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The second Salt Palace in Salt Lake City was in use from 1969 to 1994, hosting among other events the home games of the Utah Stars and Utah Jazz basketball teams, and the Salt Lake Golden Eagles ice hockey team. Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation Tour became the fastest sell-out in Salt Palace history. Tickets for the June 18 concert were sold out ...
The Salt Palace was an indoor arena located in downtown Salt Lake City, Utah. [8] Opened in 1969, the building hosted several professional sport teams, concerts, and other special events before it was closed and demolished in the 1990s to make way for the current Salt Palace Convention Center .
Salt Palace Convention Center: Salt Lake City: Utah: 515,000 sq ft (47,800 m 2) 679,000 sq ft (63,100 m 2) Greensboro Coliseum Complex: Greensboro: North Carolina:
Salt Lake Ice Center EnergySolutions Arena (2006–2015) Vivint Smart Home Arena (2015–2020) Vivint Arena (2020–2023) Address: 301 W. South Temple: Location: Salt Lake City, Utah, U.S. Coordinates: Public transit 701 704 (at Arena) Owner: Ryan Smith: Operator
Saltair viewed from the lake, c. 1900 Saltair concert program from 1919 The first Saltair, completed in 1893, was jointly owned by a corporation associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and Salt Lake & Los Angeles Railway (later renamed as the Salt Lake, Garfield, and Western Railway; not to be confused with the Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad), which was constructed ...
From its opening until the completion of the Delta Center in 1991, the Huntsman Center was one of Salt Lake City's premier sports and entertainment venues (along with the Salt Palace (1969–1993), the home of the Utah Stars and later the Utah Jazz ).
Prior to the arrival of the NHL, Salt Lake City had limited ice hockey history. The first team to call the area home, the minor-league Salt Lake Golden Eagles, played 25 seasons across the Western Hockey League (WHL), Central Hockey League (CHL), and International Hockey League (IHL) from 1969 to 1994.
Oquirrh School (1894), 350 S. 400 E., Salt Lake City, NRHP-listed [9] There is some uncertainty on Kletting's relationship to a William Carroll, see Talk:Oquirrh School. Gibbs-Thomas House (1896), 137 N. West Temple St., Salt Lake City, NRHP-listed [9] First Salt Palace (1899) Destroyed by fire in 1910. Had largest unobstructed dance floor in ...