E1 Retrieved May 19 2021 via NewsBank Rosen Jeff March 26 2004 Sonics pay homage to past Kitsap Sun Retrieved March 23 2021 O Neil Danny March 27 2007 Voice that filled Kingdome came straight from heart The Seattle Times Retrieved March 23 2021 Moore Jim March 26 2007 Bill Scott 1949 2007 Beerman lifted everyone s spirits Seattle Post Intelligencer Retrieved March 23 2021 Richardson Kenneth January 27 1989 Sonics Going Dome Tonight Hawks in Rare Kingdome Visit Seattle Post Intelligencer Retrieved March 23 2021 via NewsBank a b Frandsen Mike February 1 2014 Seattle s Last Title SuperSonics 1979 NBA Finals Win over Washington Bullets Bleacher Report Turner Broadcasting System Retrieved March 23 2021 Katz Fred October 25 2019 From a poor start to the Finals How the 1978 SuperSonics made a run similar to the Nationals The Athletic Retrieved March 23 2021 Bucks Beat Sonics for 3 2 Lead The Washington Post April 17 1980 p F4 ProQuest 147219431 Retrieved March 23 2021 Jordan Finds a Groove In Time to Edge Sonics The New York Times Associated Press November 24 1991 Fan Dies in Fall The New York Times United Press International February 18 1983 Retrieved March 31 2021 a b c d e McCready Eldredge April 6 1985 So Long Kingdome Tomorrow Marks The End Of Dome Era For Sonics The Seattle Times p C1 Retrieved March 23 2021 via NewsBank DuPree David April 22 1980 Weary Sonics Open Series With Fresh Favored Lakers The Washington Post Retrieved March 23 2021 Sakamoto Bob November 3 1985 Sonics Roll Past Bulls Chicago Tribune Retrieved March 23 2021 SuperSonics Aren t Returning to Tacoma Los Angeles Times Associated Press April 28 1985 Retrieved March 23 2021 Phoenix Suns at Seattle SuperSonics Box Score April 7 1985 Basketball Reference com Sports Reference Retrieved May 18 2021 a b c d e f Raley Dan March 27 2000 Basketball had its Dome moments too Seattle Post Intelligencer p E5 Retrieved August 28 2021 via NewsBank Farrey Tom July 28 1991 The Bottom Line Television Pays The Bills Sonics Lost Money Until New NBC Contract The Seattle Times Retrieved March 23 2021 Seattle chosen for 1987 NBA All Star Game United Press International October 10 1985 Retrieved March 23 2021 Cotton Anthony February 9 1987 Fill In Chambers Is All Star MVP As West Prevails The Washington Post Retrieved March 23 2021 SuperSonics Sold The New York Times Associated Press October 15 1983 Retrieved March 23 2021 Granberry Michael February 4 1989 Arena Official Cautious About Sonics Interest Los Angeles Times Retrieved March 23 2021 Mariners Favor Site South of Kingdome Associated Press April 30 1996 Retrieved June 11 2021 Kingdome or Tacoma Dome interim home for Sonics United Press International February 15 1990 Retrieved March 23 2021 Nelson Robert T May 30 1990 City s OK Merely First Step In Ackerley s Arena Quest The Seattle Times Retrieved March 23 2021 Lilly Dick June 26 1991 New Sonics Arena Dead Financing Troubles Sideline Ackerley The Seattle Times Retrieved March 23 2021 Atkin Ross August 2 1994 Seattle Supersonics Will Play Out of Town All Next Season The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved March 23 2021 Martin Genna McNertney Case October 11 2018 The day the Sonics came to Seattle Seattle Post Intelligencer Retrieved March 23 2021 Schwarzmann Bob January 10 1984 Huskies Germans conquer the Irish Schrempf Welp star in win The Seattle Times p B1 Retrieved August 28 2021 via NewsBank Peoples John December 23 1994 NCAA Huskies winners in Dome UW rehearsal proves venue set for Final 4 The Seattle Times p C4 Retrieved August 28 2021 via NewsBank Schwarzmann Bob December 7 1979 Soviets run pass shoot and win The Seattle Times p D1 Retrieved August 28 2021 via NewsBank Asher Mark April 4 1984 1984 NCAA Basketball Championship The Washington Post Retrieved March 24 2021 Markus Don April 9 1989 They re Still Talking About the Call Against the Hall Los Angeles Times Retrieved March 24 2021 Helfand Zach March 16 2015 Twenty years ago Tyus Edney saved UCLA s last NCAA title run Los Angeles Times Retrieved March 24 2021 Newnham Blaine March 27 1998 Without A Venue Like Kingdome Seattle Has Seen Last Final Four The Seattle Times Retrieved March 24 2021 Stevens Patrick March 26 2017 2017 March Madness The Final Four from A to Z The Washington Post Retrieved March 24 2021 Goodman Jeff November 14 2014 Phoenix 17 among cities to land Final Four ESPN Retrieved March 24 2021 Anderson Lenny February 18 1979 Trotters a Smash Hit Seattle Post Intelligencer p D2 Retrieved August 28 2021 via NewsBank Herberlein Greg June 21 1980 Westphal leads pros past Olympians The Seattle Times p D1 Retrieved August 28 2021 via NewsBank Games of the XXIInd Olympiad 1980 USA Basketball June 10 2010 Retrieved August 28 2021 Jares Joe April 19 1976 In a Kingdome by the Sea Sports Illustrated Vol 44 no 16 Time Inc pp 85 86 Retrieved March 18 2021 Pentz Matt April 9 2016 Sounders Pele and the huge crowd at the Kingdome The Seattle Times Retrieved February 23 2021 O Keefe Vincent April 10 1976 The King Pele stars in Kingdome The Seattle Times p D1 Retrieved May 22 2021 via NewsBank a b Drosendahl Glenn December 20 2014 Kingdome s first sporting event an exhibition soccer match between the Seattle Sounders and New York Cosmos draws crowd of 58 128 on April 9 1976 HistoryLink Retrieved February 23 2021 O Keefe Vince April 26 1976 Sounders wipe out frustration The Seattle Times p B1 Retrieved May 23 2021 via NewsBank Meyers Georg N August 26 1977 If ever the Kingdome was going to crumble The Seattle Times p C1 Retrieved May 23 2021 via NewsBank Parietti Walt August 10 1980 Cosmos give Sounders the boot 1 0 The Seattle Times p B1 Retrieved May 23 2021 via NewsBank Massey Matt May 6 2004 Seattle loved the Sounders of 74 The Seattle Times Retrieved March 18 2021 a b c Smith Craig September 14 1983 SOUNDERS 1974 83 The Seattle Times p E1 Retrieved August 28 2021 via NewsBank Yannis Alex December 6 1981 N A S L Is Going Indoors in Big Way The New York Times p S12 Retrieved March 18 2021 Timbers Sounders Game Opens NASL Indoor Season Sarasota Herald Tribune United Press International December 3 1981 p 15B Retrieved March 18 2021 via Google News Johnson Heather July 20 2003 Original Seattle Sounders 1974 1983 HistoryLink Retrieved March 18 2021 Smith Craig August 25 1983 Close shave Sounders win by whisker The Seattle Times p E1 Retrieved May 23 2021 via NewsBank Smith Craig December 17 1984 Will Seattle get another shot at soccer final The Seattle Times p B9 Retrieved May 19 2021 via NewsBank Edes Gordon December 15 1985 UCLA Wins Longest NCAA Soccer Final in 8th Overtime 1 0 Los Angeles Times Retrieved March 19 2021 Baker Geoff December 26 2018 Sigi Schmid Sounders first MLS coach dies at 65 The Seattle Times Retrieved March 19 2021 O Keefe Vince May 29 1976 Brazilians beat Team America 2 0 The Seattle Times p C1 Retrieved May 23 2021 via NewsBank Lewis Michael February 11 2015 How Eusebio and a team of Canadian Croatians took North American soccer by storm The Guardian Retrieved March 18 2021 Toronto Records Soccer Bowl Win The Spokesman Review Associated Press August 29 1976 Retrieved March 18 2021 via Google News O Keefe Vince October 21 1976 Speedy U S booters win The Seattle Times p G1 Retrieved May 23 2021 via NewsBank Lisi Clemente Angelo March 28 2011 A History of the World Cup 1930 2010 Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press p 144 ISBN 9780810877542 Retrieved May 23 2021 Yannis Alex January 21 1979 U S Soccer Squads Regrouping The New York Times p S9 Retrieved June 11 2021 Reed J D February 12 1979 Coming of age in Seattle Sports Illustrated Time Inc pp 42 44 Pentz Matt March 17 2021 Seattle deserves this Inside their second bid to be a World Cup host city The Athletic Retrieved May 23 2021 Robinson Herb October 6 1985 Too many domes Editorial The Seattle Times p A18 via NewsBank Mahoney Sally Gene February 3 1983 Designs for state convention center unveiled The Seattle Times p C2 via NewsBank Schaefer David April 1 1983 Convention center to be at freeway site The Seattle Times p A1 via NewsBank Graham packs em in Ellensburg Daily Record UPI May 15 1976 p 6 Billy Graham crusade drew Ellensburg Daily Record UPI May 17 1976 p 8 Balter Joni August 22 1986 Mariner schedule throws curve at GOP The Seattle Times p C1 via NewsBank Advertisement Seattle Times March 19 1977 p C2 Dougherty Gary January 29 1999 Supercross Big bikes will run at Kingdome for last time The Seattle Times p E2 Retrieved April 20 2022 2015 AMA Supercross media guide PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 13 2016 Retrieved June 20 2015 a b c d Kingdome looms large in Seattle s concert history The Seattle Times March 26 2000 Retrieved March 24 2021 Helluva show whatever you saw The Seattle Times June 11 1976 p B3 Retrieved May 1 2021 via NewsBank MacDonald Patrick November 1 2005 Paul s always been fab to us The Seattle Times Retrieved March 31 2021 Top Boxoffice PDF Billboard Vol 88 no 34 August 21 1976 p 27 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved August 6 2022 Boxscore PDF Billboard Vol 88 no 38 September 18 1976 p 29 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved March 31 2021 Arthur George July 10 1977 Reflections on Frampton s Kingdome Extravaganza Seattle Post Intelligencer p G4 a b McNerthney Casey June 1 2011 The Kingdome s Biggest Events Seattle Post Intelligencer Morlin Bill October 15 1981 Rolling Stone give fans satisfaction Spokane Daily Chronicle p 52 Eals Clay August 16 2019 The Stones roll from the covered Kingdome to the open air of CenturyLink Field The Seattle Times Retrieved March 31 2021 Girl s fatal mishap mars Stones second concert Spokane Daily Chronicle UPI October 16 1981 p 6 A 16 year old girl waiting to get into a Rolling United Press International October 16 1981 Retrieved March 31 2021 Boxscore Billboard Vol 94 no 31 August 7 1982 p 37 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved March 31 2021 via Google Books Cartwright Jane October 21 1982 For Who the bell tolls 55 000 fans say goodbye The Seattle Times p D1 Retrieved May 1 2021 via NewsBank Finnigan Bob May 23 1983 Mariners cash in on Beach Boys The Seattle Times p D3 Retrieved May 1 2021 via NewsBank The Hits Don t Stop When The Game Is Over Ballard News Tribune advertisement May 18 1983 p 11 Retrieved March 31 2021 via SmallTownPapers MacDonald Patrick July 16 1987 Live video Madonna s Kingdome concert might as well have been on TV The Seattle Times p D1 Retrieved April 5 2021 via NewsBank Amusement Business Boxscore Top Concert Grosses PDF Billboard Vol 100 no 2 January 9 1988 p 25 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved March 31 2021 Lacitis Erik July 28 1988 What s behind those skull emblazoned t shirts You d be surprised The Seattle Times p E1 Retrieved April 5 2021 via NewsBank MacDonald Patrick March 30 1990 Paul McCartney Yesterday is back and 50 000 fans enjoy a special intimacy with this dynamic performer The Seattle Times p E1 Retrieved April 5 2021 via NewsBank Amusement Business Boxscore Top Concert Grosses PDF Billboard Vol 102 no 40 October 6 1990 p 33 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved March 31 2021 Amusement Business Boxscore Top 10 Concert Grosses Billboard Vol 104 no 43 October 24 1992 p 22 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved March 31 2021 via Google Books Amusement Business Boxscore Top 10 Concert Grosses Billboard Vol 107 no 1 January 7 1995 p 13 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved March 31 2021 via Google Books a b Amusement Business Boxscore Top 10 Concert Grosses Billboard Vol 109 no 52 December 27 1997 p 24 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved March 31 2021 via Google Books a b c Drosendahl Glenn September 11 2010 Safeco Field the Seattle Mariners long sought stadium opens on July 15 1999 HistoryLink Retrieved February 23 2021 Farrey Tom Balter Joni June 9 1992 M s Sale Gets Go Ahead Full Acceptance Of Offer Predicted For Tomorrow The Seattle Times Retrieved March 25 2021 Lewis Mike February 16 2001 Taxpayers Off Hook For Safeco Field Mariners Drop Attempt To Recoup Cost Overruns From The Public Seattle Post Intelligencer p B1 Retrieved March 25 2021 via NewsBank a b Nalder Eric Guillen Tomas August 28 1994 Years Of Fixes Turned Leaky Kingdome Roof Into Sodden Disaster The Seattle Times Retrieved April 8 2010 a b c Condotta Bob July 19 2004 Ten years after the Kingdome tiles fell The Seattle Times Archived from the original on December 6 2004 Retrieved March 26 2021 Schaefer David November 3 1994 Dome To Reopen With Repair Budget In Red The Seattle Times Retrieved April 9 2010 Postman David October 15 1995 Legislature OKs plan for stadium but county must pass taxes Dome repairs not covered The Seattle Times p A1 Retrieved March 25 2021 via NewsBank Wright Bart April 21 1996 Allen goes long to purchase Seahawks Kitsap Sun Gannett Archived from the original on October 22 2020 Retrieved February 23 2021 a b Crowley Walt September 22 2001 Washington voters approve funding for new Seahawks Stadium on June 17 1997 HistoryLink Retrieved February 23 2021 Paul Allen Ventures into Seattle Election Wired Conde Nast June 19 1997 Retrieved February 23 2021 Seattle Mariners may use Kingdome for an extra year Ellensburg Daily Record Associated Press February 14 1997 p 11 Retrieved March 25 2021 via Google News Cour Jim July 17 1997 Final piles driven for Mariners new 414 million stadium Associated Press Retrieved March 25 2021 Mariners Break Ground On Their Future The Spokesman Review Associated Press March 9 1997 Retrieved March 25 2021 a b Cour Jim June 27 1999 No Love Lost for Kingdome Los Angeles Times Associated Press Retrieved March 25 2021 Maebori Jay June 28 1999 END OF AN ERA Griffey turns off Dome lights Kitsap Sun Retrieved February 23 2021 Tov Yom October 9 2006 I did the Dome Skateboarder tells all Seattle Weekly Sound Publishing Retrieved March 30 2021 Dome pranksters may be charged The Seattle Times February 25 2000 Retrieved March 30 2021 Satchell Michael June 22 2003 Bringing Down The House U S News amp World Report Archived from the original on May 23 2010 Retrieved September 8 2010 There s the Seattle Kingdome largest structure by volume Reader Bill January 26 2004 Great moments in dome history The Seattle Times Archived from the original on May 24 2011 Retrieved September 8 2010 Seattle s very own Kingdome 1976 remains the only dome to be imploded ESPN Classic to air Kingdome retrospective implosion Seattle Post Intelligencer March 20 2000 Archived from the original on September 9 2010 Retrieved September 8 2010 ESPN s SportsCenter will cut in for live coverage of the actual implosion the first live event ever televised by ESPN Classic Brunner Jim Young Bob January 4 2005 Q amp A Stadium tax proposal The Seattle Times Archived from the original on May 24 2011 Retrieved September 8 2010 Belson Ken September 7 2010 As Stadiums Vanish Their Debt Lives On The New York Times p A8 Archived from the original on September 9 2010 Retrieved September 8 2010 Residents of Seattle s King County owe more than 80 million for the Kingdome which was razed in 2000 a b c d e Lowry Phil 2006 Green Cathedrals The Ultimate Celebrations of All 273 Major League and Negro League Ballparks Past and Present New York City Addison Wesley Publishing Company ISBN 0 201 62229 7 Jim Cour July 15 1981 Seattle Natives Aren t Restless About the Kingdome Anymore Los Angeles Times John Powers December 16 1984 Ease On Down the Road NFL Clubs Are Packing It in for New Cities and Sweetheart Deals Boston Globe permanent dead link Elway s Super Year May Lead to Super Year The Gazette Colorado Springs November 27 1993 Hec Hancock October 19 1980 Thanks Be to Paul Tri City Herald Yokley Richard C Sutherland Rozane 2008 Chapter 14 The Emergency Movies Emergency Behind the Scene Sudbury Massachusetts Jones and Bartlett Publishers pp 270 272 ISBN 9780763748968 Retrieved March 24 2021 Crushed Full House Season 5 Episode 16 January 14 1992 ABC Full House Scripts Season 5 Episode 110 Crushed Retrieved March 24 2021 Jesse My pleasure Thank you You know I dabble in music myself there Tom You may have heard of my band Jesse and the Rippers Tommy Yeah didn t you play in Seattle this summer Jesse Yes we did We played a little club near the university over there yeah Tommy Cool I was playing at the Kingdome Jesse That s nice if you re into big stadiums and a lot of money I prefer small intimate places where I can split a pizza with my audience dead YouTube link Secret Admirer Frasier Season 6 Episode 6 November 5 1998 NBC Transcript of Frasier Season 6 Episode 6 So then Daphne takes a left on Madison Bumper to bumper all the way to Pike Then a right on Pike And what do you know King Dome sic traffic Concrete Modern Marvels Season 6 Episode 16 May 31 2000 1 minutes in The History Channel Foo Fighters January 25 2017 1997 New Way Home Roswell Records Event occurs at 1 31 Archived from the original on December 21 2021 via YouTube I pass boats and the Kingdome Matson Andrew January 4 2011 Thinking about Macklemore and Ryan Lewis rap tribute to Dave Niehaus My Oh My The Seattle Times Retrieved February 23 2021 McGarvey Sean April 28 2011 Seattle Mariners My Oh My Seattle Rapper s Tribute to Dave Niehaus Bleacher Report Turner Broadcasting System Retrieved February 23 2021 Macklemore LLC January 12 2011 Macklemore and Ryan Lewis My Oh My Official Video Music video YouTube Archived from the original on December 21 2021 All Tracks Gran Turismo 2 IGN December 9 1999 Retrieved March 24 2021 Perry Douglass C May 11 2000 E3 2000 Gran Turismo 2000 Impressions IGN Retrieved March 24 2021 Howarth Robert April 11 2007 World in Conflict Single Player Previews IGN Retrieved March 24 2021 Bibliography Edit Mullins William H 2013 Becoming Big League Seattle the Pilots and Stadium Politics Seattle University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 295 99425 3 Retrieved March 26 2021 via Google Books External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kingdome Official website at the Wayback Machine archived October 22 1999 The Story behind the implosion of The Seattle Kingdome Kingdome The Controversial Birth of a Seattle Icon 1959 1976 Video of Kingdome implosion via KING TVEvents and tenantsPreceded byfirst stadium Home of theSeattle Seahawks1976 1999 Succeeded byHusky StadiumPreceded byfirst ballpark Home of theSeattle Mariners1977 1999 Succeeded byT Mobile ParkPreceded bySeattle Center Coliseum Home of theSeattle SuperSonics1978 1985 Succeeded bySeattle Center ColiseumPreceded byThe PitKemper ArenaCharlotte Coliseum NCAA Men s Division IBasketball tournamentFinals Venue198419891995 Succeeded byRupp ArenaMcNichols Sports ArenaContinental Airlines ArenaPreceded byLouisiana Superdome Host of the NFL Pro Bowl1977 Succeeded byTampa StadiumPreceded bySan Diego Stadium Host of the MLB All Star Game1979 Succeeded byDodger StadiumPreceded byReunion Arena Host of the NBA All Star Game1987 Succeeded byChicago StadiumPreceded byLockhart Stadium Host of the College Cup1984 1985 Succeeded byTacoma Dome Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kingdome amp oldid 1171379053, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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