Edmonton Expo Centre Explained

Edmonton Expo Centre
Address:7515 118 Avenue NW
Location:Edmonton, Alberta
Owner:Explore Edmonton
(City of Edmonton)
Opened:April 14, 1984[1]
Expanded:2009
Former Names:Northlands Agricom (1984–2009)
Total Space:522000square feet
Exhibit:400694square feet
(8 halls)
Breakout:21485square feet
(6 rooms)
Ballroom:16545square feet
Parking:3,800 spaces
Publictransit: Coliseum station

The Edmonton Expo Centre, formerly the Northlands AgriCom and also known as the Edmonton Exposition and Conference Centre[2] is a multi-purpose convention centre in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Operated by Explore Edmonton on behalf of the City of Edmonton, it is located in Edmonton's Montrose neighbourhood, across the street from the now-closed Northlands Coliseum.

History and use

The facility was built in 1984 on the site of the old Edmonton Gardens, the first home of the Edmonton Oilers. The Oilers moved across 118 Avenue in 1974 to the new Northlands Coliseum. Prior to 2009, the EXPO Centre was known as the Northlands AgriCom, or simply The Agricom, from the agricultural and commercial trade shows which it was built to host.

From 1996 to 1998, a portion of the venue was used as the home arena of the Edmonton Ice of the Western Hockey League. It was considered a substandard venue for the team, which was prevented from using the nearby Coliseum; Edmonton Sun writer Terry Jones described the arena as being an "abomination of a building", "with the atrocious situation of a reasonable $13.50 ticket price but a $10 Northlands parking price to go with it." The team would subsequently re-locate to Kootenay.[3]

In 2002 the arena became host of the 2002 World Ringette Championships.

In December 2009, renovations were completed that doubled the facility's size to 522000square feet, which was expected to make it the largest such facility in Canada outside of Toronto at the time. The additions included four new exhibition halls, and new conference centre named the Alberta Ballroom. The Alberta government contributed $50 million to the project, while the federal government contributed $25 million.[2] [4] The city loaned $48 million.[5]

In 2010, the Edmonton Expo Centre hosted the last Powerama Motoring Expo, which it had hosted since the expo's inception in 1984.[6] [7]

In February 2016, as part of the "Northlands Vision 2020" proposal, it was revealed that Northlands hoped to upgrade the existing arena to a more modern standard 5,000-seat indoor arena to the Expo Centre for concerts and sporting events.[8] However, the 2016 opening of the new downtown arena Rogers Place, which replaced Northlands' Rexall Place as the home of Edmonton Oilers games and other major events, caused the organization to incur an increasing amount of debt due to lost event revenue.[5]

In July 2017, it was reported that Northlands had been in private discussions with the city about its future. The organization intended to divest itself of Rexall Place, Northlands Park, and the Edmonton Expo Centre in order to focus on promoting agricultural innovation.[9] On August 29, 2017, the city of Edmonton announced that it would take ownership of the Edmonton Expo Centre and forgive $42 million in debt. The venue's operations were merged with those of the downtown Shaw Conference Centre under the Edmonton Economic Development Corporation in 2018.[10] The Northlands Coliseum was similarly taken over by the city on the same day, although it also ceased operations.[11] [12] [13]

In June 2018, it was announced that the Edmonton Stingers of the newly established Canadian Elite Basketball League would play their home games at the Expo Centre.[14]

In 2022, the facility began its $98 million rehabilitation project which includes updates to the building envelope, roof replacement, mechanical and electrical upgrades, and installation of the largest rooftop solar array in Canada.[15] It is expected to be completed in 2025.[16]

Facilities

Exposition areas[17]
Hall Square
Feet
Booth
Capacity
Reception
Capacity
Aalign=right 53,262 align=right 274 align=right 2,500
Balign=right 58,104 align=right 301 align=right 3,000
Calign=right 77,472 align=right 413 align=right 4,000
D (arena)align=right 53,410 align=right 325 align=right 4,628
align=right 8,990 align=right 65 align=right
Ealign=right 53,836 align=right 253 align=right 2,500
Falign=right 39,156 align=right 181 align=right 3,500
Galign=right 29,328 align=right 138 align=right 3,000
Halign=right 36,126 align=right 178 align=right 3,250
Alberta Ballroomalign=right 16,545 align=right align=right 1,200
Totalsalign=right 417,239 align=right 2,063 align=right 26,450

Notes and References

  1. News: . April 14, 1984: Agricom unveiled as Northlands showcase venue. April 14, 2012. Edmonton Journal. Edmonton. A2.
  2. Web site: Northlands dubs new facility Edmonton Expo Centre . Bill Mah . 2009-09-08 . . Edmonton . 2009-09-22 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090911082006/http://www.edmontonjournal.com/news/Northlands+dubs+facility+Edmonton+Expo+Centre/1972750/story.html . September 11, 2009 .
  3. Web site: Ice the little franchise that could. Jones. Terry. Sun. Edmonton. Toronto Sun. 2017-08-31.
  4. Web site: Project Evolution.09: General Information . 2008-09-04 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080427074959/http://www.evolution09.ca/info.html . 2008-04-27 . dead .
  5. News: City council wants answers before forgiving Northlands debt and approving redevelopment. CBC News. 2017-08-31. en.
  6. News: Halliday. Dave. April 23, 2010. Powerama Salutes the Military, Adds Auction. F2. The Edmonton Journal.
  7. News: April 5, 1991. Powerama '91 Features Exciting World of Speed, Sound. D2. The Edmonton Journal.
  8. News: Dan Barnes: Northlands isn't horsing around anymore; Vision 2020 plan is about evolution. 2016-02-18. Edmonton Journal. 2017-08-31. en-US.
  9. News: Convention centre merger to save Northlands still puts debt on Edmonton taxpayers. 2017-06-27. Edmonton Journal. 2017-08-31. en-US.
  10. News: Council votes to forgive Northlands' $47M debt, take over Expo Centre. 2017-08-30. Edmonton Journal. 2017-08-31. en-US.
  11. Web site: Stolte. Elsie. Decision to shutter Northlands Coliseum means demolition on the table. Edmonton Journal. September 17, 2017. September 13, 2017.
  12. Web site: Northlands Coliseum will close permanently at end of this year. CBC News. September 17, 2017. September 13, 2017.
  13. Web site: Kornik. Slav. Edmonton’s Northlands Coliseum closing its doors in January. Global News. September 17, 2017. September 13, 2017.
  14. News: Edmonton professional basketball team announces name, logo. 2018-06-23. CTV News Edmonton. 2018-08-28. en-CA.
  15. News: Frey, Warren. Edmonton Expo Centre boasts Canada’s largest rooftop solar array. August 24, 2022. Journal of Commerce. ConstructConnect Canada. June 8, 2024. August 24, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220824143852/https://canada.constructconnect.com/joc/news/resource/2022/08/edmonton-expo-centre-boasts-canadas-largest-rooftop-solar-array. live.
  16. Web site: Edmonton EXPO Centre Rehabilitation - Alberta Major Projects. Alberta.ca. June 8, 2024. June 8, 2024. https://web.archive.org/web/20240608215647/https://majorprojects.alberta.ca/details/Edmonton-EXPO-Centre-Rehabilitation/4309/1000. live.
  17. Web site: Edmonton EXPO Centre Capacity Chart. Edmonton Expo Centre. 2019-04-21.