Matthew Knight Arena

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Matthew Knight Arena (MKA)
File:Matt knight logo.jpg
Matt Knight Arena (Eugene, Oregon).jpg
The exterior of the arena
Location 1776 East 13th Street
Eugene, OR 97401
United States
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Owner National Championship Properties, (Subsidiary of University of Oregon)
Operator Arena Network
Capacity 12,364
Construction
Broke ground February 7, 2009
Opened January 13, 2011
Construction cost $227 million
($239 million in 2024 dollars[1])
Architect TVA Architects
Ellerbe Becket[2]
Structural engineer Haris Engineering, Inc. [2]
Services engineer Henderson Engineers Inc.[2]
General contractor Hoffman Construction Company
Tenants
Oregon Ducks (NCAA) (2011-present)

The Matthew Knight Arena (MKA) is a 12,364 seat, multi-purpose arena in Eugene, Oregon, United States. It is home of the University of Oregon Ducks basketball teams, replacing McArthur Court. It is located on the east side of campus at the corner of Franklin Boulevard and Villard Street, a gateway to campus as people arrive from I-5. The arena was originally intended to be ready for the start of the 2010–11 basketball season, but instead opened for the men's basketball game against the USC Trojans on January 13, 2011.[3] It is named for chief donor Phil Knight's son, Matthew Knight, who died at the age of 34 in a scuba diving accident.[4] The arena cost $227 million[5] and was designed as collaboration between TVA Architects of Portland, Oregon and Ellerbe Becket of Kansas City, Missouri. Hoffman Construction Company of Portland, Oregon was the general contractor.[6]

The Ducks inaugurated the arena to a sold-out crowd on January 13, 2011, beating the USC Trojans 68–62.[7]

Design

Matthew Knight Arena, February 2011.

The arena floor is named Kilkenny Floor after former Oregon Athletic Director Pat Kilkenny. Called "Deep in the Woods", the design features repeating silhouettes of Pacific Northwest tree lines, giving the impression of being lost in the forest, gazing toward the sky. The floor was designed by Tinker Hatfield, Nike's VP of Creative Design, who intended to design an "iconic television presence possible for the University of Oregon" and honor the "Tall Firs", the nickname of the 1938–39 Oregon Ducks men's basketball team, winners of the inaugural NCAA basketball championship.[8][9]

The arena also features a 32-by-36-foot (9.8 m × 11.0 m), 65,000-pound (29,000 kg) center-hung scoreboard, once the largest in college sports. It contains four 20 by 12 feet (6.1 m × 3.7 m) high definition LED monitors and is connected to the ceiling by intersecting "O" logos.[10]

There was some criticism from fans about the glare caused by the court's contrast. There also was criticism for the lack of a visible center court line,[11] though one has since been added.

Matt Knight Attendance Records

Opponent
Attendance
Year
1
Oregon State
12,369
2010–2011
2
USC*
12,364
2010–2011
2
Stanford
12,364
2012–2013
2
Washington
12,364
2012–2013
2
Stanford
12,364
2010–2011
2
Arizona
12,364
2013–2014
7
Washington
11,925
2010–2011
8
Oregon State
11,219
2011–2012
9
USC**
11,178
2013–2014
10
UCLA
11,089
2010–2011

(*) Opening night at Matthew Knight Arena (**) Phil Knight bobble head giveaway

Criticism

Statewide criticism

The projected construction cost of $200 million made Knight Arena the most expensive on-campus basketball arena in the United States, and financing was secured through state-backed, 30-year bonds.[1] The university was criticized for overstating the income estimates.[12]

Community criticism

There was also concern from residents of the Fairmount neighborhood, where the arena is located, about insufficient parking and trash disposal during events.[13] According to spokesman Greg Rikhoff, the University did not originally plan to add any new parking for the 12,500 seat arena. The first proposals included only street parking and remote park and ride shuttle service for spectators, but later proposals added parking spaces. The University was required to obtain a conditional use permit, obligating the University to provide a transportation plan, a community impact statement, and to address other neighborhood concerns about the new use of the property in an open forum.[3][14]

On-campus criticism

Students expressed concern about the proximity of the planned arena to on-campus student housing, listing site-specific concerns such as physical security, noise, and "the out-of-place scale" of building in an academically-focused residential area.[15]

References

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External links