The Tampa Sportatorium was a professional wrestling studio used by Championship Wrestling from Florida. The former television studio building may be demolished for a new building.[1]
Located at 106 N Albany Ave near downtown Tampa, Florida, the 7,500-square-foot stucco building was used for television tapings at 11am on Thursdays, which would air on the following Sundays.[2] Tampa native Hulk Hogan attended shows at the Sportatorium as a teenager and recalled that the studio could not fit more than 50 people in it and that it was not air conditioned despite Florida's often warm, subtropical, and humid climate.[3] To make the room seem bigger to the television audience, the walls were painted black. Dory Funk Jr. praised the content to come out of the building, stating: "The Sportatorium was small, but the television it produced was so good."[4]
The upstairs of the building was used as an office by company executives Eddie and Mike Graham and Jim Barnett.[5] Championship Wrestling from Florida closed in 1987 and the Graham family sold the building a few years later.[2] A textile factory occupied the building for many years, until a foreclosure saw it go on auction in 2016. [4] [6] In 2020, it was purchased by a Miami-based development group.[2]
. Hollywood Hulk Hogan. 2002. Hulk Hogan. WWE Books.
. Backlund. 2015. Bob Backlund. Sports Publishing.