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The Rogers Centre's field arranged for Canadian football with some seats in the 500 Level closed off and replaced with large banners. Rogers Centre hosted Canadian football from opening in 1989 to 2015, as the Argonauts moved to BMO Field in 2016. In November 2007, it hosted the 95th Grey Cup, its first since 1992 and third all-time. It was the ...
Rogers Centre SkyDome (1989–2005) 1989–2015 31,074 1989 West Division; BC Lions: Empire Stadium: 1954–1982 32,375 1954 Vancouver, British Columbia [21] Empire Field: 2010–2011 27,528 2010 [22] Calgary Stampeders: Mewata Stadium: 1935–1959 10,000 1906 Calgary, Alberta [23] Edmonton Elks: Clarke Stadium: 1949–1978 20,000 1938 Edmonton ...
Stadium Capacity City Province Home Team(s) Olympic Stadium: 45,757 [5]: Montreal Quebec Rogers Centre: 39,150 [6]: Toronto Ontario Toronto Blue Jays: Ottawa Stadium: 10,332: Ottawa
Rogers Arena: Vancouver, British Columbia ... Chicago Stadium, was unavailable 1929–1930, 1932–1933 Chicago, Illinois ... Scotiabank Centre (2014–present)
BMO Field is the fifth stadium to be built at its exact location at Exhibition Place. The most recent was Exhibition Stadium, which lost its two primary tenants, the Argonauts and the Toronto Blue Jays of Major League Baseball (MLB), with the 1989 opening of SkyDome (now Rogers Centre). Exhibition Stadium was demolished in 1999.
Four Seasons Centre: 2,000 Harbourfront Centre Concert Stage † 2,000 Outdoor venue located on the waterfront. [21] It hosts free shows and music festivals. [21] 1992 [22] Harbourfront (235 Queens Quay W.) Convocation Hall: 1,700 University of Toronto (31 King's College Circle) Meridian Arts Centre: 1,700 [23] 1993 [23] North York (5040 Yonge ...
Map of downtown Toronto in 1858 The Railway Lands between the Toronto waterfront and Front Street, c. 1919 the stadium site being in the centre area of this photo. The venue is located on land that was once part of Toronto's inner harbour.
Rogers Arena is a multi-purpose arena at 800 Griffiths Way in the downtown area of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Opened in 1995, the arena was known as General Motors Place (GM Place) from its opening until July 6, 2010, when General Motors Canada ended its naming rights sponsorship and a new agreement for those rights was reached with ...