Ranking all 29 NBA arenas in terms of construction cost

Considering all the Thunder arena chatter recently, here’s a list of the construction cost for all 29 NBA arenas when they opened.

Oklahoma City Mayor David Holt opened up talks on a potential new arena for the Oklahoma City Thunder during his State of the City address earlier this month.

Holt announced that the team signed an extension to their lease with Paycom Center — who’s been home to the Thunder since their arrival in 2008 — that will keep the team there for four more seasons.

But after the 2025-26 season, Holt ideally wants the team to have a new arena done or close to done by then to secure the long-term future of the franchise in the city.

A lot of talk has thus occurred from both sides of the fence on how much a new arena should be publicly funded when the franchise is worth over $1.6 billion.

When nuanced dialogues such as these occur, it’s important to look back at history to provide some historical reference on how much arena constructions usually cost. This article will provide a clearer picture of that as it will list out all 29 NBA arenas and how much it costed to construct them.

It’s important to note that most of these costs have an inflation-adjusted 2021 number to correspond with it as it will help provide the full picture for some of the older arenas in the league that were made in the 1990s and early 2000s.

While some arenas have undergone expensive renovations since opening, those numbers will not be reflective on this piece for simplicity’s sake.

With all that clarified, let’s rank the 29 NBA arenas from the most expensive to least expensive in terms of raw construction cost.

OKC Thunder quotes: Sam Presti expects to search for a new home arena for G League’s Blue

“We have a challenge on our hands because the NBA or the G-League doesn’t want us playing in our arena next year… but like it is an NBA arena, so it should be good enough for the G-League.”

Oklahoma City Thunder general manager Sam Presti announced during his exit interview on Monday that the G League affiliate Oklahoma City Blue will be in the search for a new home arena this offseason. The Blue spent the 2020-21 regular season playing their home games at Paycom Center, being the only G League team to share an arena with their NBA counterpart. Before that, the Blue played across the street at Cox Convention Center. The NBA and G League told the Thunder that they needed to find a new home arena for the Blue that is a separate gym and can draw in a crowd.

Presti voiced his opinion and said that he did not agree with the decision to make the franchise move the Blue elsewhere. Presti said that the franchise benefitted from having both teams play in the same arena and that it made calling players up and down a seamless transition.

“We have a challenge on our hands because the NBA or the G-League doesn’t want us playing in our arena next year. You know, conversation probably not for the public, but like it is an NBA arena, so it should be good enough for the G-League. But I don’t get into that.

To me it’s about — development is about players. It’s about players. It’s what’s best for the players. We have NBA facilities, everyone loves playing in our facilities, hotel right there. I understand the G-League has a view on how they want to be perceived, but I wouldn’t want to sacrifice the environment for our players because we don’t have enough people in the stands. I get it, we’ll try to get some more people there for the G-League if that’s the key, but the G-League is for investment and to help our parent team, have them be ready for that. So that’s how I look at it.

But I’ll fill you in once we know how that’s going to go. We’ve got to find a solution there.

We’re not a major metropolitan city where there’s a million small venues everywhere, and we have designs on maybe potentially doing something locally where we build our own, our own G-League facility, but we can’t do that, execute a plan like that that would be great for the community if we’re renting everywhere.”

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OKC Thunder stats: Team finishes 28th in average home game attendance this season

The rebuilding Thunder struggled to fill up Paycom Center this season.

With the 2021-22 regular season now behind us, the Oklahoma City Thunder officially finished 28th in average attendance and 27th in total attendance in its 41 home games, per ESPN. The Thunder filled up 81.7 percent of Paycom Center during the season in its home games.

This number is not surprising. Small market rebuilding teams usually bring in low attendance numbers as the team focuses more on player development than on tangible win-loss results. The number will most likely rise when the team improves over the next few seasons with high draft picks and the development of current players like Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Josh Giddey.

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