The Oshawa Civic Auditorium was an indoor arena in Oshawa, Ontario, Canada. It operated from 1964 to 2006, and was primarily used as an ice hockey venue for the Oshawa Generals. The auditorium was built as a replacement to the Hambly Arena, which burned down in 1953.[1][2] The auditorium was part of a larger multi-purpose recreational complex.
Construction
The construction of the auditorium was led by a committee of residents with the slogan: "Let's build it ourselves, for ourselves."[3] Volunteers raised $1.4 million from the community to fund the project, including $476,000 from the local General Motors employees union (Canadian Auto Workers) through payroll reductions.[2] The City of Oshawa provided 20 acres of land on Thornton Road South, previously designated for a cemetery.[2] Groundbreaking for the project took place on February 28, 1964,[3] and the formal opening took place on December 11, 1964.[3][4] The auditorium capacity was 3,625 seated, and 4,025 including standing room.
In June 2005, construction began on a replacement arena in downtown Oshawa. The General Motors Centre, opened as the city's new primary hockey venue in October 2006. The auditorium sat idle until demolition between April and July 2010. The former site of the auditorium became an indoor turf field.[2]
References
^Weymark, Jennifer (January 29, 2016). "Memories of the Oshawa Arena". oshawaexpress.ca. The Oshawa Express. Retrieved December 18, 2017.