Continental Airlines Arena History
```mediawiki The Continental Airlines Arena, located at the Meadowlands Sports Complex in East Rutherford, New Jersey, was one of the most prominent multi-purpose indoor arenas in the northeastern United States. Operating under several names during its lifetime — Brendan Byrne Arena, Continental Airlines Arena, and finally the Izod Center — the venue served as home to two professional sports franchises, the New Jersey Devils of the National Hockey League and the New Jersey Nets of the National Basketball Association, and hosted tens of thousands of concerts, conventions, and cultural events over nearly three decades. Its closure in 2015 ended a significant chapter in New Jersey sports and entertainment history, with the Prudential Center in Newark and the Barclays Center in Brooklyn having by then drawn both tenant teams away from the Meadowlands complex.
History
Construction and Opening
The arena was conceived in the early 1980s as the indoor centerpiece of the Meadowlands Sports Complex, a sprawling entertainment and sports campus developed by the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority (NJSEA) on former wetlands in East Rutherford, Bergen County. The site had been developed in phases, with Giants Stadium opening in 1976 and the Meadowlands Racetrack — a harness racing facility — operating adjacent to where the arena would be built. Construction of the indoor arena proceeded through the mid-1980s, and the facility opened on July 2, 1981,[1] initially named the Brendan Byrne Arena in honor of New Jersey's 47th governor, who had championed the Meadowlands development during his administration.
The naming was not without controversy. Byrne was still alive and serving as a private citizen when the arena was named after him, a relatively uncommon practice at the time for public facilities. The arena's design, by the architectural firm Grad Associates, seated approximately 19,040 spectators for hockey and up to 20,000 for concerts, making it one of the larger arenas in the region at the time of its opening.[2]
Name Changes
The arena operated as the Brendan Byrne Arena until 1996, when a naming rights agreement with Continental Airlines resulted in the facility being rechristened the Continental Airlines Arena. The deal was reported at the time as being worth approximately $1.4 million annually,[3] reflecting the growing commercial practice of selling venue names to corporate sponsors — a model that was then gaining widespread adoption across North American sports. Continental Airlines maintained a significant hub operation at nearby Newark Liberty International Airport, making the sponsorship a logical regional fit.
The Continental Airlines name lasted until 2007, when the arena was renamed the Izod Center following a new naming rights deal with the clothing brand Izod, a division of PVH Corp.[4] The Izod Center name remained in place until the facility's closure. The arena's full naming chronology, therefore, ran: Brendan Byrne Arena (1981–1996), Continental Airlines Arena (1996–2007), and Izod Center (2007–2015).
The Sports Tenants
Two professional sports franchises called the arena home for extended stretches of its operational life. The New Jersey Devils, who joined the NHL after relocating from Colorado in 1982 and initially played at the Byrne Arena immediately upon arrival, used the facility as their home ice through the 2006–07 NHL season. During that tenure, the Devils won three Stanley Cup championships — in 1995, 2000, and 2003 — with all three title-winning runs including home playoff games at the arena.[5] The team relocated to the newly constructed Prudential Center in Newark for the 2007–08 season.
The New Jersey Nets of the NBA played at the arena from its opening through the 2009–10 season, representing one of the longest continuous tenancies of any NBA team at a single arena during that period. The Nets reached the NBA Finals in consecutive years, 2002 and 2003, though they did not win a championship during their Meadowlands tenure.[6] The team subsequently relocated to the Barclays Center in Brooklyn in 2012, having played interim seasons at the Prudential Center after leaving the Meadowlands.
The presence of both a major NHL and NBA franchise at the same arena made the Meadowlands facility one of a relatively small number of venues in American sports history to host two active professional franchises simultaneously over such an extended period.
Concerts and Major Events
Beyond sports, the arena built a substantial reputation as a concert venue, though its acoustics drew mixed assessments from performers and audiences alike. The arena's large capacity made it attractive for touring acts at the peak of their commercial drawing power. Bruce Springsteen, a New Jersey native, performed there on multiple occasions, as did U2, Whitney Houston, the Rolling Stones, and Madonna, among many others. Some touring acts made specific accommodations to address sound quality concerns in the space, including adjustments to speaker configurations.[7]
The arena also hosted major boxing matches, professional wrestling events including WWE pay-per-view cards, college basketball tournaments, and large religious gatherings. Its sheer capacity — larger than most venues in the New York metropolitan area at the time — made it a default choice for events requiring audiences in the high five figures.
Closure and Aftermath
By the early 2010s, the Izod Center's position had weakened significantly. Both of its professional sports tenants had departed, leaving the arena without the anchor bookings that had defined its economic model. The NJSEA announced in January 2015 that the arena would close, with the final event — a concert — taking place in April 2015.[8] The closure was attributed to the high cost of maintaining and operating the aging facility without anchor tenants, and to the broader redevelopment plans for the Meadowlands complex, which included expanded retail and entertainment projects.
The building was subsequently demolished as part of the American Dream Meadowlands retail and entertainment complex development.[9] The site's transformation into a massive mixed-use retail and entertainment destination represented a sharp departure from the arena model, though the adjacent Meadowlands Racetrack continued to operate.
Geography
The arena sat within the Meadowlands Sports Complex, roughly eight miles west of Midtown Manhattan in East Rutherford, Bergen County. The broader Meadowlands region, comprising roughly 30 square miles of former wetlands and industrial land straddling Bergen and Hudson counties, was one of the most ambitious land-development efforts in New Jersey's modern history. The complex itself clustered the arena, Giants Stadium (later MetLife Stadium), and the Meadowlands Racetrack in close proximity, creating a concentrated sports and entertainment campus unlike anything else in the region.
The surrounding area offered limited pedestrian amenities beyond the complex itself, which shaped the visitor experience in ways that distinguished the Meadowlands from urban arenas. There were no nearby restaurants or bars within easy walking distance, no neighborhood to explore before or after events. Everything happened inside the complex, or people drove elsewhere.
Transportation to the arena was primarily automobile-dependent. New Jersey Transit operated dedicated bus service from the Port Authority Bus Terminal in Midtown Manhattan and from various New Jersey transit hubs on event nights, and a rail shuttle service from Secaucus Junction ran during major events. The complex was accessible from New Jersey Route 3 and Interstate 95 (the New Jersey Turnpike), making it reachable from throughout the state and from the New York metropolitan area. Despite this highway access, post-event traffic congestion was notorious among regular attendees. Exiting the parking lots after a sold-out event could take an hour or more, a consistent complaint across the arena's operational life that contrasted sharply with the public transit access offered by the Prudential Center in Newark after it opened in 2007.
Fan Experience and Physical Facilities
The arena's physical design reflected the construction standards of the early 1980s, and by the 2000s those standards had been surpassed by newer facilities around the league. The upper-level seating drew recurring complaints about sightlines and, during summer concerts, heat — the building's ventilation in the upper bowl was inadequate by the benchmarks of later arena construction. Concourse space was limited relative to crowd size during sellouts, creating bottlenecks at concession stands and restrooms.
The concessions themselves became part of the arena's local folklore. Among the most distinctly remembered features were the pretzel vendors who operated from shopping carts on the concourses, selling large soft pretzels that became a recognizable part of the arena's identity for regular attendees over the years. It's not a detail that shows up in official histories, but ask any regular Devils or Nets fan from that era and it comes up.
Sound quality in the building for concerts was a persistent issue. The arena's architecture was optimized for sports, where ambient crowd noise is part of the experience, rather than for amplified music. Several major touring acts adapted their stage and speaker configurations in response, though results varied. The arena's concert reputation was considered weaker than comparable-era venues in the region for this reason.
Economic Impact
The arena's economic contribution to New Jersey was substantial over its operational life. As one of the primary venues for professional sports in the state, it generated revenue through ticket sales, concessions, parking, and ancillary spending by visitors in the surrounding region. The NJSEA, as the operating authority, benefited from the revenues generated by both sports tenants and concert and event bookings, with the facility supporting hundreds of full- and part-time jobs in event operations, security, food service, and arena management.
The broader Meadowlands complex, of which the arena was a central component, was estimated to generate hundreds of millions of dollars annually in economic activity for the state during peak operational years, though specific figures varied depending on methodology and the source of the analysis.[10] The departure of the Devils and Nets removed the two largest single sources of recurring bookings from the arena's calendar, and the economics of the facility became increasingly difficult to sustain as a result.
The closure and subsequent redevelopment into the American Dream complex represented a bet by state authorities and private developers that retail and entertainment uses could generate greater economic returns from the site than the aging arena had been able to produce in its final years.
Architecture
The arena was designed by Grad Associates, a Newark-based architectural firm, and reflected the functionalist indoor arena design that dominated large-venue construction in the United States during the late 1970s and early 1980s. The building's exterior featured a distinctive circular form with a low-profile roof and a largely utilitarian aesthetic, consistent with the industrial character of the surrounding Meadowlands environment. Construction materials included reinforced concrete and steel, with the building engineered to support the large clear-span roof necessary for an unobstructed interior bowl.
The interior was configured around a central playing surface with seating arranged in a continuous bowl, providing sightlines to the court or ice surface from all sections. The design was practical for its era, but the bowl's geometry contributed to the acoustic problems that would dog the arena throughout its concert-hosting years. Newer arena designs built from the 1990s onward incorporated significantly more sophisticated acoustic engineering, suspended ceiling systems, and improved concourse layouts — improvements conspicuously absent from the Meadowlands building.
By the time of its closure, the physical plant was over 30 years old and would have required significant capital investment to bring into alignment with contemporary arena standards. The NJSEA's decision not to undertake that investment, and to close the facility instead, reflected both the economics of the situation and the broader shift in the region's sports venue geography that had taken place over the preceding decade. ```
- ↑ ["Brendan Byrne Arena Opens", The Record (Bergen County), July 3, 1981.]
- ↑ ["Meadowlands Arena: By the Numbers", New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority, archived 2006.]
- ↑ ["Continental Airlines Buys Arena Naming Rights", The Star-Ledger, August 1996.]
- ↑ ["Meadowlands Arena to Be Renamed Izod Center", The Star-Ledger, September 19, 2007.]
- ↑ ["New Jersey Devils History", NHL.com, accessed 2024.]
- ↑ ["New Jersey Nets Franchise History", NBA.com, accessed 2024.]
- ↑ ["Concert Sound at the Meadowlands Arena", Pollstar, various issues, 1990s–2000s.]
- ↑ ["Izod Center to Close Permanently", The Star-Ledger, January 15, 2015.]
- ↑ ["American Dream Complex Transforms Meadowlands", NJ.com, 2019.]
- ↑ ["Economic Impact of the Meadowlands Complex", Meadowlands Regional Chamber of Commerce, various annual reports.]