Mid-South Coliseum
The Mid-South Coliseum is a modern-style indoor arena located at 996 Early Maxwell Boulevard on the Mid-South Fairgrounds in Memphis, Tennessee, completed in 1964 at a cost of $4.7 million following groundbreaking on March 16, 1963.[1] Designed with a planned capacity of up to 10,000 spectators—though actual events often accommodated 12,000 to 13,000—it was the first public auditorium in Memphis intentionally planned as a racially integrated facility during the lingering era of segregation.[1][2] Known as the "Entertainment Capital of the Mid-South," the venue hosted landmark concerts by artists such as The Beatles in 1966 and Elvis Presley's final Memphis performance in 1976, alongside sporting events including hockey games for the Memphis Wings and various trade shows, circuses, and civic gatherings that drew integrated crowds from 1964 to 1974.[1][3] The Coliseum operated as a cultural and entertainment hub for over four decades until its closure in 2006, prompted by operating deficits and competition from newer facilities, after which it fell into disuse and became the subject of ongoing preservation debates and demolition proposals.[4][5]
Architecture and Specifications
Design and Construction Features
The Mid-South Coliseum features a modern architectural design characterized by its circular form with 32 wall segments and a prominent steel-domed roof spanning 325 feet, making it the third largest structural steel dome in the United States upon completion.[1][6] The structure was designed by Merrill G. Ehrman of Furbringer and Ehrman, with assistance from Robert Lee Hall & Associates, as part of a 1960 master plan by Vandeburg-Linkletter Associates, emphasizing multipurpose functionality for sports, exhibitions, and entertainment without internal support columns to maximize unobstructed viewing.[1][6] Structural engineering was handled by S.S. Kenworthy & Associates, while mechanical and electrical systems were engineered by Sam Burns & Associates, incorporating state-of-the-art 1960s lighting, sound, and dual air conditioning units with 1,400 tons capacity.[1] Construction began with planning in 1959, groundbreaking on March 16, 1963, and completion in December 1964 at a cost of $4.7 million, funded jointly by the City of Memphis (60%) and Shelby County (40%).[1][7] Primary materials included concrete for foundations, walls, and roof decking; brick for exterior cladding; glazed ceramic tiles for interior walls to enhance acoustics; terrazzo for floors; and 713 tons of steel for the dome, supported by large bell-bottom caissons up to 11 feet in diameter.[1][6] The arena floor measures 112 feet by 228 feet, with an interior ceiling height of 86 feet rising to 102 feet exteriorly, and includes provisions for ice-making via brine pipes, a movable stage, and 64,500 square feet of adjacent exhibition space.[6] A distinctive aspect of the design was its planning as the first racially integrated public auditorium in Memphis, featuring unified entrances, restrooms, and seating without segregation provisions, reflecting mid-20th-century shifts toward civil rights compliance.[1][7] The circular shape and domed enclosure of approximately 3.76 million cubic feet contributed to superior acoustics, with baffles in seating areas and reverberation control optimized for live performances and events.[8][1]