Name
Norfolk Scope

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Established
1971 (54 years old)

Capacity
10,253

Build Cost
$14.5 million (upgrades since 2003)

Architect


Country
United States

Location
Norfolk, Virginia

Timezone


Coordinates
36°51'7.06" N -76°17'7.32" W



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Upcoming
26 Mar Norfolk Admi home team badge - Away Team Badge Reading Roya
28 Mar Norfolk Admi home team badge - Away Team Badge Savannah
29 Mar Norfolk Admi home team badge - Away Team Badge Savannah
09 Apr Norfolk Admi home team badge - Away Team Badge Reading Roya
11 Apr Norfolk Admi home team badge - Away Team Badge South Caroli
12 Apr Norfolk Admi home team badge - Away Team Badge South Caroli

Past Events
09 Mar Norfolk Admi home team badge 3 - 2home team badge Florida Ever
08 Mar Norfolk Admi home team badge 3 - 5home team badge Florida Ever
06 Mar Norfolk Admi home team badge 4 - 1home team badge Florida Ever
23 Feb Norfolk Admi home team badge 2 - 3home team badge Maine Marine
23 Feb Norfolk Admi home team badge 4 - 0home team badge Maine Marine
22 Feb Norfolk Admi home team badge 0 - 2home team badge Maine Marine
02 Feb Norfolk Admi home team badge 3 - 4home team badge South Caroli


Description
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Norfolk Scope is a multi-function complex in Norfolk, Virginia, comprising an 11,000-person arena, a 2,500-person theater known as Chrysler Hall, a 10,000-square-foot (930 m2) exhibition hall and a 600-car parking garage.

The arena was designed by Italian architect/engineer Pier Luigi Nervi in conjunction with the (now defunct) local firm Williams and Tazewell, which designed the entire complex. Nervi's design for the arena's reinforced concrete dome derived from the PalaLottomatica and the much smaller Palazzetto dello Sport, which were built in the 1950s for the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome.

Construction on Scope began in June 1968 at the northern perimeter of Norfolk's downtown and was completed in 1971 at a cost of $35 million. Federal funds covered $23 million of the cost, and when it opened formally on November 12, 1971, the structure was the second-largest public complex in Virginia, behind only the Pentagon.

Featuring the world's largest reinforced thinshell concrete dome (though eclipsed by the Seattle Seattle Kingdome from 1976 to 2000), Scope won the Virginia Society of the American Institute of Architects Test of Time award in 2003. Wes Lewis, director of Old Dominion University's civil engineering technology program, called it "a beautiful marrying of art and engineering." Noted architectural critic James Howard Kunstler described the design as looking like "yesterday's tomorrow."

The name "Scope", a contraction of kaleidoscope, emphasizes the venue's re-configurability. The facility logo (right), which features a multi-colored, abstracted kaleidoscope image, was designed by Raymond Loewy's firm Loewy/Snaith of New York.
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