Veterans Memorial Coliseum

  • Client City Of Portland
  • Expertise Cultural, Interiors
  • Location Portland, Oregon, United States

Project Facts
  • Completion Year 1960
  • Design Finish Year 1957
  • Size Site Area: 22 acres Number of Stories: 2 Building Gross Area: 341,300 square feet
  • Collaborators
    Bolt Beranek & Newman J. Donald Kroeker And Associates Grant Kelly And Associates Lawrence D. Byington Moffatt & Nichol Hoffman Construction Company
Project Facts
  • Completion Year 1960
  • Design Finish Year 1957
  • Size Site Area: 22 acres Number of Stories: 2 Building Gross Area: 341,300 square feet
  • Collaborators
    Bolt Beranek & Newman J. Donald Kroeker And Associates Grant Kelly And Associates Lawrence D. Byington Moffatt & Nichol Hoffman Construction Company

Located in Portland, Oregon, the Veterans Memorial Coliseum directly expresses SOM’s conviction that successful architecture depends on the balanced union of art and engineering. The design team, led by Myron Goldsmith, used a grid of reinforced concrete columns and cantilevered steel trusses to form a square building, 360 feet wide on each side. Unlike most arenas, SOM wrapped the building in modular 3.5-foot by 9-foot glass panels, flooding the interior with natural light.

Composed of gray-tinted glass, the glass walls are capped at the top of the building by a white strip of acrylic overlaid on plywood fascia. To cover the 80,000 square feet of windows, SOM designed a special blackout curtain which, at the time of its installation, was the largest continuous curtain in the United States. When it opened in 1960, the building was also the only glass-walled International Style stadium in the Pacific Northwest.

Inside, terraced seating wraps the arena in an oval bowl made of free-standing concrete. From outside the building, a viewer can see the bowl’s curved form through the grid of windows. The elegant contrast between fluid and rectangular shapes gives the coliseum its unique sense of equilibrium.

The coliseum is listed on the National Park Service’s National Register of Historic Places, and the National Trust for Historic Preservation has declared it a National Treasure.

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