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{{short description|Arena located in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.}} {{for|similarly named sports facilities|State farm (disambiguation)}} {{Use American English|date=September 2023}} {{Use mdy dates|date=September 2022}} {{Infobox venue | nickname = | logo_image = State farm arena logo.svg | image = State Farm (Philips) Arena, Atlanta, GA (46558861525) - 2019.jpg | image_size = 270px | caption = State Farm Arena in 2019 | location = [[Atlanta|Atlanta, Georgia]], U.S. | former_names = Philips Arena (1999β2018) | coordinates = {{coord|33|45|26|N|84|23|47|W|type:landmark_scale:2000|display=it}} | pushpin_map = USA Atlanta#Metro Atlanta#USA Georgia#USA | pushpin_relief = yes | pushpin_label = State Farm Arena | pushpin_mapsize = 250 | pushpin_map_caption = Location in [[Atlanta]]##Location in the [[Atlanta metro area]]##Location in [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]]##Location in the [[United States]] | broke_ground = June 5, 1997<ref>{{cite news |title=Turner Hopes Arena a Start on Bigger Plan|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]|date=June 6, 1997}}</ref> | opened = September 18, 1999 | renovated = 2017β2018 | owner = Atlanta Fulton County Recreation Authority | operator = [[Atlanta Hawks]] | architect = [[Populous (company)|Populous]] (then HOK Sport)<br>[[Arquitectonica]] (Expansion) | project_manager = Barton Malow<ref name="ballparks">{{cite web|url=http://hockey.ballparks.com/NHL/AtlantaThrashers/index.htm|title=Philips Arena|publisher=Ballparks.com|access-date=April 16, 2018}}</ref> | structural engineer = [[Thornton Tomasetti]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://s3.amazonaws.com/tt_assets/pdf/SportsEntertainmentBrochure.pdf|title=Sports/Entertainment Brochure|publisher=Thornton Tomasetti|access-date=April 16, 2018}}</ref> | services engineer = M-E Engineers, Inc.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.me-engineers.com/projects/?office=denver&category=professional_arena&project=D74|title=Philips Arena|publisher=M-E Engineers, Inc.|access-date=April 16, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120723130824/http://www.me-engineers.com/projects/?office=denver&category=professional_arena&project=D74|archive-date=July 23, 2012|url-status=dead}}</ref> | general_contractor = Atlanta Arena Constructors (AAC), a joint venture of [[Skanska|Beers Construction Co.]], Holder Construction Co., H.J. Russell & Co. and C.D. Moody Construction Co. | dimensions = {{convert|680000|sqft|m2|abbr=on}} | tenants = [[Atlanta Hawks]] ([[National Basketball Association|NBA]]) (1999βpresent)<br>[[Atlanta Thrashers]] ([[National Hockey League|NHL]]) (1999β2011)<br>[[Georgia Force]] ([[Arena Football League (1987β2008)|AFL]]) (2002, 2005β2007)<br>[[Atlanta Dream]] ([[Women's National Basketball Association|WNBA]]) (2008β2016, 2019)<br>[[Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets men's basketball|Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets]] ([[National Collegiate Athletic Association|NCAA]]) (2011) | publictransit = {{rint|marta}}'''[[Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority|MARTA]]''' {{rail color box|system=MARTA|line=Green}}{{rail color box|system=MARTA|line=Blue}} at [[GWCC/CNN Center station|GWCC/CNN Center]]<br> {{rail color box|system=MARTA|line=Red}}{{rail color box|system=MARTA|line=Gold}} at [[Peachtree Center station|Peachtree Center]] | address = 1 State Farm Drive | construction_cost = {{ubl|[[United States dollar|$]]213.5 million<br>(${{formatprice|{{Inflation|US|213500000|1999}}}} in {{Inflation-year|US}} dollars{{inflation-fn|US}})<br>'''Renovations''' (2017-2018):<br />$192.5 million<br />(${{formatprice|{{Inflation|US|192500000|2018}}}} in {{Inflation-year|US}} dollars{{inflation-fn|US}})}} | seating_capacity = [[Basketball]]: <br>20,233 (1999β2005)<br>18,729 (2005β2011)<br>18,371 (2011β2012)<br>18,238 (2012β2013),<ref name="HawksMediaGuide">{{cite web |title=2012β13 Atlanta Hawks Media Guide|url=http://atlantahawkspr.files.wordpress.com/2012/10/1213_atlantahawks_media-guide.pdf|publisher=Atlanta Hawks|access-date=December 21, 2012|pages=295}}</ref><br>18,118 (2013β2014),<ref name="HawksMediaGuide1314">{{cite web |title=2013β14 Atlanta Hawks Media Guide|url=https://atlantahawkspr.files.wordpress.com/2013/10/1314_atlanta-hawks_mediaguide.pdf|publisher=Atlanta Hawks|access-date=January 28, 2015|page=282}}</ref><br>18,047 (2014β2017)<ref name="HawksMediaGuide1415">{{cite web |title=2014β15 Atlanta Hawks Media Guide|url=https://atlantahawkspr.files.wordpress.com/2014/10/1415_hawks_mediaguide.pdf|publisher=Atlanta Hawks|access-date=January 28, 2015|pages=288}}</ref><br>15,711 (2017β2018)<ref name="redcap">{{cite news |title=Renovations Will Reduce Philips Arena Seating Capacity|first=Chris|last=Vivlamore|url=http://www.ajc.com/sports/basketball/renovations-will-reduce-philips-arena-seating-capacity/InzbQLNcUAZl5oi6M7JBGP/|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]|date=September 27, 2017|access-date=October 2, 2017}}</ref><br>17,608+ (2018βpresent)<ref>{{cite web |title=2018β19 Atlanta Hawks Media Guide|url=https://atlantahawkspr.files.wordpress.com/2018/10/1819_hwk_pr_media-guide.pdf|publisher=Atlanta Hawks|year=2018|access-date=January 27, 2019|page=299}}</ref><br>[[Ice hockey]]: <br>18,545 (1999β2010)<br> 17,624 (2010β2011)<br>[[Concerts]]: 21,000+ | website = {{URL|https://www.statefarmarena.com/|statefarmarena.com}} }} '''State Farm Arena''' is a [[Multi-purpose stadium|multi-purpose arena]] located in [[Atlanta]], Georgia. The arena serves as the home venue for the [[Atlanta Hawks]] of the [[National Basketball Association]] (NBA). It also served as home to the [[Atlanta Thrashers]] of the [[National Hockey League]] (NHL) from 1999 to 2011, before the team moved to [[Winnipeg]], as well as the [[Atlanta Dream]] of the [[Women's National Basketball Association]] (WNBA) from 2008 to 2016 and 2019, and the temporary home of Georgia Tech basketball in 2011. It opened in 1999 as '''Philips Arena''' at a cost of $213.5 million, replacing [[Omni Coliseum]]. It is owned by the Atlanta Fulton County Recreation Authority and operated by the Hawks, owned by [[Tony Ressler]] along with a group of investors including [[Grant Hill]]. ==Layout== [[File:Philips Arena-Atlanta.jpg|thumb|right|Then-Philips Arena on February 12, 2012.]] The arena seats 17,608+ for [[basketball]] and 18,000+ for concerts.{{update inline|date=April 2025}} The largest crowd ever for an Atlanta Hawks basketball game at the arena was Game 6 of the 2008 Eastern Conference First Round on May 2, 2008 (against the [[Boston Celtics]]), where there was an announced attendance of 20,425.<ref name="HawksMediaGuide"/> The arena includes 92 luxury suites, 9 party suites, and 1,866 club seats. For concerts and other entertainment events, the arena can seat 21,000.<ref name="facts">{{cite web|url=http://www.philipsarena.com/arena-info/media-guide|title=Philips Arena Media Guide|website=Philipsdarena.com|access-date=April 16, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160404121547/http://www.philipsarena.com/arena-info/media-guide|archive-date=April 4, 2016|url-status=dead}}</ref> The arena was originally laid out in a rather unusual manner, with the club seats and luxury boxes aligned solely along one side of the playing surface, and the general admission seating along the other three sides (the arrangement was later emulated in [[Ford Field]], [[Addition Financial Arena]], [[Soldier Field]], [[Levi's Stadium]], and other venues). This layout was a vast contrast to many of its contemporaries, which have their revenue-generating luxury boxes and club seats located in the 'belly' of the arena, thus causing the upper deck to be 2β4 stories higher. The layout at Philips was done so as to be able to bring the bulk of the seats closer to the playing surface while still making available a sufficient number of revenue-raising club seats and loges.<ref name="facts"/> [[#Renovations|Renovations in 2017β18]] removed the upper levels of the suite wall in favor of premium seating spread throughout the arena, turning those upper areas to standard seating. On the exterior, angled steel columns supporting the roof facing downtown spell out "ATLANTA." The side facing the [[Georgia World Congress Center]] originally spelled out "[[CNN]]" (whose [[CNN Center|headquarters]] adjoins the arena), but that section has since been altered to accommodate a [[Taco Mac]] restaurant. The [[GWCC/CNN Center station|GWCC/CNN Center]] rail station below the arena provides access to [[Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority|MARTA]] public transportation. [[Eindhoven, Netherlands]]-based technology company [[Philips]] purchased the initial naming rights to the arena in February 1999 for $185 million over 20 years. In February 2018, it was reported that Philips would not renew its naming rights agreement for the arena when it expired in June 2019, primarily due to Philips' withdrawal from the consumer electronics market in 2013.<ref>{{cite web |title=Sources: Philips Won't Renew Naming Rights|first=Don|last=Muret|url=http://www.venuesnow.com/news/detail/philips-wont-renew-naming-rights|website=Venues Today|access-date=February 15, 2018}}</ref> On August 29, 2018, [[State Farm]] purchased the naming rights to the arena, in a 20-year deal that cost $175 million.<ref>{{cite press release|title=State Farm and Atlanta Hawks Basketball Club Announce Generational Collaboration To Transform City of Atlanta|url=https://www.nba.com/hawks/state-farm-and-atlanta-hawks-basketball-club-announce-generational-collaboration-transform-city?cid=hawks_18arenatransformation_w_h_hp_mnb_-_0829_statefarmarena|publisher=NBA Media Ventures, LLC|website=Hawks.com|date=August 30, 2018|access-date=August 31, 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Welcome to the Neighborhood|url=http://www.statefarmarena.com/welcome|website=StateFarmArena.com|access-date=August 31, 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Hawks Reach Arena Naming Rights Agreement with State Farm|first=Chris|last=Vivlamore|url=https://www.ajc.com/sports/basketball/breaking-hawks-reach-arena-naming-rights-agreement-with-state-farm/ugmOWmhYSF8C0k1igJLmON/|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]|date=August 30, 2018|access-date=August 31, 2018}}</ref> For the 2007β2008 season, State Farm Arena utilized the new "see-through" shot clock units which allow spectators seated behind the basket to see the action without having the clocks interfere with their view, joining [[FedExForum]], [[Wells Fargo Center (Philadelphia)|Wells Fargo Center]], [[TD Garden]], [[United Center]], [[Footprint Center]] and the [[Spectrum Center (arena)|Spectrum Center]]. Video advertising panels replaced the traditional scrolling panels. ==Banners== ===Atlanta Hawks=== Title banners *1958 NBA championship *1970 Western Division Champions *1980, 1987, 1994 Central Division Champions *2015, 2021 Southeast Division Champions {| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center" |- | colspan=4 style="{{NBA color cell|Atlanta Hawks}};"|'''Atlanta Hawks retired numbers''' |- ! style="width:40px; {{NBA color cell2|Atlanta Hawks}};"|No. ! style="width:150px; {{NBA color cell2|Atlanta Hawks}};"|Player ! style="width:100px; {{NBA color cell2|Atlanta Hawks}};"|Position ! style="width:100px; {{NBA color cell2|Atlanta Hawks}};"|Tenure |- | '''9''' || [[Bob Pettit]] || [[Forward (basketball)|F]] || 1954β1965 |- | '''21''' || [[Dominique Wilkins]] || [[Forward (basketball)|F]] || 1982β1994 |- | '''23''' || [[Lou Hudson]] || [[Forward (basketball)|F]], [[Guard (basketball)|G]] || 1966β1977 |- | '''44''' || [[Pete Maravich|'Pistol' Pete Maravich]] || [[Shooting guard|SG]] || 1970β1973 |- | '''55''' || [[Dikembe Mutombo]] || [[Center (basketball)|C]] || 1996β2001 |- | '''59''' || [[Kasim Reed]] || Mayor of [[Atlanta]] || 2010β2018 |- | '''β''' || [[Ted Turner]] || Owner || 1977β2001 |} ===Atlanta Dream=== *2010, 2011, 2013 Eastern Conference Champions ===Atlanta Thrashers (1999β2011)=== * 2006β07 Southeast Division Champions ==History== [[File:Philips Arena Logo.svg|thumb|left|Logo as Philips Arena, 1999β2018]] During the late 1980s and early 1990s, many cities started building new state-of-the-art sporting venues for their [[NBA]] and/or [[National Hockey League|NHL]] franchises, or in hopes of attaining one. Many of these arenas had modern amenities for their high-end customers, such as luxury boxes, club seats, and large, posh club-level concourses; some even had practice facilities on-site. These attractions were rarely found in arenas constructed in the early 1970s, when the [[Omni Coliseum]] was built. However, it was likely that the Omni would have had to be replaced in any event due to a serious design flaw. It had been built using Cor-Ten [[weathering steel]] that was intended to seal itself, ensuring it would last for decades. However, the Omni's designers didn't account for Atlanta's humid subtropical climate. Rather than form a seal, the Cor-Ten steel never stopped rusting, causing the arena to deteriorate faster than anticipated. [[Ted Turner]], owner of the Hawks at the time, wanted to bring the NHL back to Atlanta; the city's first NHL team, the [[Atlanta Flames]], had moved to Calgary in [[1980β81 NHL season|1980]]. However, the NHL determined that the Omni was not suitable even as a temporary facility due to its structural problems and lack of amenities. The league told Turner that it would only grant an expansion team on condition that a new arena be in place for the prospective team's inaugural season. After much consideration of possible other sites both in Downtown Atlanta and in the suburbs, it was decided that the Omni would be demolished in 1997, and a new arena would be built in the same location; the Omni was demolished on July 26, 1997. The Hawks split their games between the [[Georgia Dome]] and [[McCamish Pavilion|Alexander Memorial Coliseum]] for the next two seasons while Philips Arena was under construction. Philips Arena held its first event with a September 1999 concert by musician [[Elton John]]. The Omni's "center-hung scoreboard" now hangs in the lobby of Philips Arena, where it still displays the Omni's logo along with those of Philips Arena, the Hawks, and the Thrashers (who never played in The Omni). The scoreboard still functions and displays information relevant to the game taking place in the arena. On April 2, 2009, Philips Arena achieved [[Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design|LEED]] for Existing Building: Operations and Maintenance certification as specified by the United States Green Building Council (USGBC). It was the world's first LEED certified NBA/NHL arena.<ref name="facts"/> It has been nicknamed the "Highlight Factory", due to the number of exciting plays, or highlights, that occur and Philips' history with lights and electronics.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://bleacherreport.com/articles/2769812-atlanta-hawks-put-on-nbas-ultimate-fan-experience-at-the-highlight-factory|title=Atlanta Hawks Put on NBA's Ultimate Fan Experience at the 'Highlight Factory'|publisher=Bleacher Report|date=April 10, 2018}}</ref> On March 14, 2008, an [[Enhanced Fujita Scale|EF]]2 Tornado struck near the Arena as part of [[2008 Atlanta tornado outbreak|a tornado outbreak that hit the city]]. The arena only received minor exterior damage. Since the 2010s, several statues have been erected near the arena in honor of notable Atlantan athletes, including a [[statue of Dominique Wilkins]] and a [[statue of Evander Holyfield]]. ==Events== [[File:Philips Arena basketball.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Then-Philips Arena prior to a Hawks game vs the Phoenix Suns]] The arena hosted the [[NBA All-Star Game]] in [[2003 NBA All-Star Game|2003]] and [[2021 NBA All-Star Game|2021]] and the Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball tournament in 2012. It also hosted the [[NHL All-Star Game]] in [[2008 National Hockey League All-Star Game|2008]]. [[File:Thrashers Philips Arena.jpg|thumb|A Thrashers game in 2007.]] The first playoff game in any professional league played in Philips Arena was in 2005, when the Georgia Force of the [[Arena Football League]] hosted, and won, its first home playoff game. The first NHL playoff game in Philips Arena was in [[2007 Stanley Cup Playoffs|2007]], the Thrashers' only appearance in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. The first NBA playoff game in Philips Arena was in 2008, when the Hawks made the [[2008 NBA Playoffs]] after an eight-season drought of missing the playoffs. On April 10, 2011, the Thrashers lost to the [[Pittsburgh Penguins]], 5β2, in their final game. [[Tim Stapleton]] scored the final goal for the Thrashers in team history. The venue had been named the site of the 2005 [[Southeastern Conference]] Women's Basketball Tournament; however, when the NHL announced in early 2004 that the 55th [[NHL All-Star Game]], scheduled for February 2005 would be held in Atlanta, arena officials withdrew the Southeastern Conference women's basketball tournament β which was then moved 140 miles to the northeast along [[Interstate 85]] to the [[Bon Secours Wellness Arena|BI-LO Center]] in [[Greenville, South Carolina]]. Oddly, the arena would not even be the host of that planned All-Star Game due to the [[2004β05 NHL lockout]]. As a result, Atlanta became the second (San Jose being the first) city to lose a planned All-Star Game because of a labor dispute. Philips Arena would later be announced as home to the [[56th National Hockey League All-Star Game|56th NHL All-Star Game]] in 2008. Also, Philips Arena hosted game three of the 2010 WNBA Finals, where the [[Seattle Storm]] defeated the [[Atlanta Dream]]. In 2013, Philips Arena hosted the finals of the men's [[NCAA]] [[NCAA Men's Division II Basketball Championship|Division II]] and [[NCAA Men's Division III Basketball Championship|Division III]] college basketball championships. The events were held as an undercard to the [[2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament|2013 NCAA Final Four]] held at the [[Georgia Dome]], in celebration of the 75th edition of the [[NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship]]. On May 22, 2025, State Farm Arena hosted the [[Women's National Basketball Association|WNBA]]'s [[Atlanta Dream]] vs the [[Indiana Fever]].<ref>{{cite web | url=https://dream.wnba.com/news/atlanta-dream-set-to-host-2025-home-opener-against-indiana-fever-at-state-farm-arena | title=Atlanta Dream Set to Host 2025 Home Opener Against Indiana Fever at State Farm Arena }}</ref> ===MMA and wrestling=== The arena hosted [[UFC 88]],<ref name=ufc88>{{cite web|title=Liddell-Evans Headlines UFC 88 in Atlanta on September 6|publisher=UFC.com|url=http://www.ufc.com/index.cfm?fa=eventDetail.fightCard&eid=1461|access-date=June 17, 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080619202745/http://www.ufc.com/index.cfm?fa=EventDetail.FightCard&eid=1461|archive-date=June 19, 2008|url-status=dead}}</ref> [[UFC 145]], [[UFC 201]],<ref name="UFC201">{{cite news |title=Robbie Lawler vs. Tyron Woodley Targeted for UFC 201 Headliner in Atlanta|first=Tristen|last=Critchfield|url=http://www.sherdog.com/news/news/Robbie-Lawler-vs-Tyron-Woodley-Targeted-for-UFC-201-Headliner-in-Atlanta-104485|work=Sherdog|date=May 4, 2016|access-date=May 4, 2016}}</ref> and [[UFC 236]] in 2008, 2012, 2016 and 2019 respectively. Philips Arena also hosted the 2011 [[WWE Hall of Fame]] induction ceremony, the night before [[WrestleMania XXVII]] which was held at the [[Georgia Dome]]. Philips Arena also hosted the [[Royal Rumble]] in [[Royal Rumble (2002)|2002]] and [[Royal Rumble (2010)|2010]], [[WWE Backlash|Backlash]] in [[Backlash (2007)|2007]], [[WWE Hell in a Cell|Hell in a Cell]] in [[Hell in a Cell (2012)|2012]], [[Survivor Series]] in [[Survivor Series (2015)|2015]], and [[WWE Day 1 (2022)|Day 1]] in 2022. An edition of ''[[WCW Monday Nitro]]'' was also held when the arena was known as Philips Arena on June 5, 2000.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.wcw.com/2000/06/|title=WCW June Calendar|date=September 3, 2000|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20000903052810/http://www.wcw.com/2000/06/ |archive-date=September 3, 2000 }}</ref> The arena hosted the February 19, 2020 episode of ''[[AEW Dynamite]]'' featuring [[All Elite Wrestling]]'s first-ever [[Steel cage match]]. The venue also hosted [[WWE Bad Blood]] [[Bad Blood (2024)|2024]] on October 5, 2024. ===Concerts=== State Farm Arena is among the busiest arenas for concerts in the world, having sold well over 550,000 concert tickets in 2007<ref>{{cite news |url=http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/music/article3134279.ece|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110616042002/http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/music/article3134279.ece|url-status=dead|archive-date=June 16, 2011|location=London|newspaper=The Times|title=From Unwanted Empty Shell to the World's Busiest Venue|first=Will|last=Pavia|date=January 5, 2008}}</ref> and ranked as the third-busiest arena in the U.S. in 2011. State Farm has hosted such concerts as Elton John, The Who, and The Weeknd.<ref>{{cite news|title=Philips Arena Ranked Third Busiest in the Nation|first=Melissa|last=Ruggieri|url=http://blogs.ajc.com/atlanta-music-scene/2012/02/14/philips-arena-ranked-third-busiest-in-the-nation/?cxntlid=thbz_hm|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]|date=February 14, 2012|access-date=February 14, 2012|archive-url=https://archive.today/20120707201028/http://blogs.ajc.com/atlanta-music-scene/2012/02/14/philips-arena-ranked-third-busiest-in-the-nation/?cxntlid=thbz_hm|archive-date=July 7, 2012|url-status=dead}}</ref> {| class="wikitable mw-collapsible autocollapse" style="text-align:center;" |- ! width=12% style="text-align:center;{{NBA color cell|Atlanta Hawks|border=2}};|Date ! width=10% style="text-align:center;{{NBA color cell|Atlanta Hawks|border=2}};|Artist ! width=10% style="text-align:center;{{NBA color cell|Atlanta Hawks|border=2}};|Opening act(s) ! width=16% style="text-align:center;{{NBA color cell|Atlanta Hawks|border=2}};|Tour / Concert name ! width=10% style="text-align:center;{{NBA color cell|Atlanta Hawks|border=2}};|Attendance ! width=10% style="text-align:center;{{NBA color cell|Atlanta Hawks|border=2}};|Revenue ! width=16% style="text-align:center;{{NBA color cell|Atlanta Hawks|border=2}};|Notes |- | September 24, 1999 || [[Elton John]] || β || [[Medusa Tour]] || 18,919 / 18,919 || $966,802 || The first event held at the arena. |- | September 26, 1999 || [[Cher]] || [[Cyndi Lauper]]<br>[[Julio Iglesias Jr.]] || [[Do You Believe? (tour)|Do You Believe?]] || 10,982 / 15,914 || $585,996 || |- | September 28, 1999 || [[ZZ Top]] || [[Lynyrd Skynyrd]]<br>[[Screamin' Cheetah Wheelies]] || [[XXX Tour]] || β || β || |- | October 24, 1999 || [[Ricky Martin]] || [[Jessica Simpson]] || [[Livin' la Vida Loca Tour]] || 14,042 / 14,042 || $865,596 || |- | November 18, 1999 || [[Shania Twain]] || [[Shane Minor]] || [[Come On Over Tour]] || β || β || |- | November 24, 1999 || [[Backstreet Boys]] || β || [[Into the Millennium Tour]] || β || β || |- | December 9, 1999 || [[Rage Against the Machine]] || [[Gang Starr]]<br>[[Anti-Flag]] || [[The Battle of Los Angeles Tour]] || β || β || |- | January 29, 2000 || [[TLC (group)|TLC]] || [[Blaque]]<br>[[Christina Aguilera]] || [[FanMail Tour]] || β || β || This concert was filmed for a PayPerView special, TLC: Sold Out. [[Goodie Mob]] made a special appearance to perform their song, "What it Ain't".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=229YTUqGM1g|title=YouTube|via=YouTube|access-date=April 16, 2018}}{{cbignore}}{{Dead YouTube link|date=February 2022}}</ref> |- | April 1, 2000 || [[Mariah Carey]] || β || [[Rainbow World Tour]] || 12,956 / 12,956 || $664,229 || |- | April 12, 2000 || [[Tina Turner]] || [[Lionel Richie]]<br>[[Janice Robinson]] || [[Twenty Four Seven Tour]] || β || β || |- | April 13, 2000 || [[Korn]] || [[Mindless Self Indulgence]]<br>[[Staind]] || [[Sick and Twisted Tour]] || β || β || |- | April 15, 2000 || [[Kiss (band)|Kiss]] || [[Ted Nugent]]<br>[[Skid Row (American band)|Skid Row]] || [[Kiss Farewell Tour]] || 14,495 / 14,495 || β || |- | April 29, 2000 || [[Elton John]] || β || [[Medusa Tour]] || β || β || |- | May 18, 2000 || rowspan=2|[[NSYNC]] || rowspan=2|[[P!nk]]<br>[[Sisqo]] || rowspan=2|[[No Strings Attached Tour]] || rowspan=2|27,018 / 27,018 || rowspan=2|$1,272,461 || rowspan=2| |- | May 19, 2000 |- | June 3, 2000 || rowspan=2|[[Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band]] || rowspan=2|β || rowspan=2|[[Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band Reunion Tour]] || rowspan=2|36,122 / 36,122 || rowspan=2|$2,204,866 || rowspan=2|During the second show, band performed [[American Skin (41 Shots)|American Skin]] for the first time ever |- | June 4, 2000 |- | June 22, 2000 || [[Diana Ross and the Supremes]] || β || [[Return to Love Tour]] || β || β || |- | July 10, 2000 || [[Ricky Martin]] || β || [[Livin' la Vida Loca Tour]] || β || β || |- | July 12, 2000 || [[Tim McGraw]]<br>[[Faith Hill]] || [[Keith Urban]] || [[Soul2Soul Tour]] || β || β || <ref name="dickerson">{{cite book|last=Dickerson|first=James L.|title=Faith Hill: Piece of My Heart|publisher=Macmillan Publishers|year=2001|isbn=0-312-28195-1|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/faithhill00jame}} pp. 139β140.</ref> |- | August 7, 2000 || [[Pearl Jam]] || [[Sonic Youth]] || [[Binaural Tour]] || β || β || This concert was recorded for the album ''[[8/7/00 β Atlanta, Georgia]]''. |- | August 17, 2000 || [[AC/DC]] || [[Slash's Snakepit]] || [[Stiff Upper Lip World Tour]] || β || β || |- | August 27, 2000 || [[Dixie Chicks]] || β || [[Fly Tour]] || β || β || |- | September 28, 2000 || [[The Who]] || β || [[The Who Tour 2000]] || β || β || |- | October 14, 2000 || [[Tina Turner]] || [[Joe Cocker]] || [[Twenty Four Seven Tour]] || β || β || |- | October 21, 2000 || [[NSYNC]] || [[Meredith Edwards (singer)|Meredith Edwards]] || [[No Strings Attached Tour]] || β || β || <ref>{{cite magazine |title=N Sync's Would-Be Assassin's Plot Foiled|first=Christina|last=Saraceno|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/n-syncs-would-be-assassins-plot-foiled-20001020|magazine=[[Rolling Stone]]|date=October 20, 2000|access-date=August 25, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140511010640/http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/n-syncs-would-be-assassins-plot-foiled-20001020|archive-date=May 11, 2014|url-status=live}}</ref> |- | March 30, 2001 || [[U2]] || [[Nelly Furtado]] || [[Elevation Tour]] || 20,596 / 20,596 || $1,500,277 || |- | April 24, 2001 || [[Elton John]]<br>[[Billy Joel]] || β || [[Face to Face 2001]] || 19,892 / 19,892 || $1,990,010 || |- | May 11, 2001 || [[Bon Jovi]] || β || [[One Wild Night Tour]] || β || β || |- | June 11, 2001 || [[Backstreet Boys]] || [[Myra (singer)|Myra]]<br>[[Krystal Harris]]<br>[[Shaggy (musician)|Shaggy]] || [[Black & Blue Tour]] || β || β || |- | July 28, 2001 || [[3LW]]<br>[[Dream (American group)|Dream]]<br>[[Jessica Simpson]]<br>[[Eve (rapper)|Eve]]<br>[[Nelly]] and the [[St. Lunatics]]<br>[[Destiny's Child]] || β || [[Total Request Live Tour]] || β || β || |- | August 19, 2001 || rowspan=2|[[Madonna]] || rowspan=2|β || rowspan=2|[[Drowned World Tour]] || rowspan=2|29,617 / 29,617 || rowspan=2|$3,553,444 || rowspan=2| <ref name="tara">{{Cite book|last=Taraborrelli|first=J. Randy|author-link=J. Randy Taraborrelli|title=Madonna: An Intimate Biography|publisher=[[Simon & Schuster]]|year=2002|isbn=978-0-7432-2880-0|title-link=Madonna: An Intimate Biography |page=90}}</ref> |- | August 20, 2001 |- | August 27, 2001 || [[Sade (band)|Sade]] || β || [[Lovers Rock Tour]] || β || β || |- | September 8, 2001 || [[Janet Jackson]] || [[112 (R&B group)|112]] || [[All for You Tour]] || 14,681 / 15,584 || $852,683 || <ref>{{cite news |title=Janet Jackson a Hit at Philips No Sign of Recent Illnesses During Energetic Show|first=Sonia|last=Murry|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]|date=September 9, 2001|page=E.16}}</ref> |- | October 31, 2001 || [[Stone Temple Pilots]] || [[Linkin Park]]<br>[[Puddle of Mudd]]<br>[[Staind]]<br>[[Static-X]]<br>[[Deadsy]]<br>Spike 1000 || [[Family Values Tour]] || β || β || |- | November 5, 2001 || [[Jimmy Buffett]] || β || 2001: A Beach Odyssey Tour || β || β || <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.buffettworld.com/archives/2001-a-beach-odyssey/11-05/|title=Monday, November 5th, 2001 β Atlanta, GA β Phillips Arena Β» Jimmy Buffett World|website=Buffettworld.com|access-date=April 16, 2018}}</ref> |- | November 30, 2001 || [[U2]] || [[Garbage (band)|Garbage]] || [[Elevation Tour]] || 18,535 / 18,535 || $1,504,925 || |- | December 15, 2001 || [[Britney Spears]] || β || [[Dream Within a Dream Tour]] || 15,535 / 15,535 || $849,362 || |- | February 9, 2002 || [[Bob Dylan]] || β || [[Never Ending Tour 2002]] || β || β || |- | March 25, 2002 || [[Santana (band)|Santana]] || β || [[All is One Tour]] || β || β || |- | May 12, 2002 || rowspan=2|[[Paul McCartney]] || rowspan=2|β || rowspan=2|[[Driving World Tour]] || rowspan=2|28,810 / 28,810 || rowspan=2|$3,476,918 || rowspan=2| |- | May 13, 2002 |- | August 27, 2002 || [[Cher]] || β || [[Living Proof: The Farewell Tour]] || 13,848 / 13,848 || $944,256 || |- | September 17, 2002 || [[Billy Joel]]<br>[[Elton John]] || β || [[Face to Face 2002]] || 19,409 / 19,409 || $2,025,750 || |- | October 13, 2002 || [[Rush (band)|Rush]] || β || [[Vapor Trails Tour]] || β || β || |- | October 21, 2002 || colspan=3|[[American Idols LIVE! Tour 2002]] || 94.1% || β || |- | December 2, 2002 || [[Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band]] || β || [[The Rising Tour]] || 17,408 / 17,408 || $1,211,256 || |- | December 11, 2002 || [[Dave Matthews Band]] || [[Jason Mraz]] || 2002 Fall Tour || β || β || <ref>{{cite web|url=http://dmbalmanac.com/TourShowSet.aspx?id=453055918&tid=69|title=DMBAlmanac.comΒ²|website=Dmbalmanac.com|access-date=April 16, 2018}}</ref> |- | February 1, 2003 || [[Jimmy Buffett]] || β || Far Side of the World Tour || β || β || <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.buffettworld.com/archives/2003-the-tiki-time/02-01-03/|title=Saturday, February 1st, 2003 β Atlanta, GA β Phillips Arena Β» Jimmy Buffett World|website=Buffettworld.com|access-date=April 16, 2018}}</ref> |- | February 13, 2003 || [[Bon Jovi]] || [[Goo Goo Dolls]] || [[Bounce Tour]] || 15,781 / 15,781 || $823,609 || |- | April 25, 2003 || [[Cher]] || [[Tommy Drake]] || [[Living Proof: The Farewell Tour]] || 12,847 / 14,130 || $872,885 || |- | June 3, 2003 || [[Fleetwood Mac]] || β || [[Say You Will Tour]] || 12,656 / 12,656 || $1,108,443 || |- | July 12, 2003 || [[Justin Timberlake]]<br>[[Christina Aguilera]] || [[The Black Eyed Peas]] || [[Justified and Stripped Tour]] || β || β || |- | August 3, 2003 || [[Dixie Chicks]] || [[Michelle Branch]] || [[Top of the World Tour]] || 17,101 / 17,101 || $1,001,135 || |- | January 25, 2004 || [[Bette Midler]] || β || [[Kiss My Brass]] || 11,303 / 12,757 || $965,079 || |- | March 23, 2004 || [[Britney Spears]] || [[Kelis]] <br> [[Skye Sweetnam]] || [[The Onyx Hotel Tour]] || 12,456 / 14,144 || $793,814 || |- | March 28, 2004 || [[BeyoncΓ©]]<br>[[Alicia Keys]]<br>[[Missy Elliott]] || [[Tamia]] || [[Verizon Ladies First Tour]] || 12,310 / 12,310 || $845,693 || |- | April 9, 2004 || [[Aerosmith]] || [[Cheap Trick]] || [[Honkin' on Bobo Tour]] || β || β || |- | April 23, 2004 || [[Shania Twain]] || [[Emerson Drive]] || [[Up! Tour]] || 15,779 / 17,992 || $954,666 || |- | April 28, 2004 || [[Yes (band)|Yes]] || β || 35th Anniversary Tour || β || β || |- | April 30, 2004 || [[Prince (musician)|Prince]] || [[The Time (band)|The Time]] || [[Musicology Live 2004ever]] || 17,977 / 17,977 || $1,168,393 || |- | July 24, 2004 || rowspan=2|[[Madonna]] || rowspan=2|β || rowspan=2|[[Re-Invention World Tour]] || rowspan=2|25,627 / 25,627 || rowspan=2|$3,450,874 || rowspan=2| |- | July 25, 2004 |- | August 9, 2004 || rowspan=2|[[Prince (musician)|Prince]] || rowspan=2|[[The Time (band)|The Time]] || rowspan=2|[[Musicology Live 2004ever]] || rowspan=2|33,214 / 33,214 || rowspan=2|$2,031,926 || rowspan=2| |- | August 10, 2004 |- | August 15, 2004 || colspan=3|[[American Idols LIVE! Tour 2004]] || β || β || |- | September 17, 2004 || [[Van Halen]] || Laidlaw || [[Summer Tour 2004 (Van Halen)|Summer Tour 2004]] || β || β || |- | October 28, 2004 || [[Avril Lavigne]] || [[Butch Walker]] || [[Bonez Tour]] || β || β || |- | November 14, 2004 || [[Sarah Brightman]] || β || [[Harem World Tour]] || β || β || |- | July 15, 2005 || [[Destiny's Child]] || β || [[Destiny Fulfilled... and Lovin' It]] || 12,972 / 12,972 || $1,256,284 || This concert was filmed for the DVD, ''[[Live in Atlanta]]''. |- | July 16, 2005 || rowspan=3|[[Kenny Chesney]] || rowspan=3|[[Gretchen Wilson]]<br>[[Uncle Kracker]]<br>[[Pat Green]] || rowspan=3|Somewhere in the Sun Tour || rowspan=3|β || rowspan=3|β || rowspan=3| |- | July 17, 2005 |- | July 18, 2005 |- | July 23, 2005 || [[Bruce Springsteen]] || β || [[Devils & Dust Tour]] || 6,541 / 10,597 || $419,055 || |- | August 23, 2005 || [[Green Day]] || [[My Chemical Romance]]<br>[[Simple Plan]]<br>[[Jimmy Eat World]]<br>[[Against Me!]] || [[American Idiot World Tour]] || β || β || |- | September 20, 2005 || [[Paul McCartney]] || β || [[The 'US' Tour]] || 14,096 / 14,096 || $1,930,941 || |- | September 28, 2005 || [[Coldplay]] || [[Rilo Kiley]] || [[Twisted Logic Tour]] || 14,557 / 14,557 || $752,540 || |- | October 1, 2005 || [[Elton John]] || β || [[Peachtree Road Tour]] || 15,605 / 15,605 || $1,335,525 || |- | October 15, 2005 || [[The Rolling Stones]] || [[Wilco]] || [[A Bigger Bang (concert tour)|A Bigger Bang]] || β || β || |- | October 27, 2005 || [[Nine Inch Nails]] || [[Queens of the Stone Age]]<br>[[Death from Above 1979]] || [[Live: With Teeth Tour]] || β || β || |- | November 18, 2005 || rowspan=2|[[U2]] || rowspan=2|[[Institute (band)|Institute]] || rowspan=2|[[Vertigo Tour]] || rowspan=2|36,334 / 36,334 || rowspan=2|$3,500,572 || rowspan=2| |- | November 19, 2005 |- | January 15, 2006 || [[Aerosmith]] || [[Lenny Kravitz]] || [[Rockin' the Joint Tour]] || β || β || |- | January 17, 2006 || [[Bon Jovi]] || β || [[Have a Nice Day Tour]] || 14,262 / 14,262 || $1,095,715 || |- | February 8, 2006 || [[The Rolling Stones]] || [[Soulive]] || [[A Bigger Bang (concert tour)|A Bigger Bang]] || β || β || |- | July 8, 2006 || [[Tim McGraw]]<br>[[Faith Hill]] || β || [[Soul2Soul II Tour]] || β || β || |- | August 9, 2006 || [[Mariah Carey]] || β || [[The Adventures of Mimi]] || 11,226 / 13,288 || $660,595 || |- | September 12, 2006 || [[Shakira]] || β || [[Oral Fixation Tour]] || 11,986 / 11,986 || $787,197 || <ref>{{Cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_A4EAAAAMBAJ&q=shakira+billboard+Boxscore+atlanta&pg=PA14|title=Billboard|date=October 7, 2006}}</ref> |- | November 2, 2006 || [[Barbra Streisand]] || β || [[Streisand (concert tour)|Streisand]] || 14,538 / 14,538 || $3,855,784 || |- | November 4, 2006 || [[Def Leppard]]<br>[[Journey (band)|Journey]] || [[Stoll Vaughan]] || [[Yeah! Tour]] || β || β || |- | December 2, 2006 || [[Dixie Chicks]] || [[Pete Yorn]] || [[Accidents & Accusations Tour]] || β || β || This show was originally scheduled for October 17, but was rescheduled for [[Melbourne]] show. |- | December 18, 2006 || [[The Killers]] || β || [[Sam's Town Tour]] || β || β || This concert was a part of "[[WWWQ|99X Mistletoe Jam]]". |- | February 27, 2007 || [[Justin Timberlake]] || [[P!nk]] || [[FutureSex/LoveShow]] || 16,638 / 16,638 || $1,129,984 || [[T.I.]] was the special guest. |- | March 17, 2007 || [[Josh Groban]] || [[Angelique Kidjo]] || [[Awake Tour]] || β || β || |- | April 25, 2007 || [[Jimmy Buffett]] || β || The Bama Breeze Tour || β || β || <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.buffettworld.com/archives/2007-bama-breeze/04-25/|title=Wednesday, April 25th, 2007 β Atlanta, GA β Phillips Arena Β» Jimmy Buffett World|website=Buffettworld.com|access-date=April 16, 2018}}</ref> |- | May 22, 2007 || [[Roger Waters]] || β || [[The Dark Side of the Moon Live]] || 12,204 / 13,525 || $1,158,623 || |- | July 20, 2007 || [[BeyoncΓ©]] || [[Robin Thicke]] || [[The BeyoncΓ© Experience]] || β || β || |- | July 21, 2007 || [[Tim McGraw]]<br>[[Faith Hill]] || β || [[Soul2Soul 2007]] || β || β || |- | November 17, 2007 || rowspan=2|[[The Police]] || rowspan=2|[[Fiction Plane]] || rowspan=2|[[The Police Reunion Tour]] || rowspan=2|27,665 / 27,665 || rowspan=2|$3,249,155 || rowspan=2| |- | November 18, 2007 |- | February 10, 2008 || [[Van Halen]] || β || [[Van Halen 2007β2008 North American Tour|Van Halen 2007β2008 Tour]] || β || β || |- | April 18, 2008 || [[Avril Lavigne]] || [[Boys Like Girls]] || [[The Best Damn Tour]] || 6,016 / 8,347 || $171,294 || |- | April 25, 2008 || [[Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band]] || β || [[Magic Tour (Bruce Springsteen)|Magic Tour]] || 17,630 / 17,630 || $1,666,489 || |- | April 30, 2008 || rowspan=2|[[Bon Jovi]] || rowspan=2|[[Daughtry (band)|Daughtry]] || rowspan=2|[[Lost Highway Tour]] || rowspan=2|32,964 / 32,964 || rowspan=2|$2,851,856 || rowspan=2| |- | May 1, 2008 |- | May 28, 2008 || [[Alicia Keys]] || β || [[As I Am Tour]] || β || β || |- | July 31, 2008 || [[George Michael]] || β || [[25 Live]] || β || β || |- | October 19, 2008 || [[Janet Jackson]] || β || [[Rock Witchu Tour]] || 7,503 / 9,698 || $665,775 || |- | November 5, 2008 || [[Coldplay]] || [[Snow Patrol]] || [[Viva la Vida Tour]] || 25,880 / 27,682 || $2,250,991 || |- | November 9, 2008 || rowspan=2|[[Tina Turner]] || rowspan=2|β || rowspan=2|[[Tina!: 50th Anniversary Tour]] || rowspan=2|26,028 / 26,028 || rowspan=2|$2,585,972 || rowspan=2| |- | November 10, 2008 |- | November 11, 2008 || [[Coldplay]] || [[Snow Patrol]] || [[Viva la Vida Tour]] || 25,880 / 27,682 || $2,250,991 || |- | November 24, 2008 || [[Madonna]] || [[Paul Oakenfold]] || [[Sticky & Sweet Tour]] || 14,843 / 14,843 || $2,632,952 || |- | December 16, 2008 || [[AC/DC]] || [[The Answer (band)|The Answer]] || [[Black Ice World Tour]] || 16,090 / 16,090 || $1,268,752 || |- | January 17, 2009 || [[CΓ©line Dion]] || β || [[Taking Chances World Tour]] || 16,919 / 16,919 || $2,300,783 || |- | March 5, 2009 || [[Britney Spears]] || [[The Pussycat Dolls]] || [[The Circus Starring Britney Spears]] || 17,194 / 17,194 || $1,695,449 || |- | March 14, 2009 || [[Elton John]]<br>[[Billy Joel]] || β || [[Face to Face 2009]] || 18,883 / 18,883 || $2,049,955 || |- | April 26, 2009 || [[Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band]] || β || [[Working on a Dream Tour]] || 14,361 / 15,190 || $1,324,980 || <ref name="ajc042809">{{cite news |title=Springsteen Rocks Hard|first=Phil|last=Kloer|url=http://www.ajc.com/services/content/printedition/2009/04/28/springsteen0428.html|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]|date=April 28, 2009|access-date=April 29, 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110622095710/http://www.ajc.com/services/content/printedition/2009/04/28/springsteen0428.html|archive-date=June 22, 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref> |- | April 28, 2009 || [[Fleetwood Mac]] || β || [[Unleashed (concert tour)|Unleashed]] || 10,653 / 11,910 || $959,973 || |- | June 13, 2009 || [[Taylor Swift]]<br>[[Keith Urban]] || [[Kellie Pickler]]<br>[[Gloriana (band)|Gloriana]] || [[Fearless Tour]]<br>Escape Together World Tour 2009 || β || β || |- | July 1, 2009 || [[BeyoncΓ©]] || [[Pussycat Dolls]]<br>[[RichGirl]] || [[I Am... (BeyoncΓ© tour)|I Am... World Tour]] || 13,949 / 13,949 || $1,281,632 || |- | August 22, 2009 || [[Jonas Brothers]] || [[Jordin Sparks]]<br>[[Honor Society]]<br>[[Wonder Girls]] || [[Jonas Brothers World Tour 2009]] || 17,214 / 17,214 || $1,140,990 || |- | September 4, 2009 || [[Britney Spears]] || [[Jordin Sparks]]<br>[[Kristinia DeBarge]] || [[The Circus Starring Britney Spears]] || 11,900 / 11,900 || $655,507 || |- | October 4, 2009 || [[Metallica]] || [[Gojira (band)|Gojira]]<br>[[Lamb of God (band)|Lamb of God]] || [[World Magnetic Tour]] || β || $1,105,745 || |- | October 23, 2009 || [[AC/DC]] || [[The Answer (band)|The Answer]] || [[Black Ice World Tour]] || 10,416 / 12,469 || $832,481 || |- | October 26, 2009 || [[Kiss (band)|Kiss]] || [[Buckcherry]]|| [[Alive 35 World Tour]] || β || β || |- | November 29, 2009 || [[Miley Cyrus]] || [[Metro Station (band)|Metro Station]] || [[Wonder World Tour (Miley Cyrus)|Wonder World Tour]] || 15,000 / 15,000 || $1,041,720 || |- | February 4, 2010 || [[The Black Eyed Peas]] || [[LMFAO (group)|LMFAO]]<br>[[Ludacris]] || [[The E.N.D. World Tour]] || 11,921 / 11,921 || $857,619 || |- | February 27, 2010 || [[Jay-Z]] || [[Trey Songz]]<br>[[Young Jeezy]] || [[The Blueprint 3 Tour]] || β || β || |- | March 17, 2010 || [[John Mayer]] || [[Michael Franti and Spearhead]] || [[Battle Studies World Tour]] || 13,247 / 13,247 || $802,265 || |- | March 30, 2010 || [[Alicia Keys]] || [[Robin Thicke]]<br>[[Melanie Fiona]] || [[Freedom Tour]] || 9,099 / 9,099 || $643,646 || |- | April 15, 2010 || [[Bon Jovi]] || [[Dashboard Confessional]] || [[The Circle Tour]] || 16,510 / 16,510 || $1,815,719 || |- | April 21, 2010 || [[Nickelback]] || [[Shinedown]]<br>[[Breaking Benjamin]]<br>[[Sick Puppies]] || [[Dark Horse Tour]] || β || β || |- | August 11, 2010 || [[Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers]] || [[Crosby, Stills & Nash]] || [[Mojo Tour 2010]] || β || β || |- | November 16, 2010 || [[Dave Matthews Band]] || [[Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue]] || 2010 Fall Tour || β || β || <ref>{{cite web|url=http://dmbalmanac.com/TourShowSet.aspx?id=453056852&tid=112|title=DMBAlmanac.comΒ²|website=Dmbalmanac.com|access-date=April 16, 2018}}</ref> |- | November 18, 2010 || [[Roger Waters]] || β || [[The Wall Live (2010β13)|The Wall Live]] || 12,665 / 12,665 || $1,772,797 || |- | December 5, 2010 || [[Usher (entertainer)|Usher]] || [[Trey Songz]]<br>[[Miguel (singer)|Miguel]] || [[OMG Tour]] || 14,137 / 14,137 || $1,201,311 || |- | December 23, 2010 || [[Justin Bieber]] || β || [[My World Tour]] || 14,045 / 14,045 || $823,881 || |- | January 23, 2011 || [[Linkin Park]] || β || [[A Thousand Suns World Tour]] || β || β || |- | March 24, 2011 || [[Stevie Nicks]]<br>[[Rod Stewart]] || β || [[Heart & Soul Tour]] || 11,454 / 11,454 || $1,083,419 || |- | April 9, 2011 || [[Lil Wayne]] || [[Nicki Minaj]]<br>[[Rick Ross]]<br>[[Porcelain Black]]<br>[[Travis Barker]]<br>[[Mix Master Mike]] || [[I Am Music II Tour]] || β || β || |- | May 14, 2011 || [[Bon Jovi]] || β || [[Bon Jovi Live]] || 16,658 / 16,658 || $1,649,543 || |- | June 22, 2011 || [[NKOTBSB]] || [[Jordin Sparks]]<br>[[Ashlyne Huff]] || [[NKOTBSB Tour]] || 12,495 / 12,495 || $902,678 || |- | July 12, 2011 || rowspan=2|[[Sade (band)|Sade]] || rowspan=2|[[John Legend]] || rowspan=2|[[Sade Live]] || rowspan=2|21,870 / 23,374 || rowspan=2|$1,968,933 || rowspan=2| <ref name="ajc_quote">{{cite news |title=Sade Returns with New Tour, Hits Collection|first=Melissa|last=Ruggieri|url=http://blogs.ajc.com/atlanta-music-scene/2011/04/07/sade-returns-with-new-tour-hits-collection/|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]|date=April 7, 2011|access-date=May 31, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110811204027/http://blogs.ajc.com/atlanta-music-scene/2011/04/07/sade-returns-with-new-tour-hits-collection/|archive-date=August 11, 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref> |- | July 13, 2011 |- | July 17, 2011 || [[Britney Spears]] || [[Nicki Minaj]] <br> [[Jessie and the Toy Boys]] <br> [[The Nervo Twins|NERVO]] || [[Femme Fatale Tour]] || 13,014 / 13,495 || $988,235 || |- | October 1, 2011 || rowspan=2|[[Taylor Swift]] || rowspan=2|[[Needtobreathe]] <br> [[James Wesley]] || rowspan=2|[[Speak Now World Tour]] || rowspan=2|26,244 / 26,244 || rowspan=2|$1,726,661 || rowspan=2|[[Usher (entertainer)|Usher]] and [[T.I.]] were the special guests. |- | October 2, 2011 |- | October 28, 2011 || rowspan=2|[[Jay-Z]]<br>[[Kanye West]] || rowspan=2|β || rowspan=2|[[Watch the Throne Tour]] || rowspan=2|27,330 / 27,330 || rowspan=2|$2,888,792 || rowspan=2| <ref name=review2>{{cite news|last=Copeland|first=Larry|title=Jay-Z and Kanye's joint tour opens in Atlanta|newspaper=[[USA Today]]|date=October 29, 2011|url=https://www.usatoday.com/life/music/news/story/2011-10-28/watch-the-throne-kanye-west-jay-z/50991356/1|access-date=October 29, 2011}}</ref><ref name=review3>{{cite web|title=JAY-Z AND KANYE WEST KICK OFF 'WATCH THE THRONE' TOUR IN ATLANTA|publisher=[[Rap-Up]]|date=October 29, 2011|url=http://www.rap-up.com/2011/10/29/jay-z-and-kanye-west-kick-off-watch-the-throne-tour-in-atlanta/|access-date=October 29, 2011}}</ref><ref name=review4>{{cite web|title=Jay-Z And Kanye West Kick Off Their Watch The Throne Tour in Atlanta|publisher=Idolator|date=October 29, 2011|url=http://idolator.com/6060411/jay-z-and-kanye-west-tour-watch-the-throne|access-date=October 29, 2011}} </ref> |- | October 29, 2011 |- | November 2, 2011 || [[Guns N' Roses]] || [[Buckcherry]]<br>Kelen Heller || [[Chinese Democracy Tour]] || 7,873 || β || <ref>{{cite news |title=Axl Rose and Guns N' Roses Rock Out Philips Arena Wednesday Night|first=Robb|last=Cohen|url=http://blogs.ajc.com/atlanta-music-scene/2011/11/03/axl-rose-and-guns-n-roses-rock-out-philips-arena-wednesday-night/|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]|date=November 3, 2011|access-date=June 19, 2012|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120106170058/http://blogs.ajc.com/atlanta-music-scene/2011/11/03/axl-rose-and-guns-n-roses-rock-out-philips-arena-wednesday-night/|archive-date=January 6, 2012}}</ref> |- | March 18, 2012 || [[Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band]] || β || [[Wrecking Ball World Tour]] || 14,959 / 17,700 || $1,382,345 || |- | April 19, 2012 || [[Van Halen]] || [[Kool & the Gang]] || [[A Different Kind of Truth]] || β || β || |- | April 23, 2012 || [[Rammstein]] || [[Joe Letz]] || [[Made in Germany 1995β2011 (tour)|Made in Germany 1995β2011]] || β || β || |- | May 2, 2012 || [[Nickelback]] || [[Seether]]<br>[[My Darkest Days]]<br>[[Bush (British band)|Bush]] || [[Here and Now Tour (Nickelback)|Here and Now Tour]] || β || β || |- | June 13, 2012 || [[Roger Waters]] || β || [[The Wall Live (2010β13)|The Wall Live]] || 10,707 / 10,707 || $1,256,465 || |- | June 20, 2012 || [[LMFAO (group)|LMFAO]] || β || [[Sorry for Party Rocking Tour]] || β || β || |- | July 2, 2012 || [[Coldplay]] || [[Robyn]]<br>[[Wolf Gang]] || [[Mylo Xyloto Tour]] || 17,218 / 17,218 || $1,220,718 || |- | July 26, 2012 || [[Aerosmith]] || [[Cheap Trick]] || [[Global Warming Tour]] || 13,045 / 13,045 || $1,309,188 || Aerosmith performed a clip of "Woman of the World". The song hadn't been played anywhere since 1974. |- | August 29, 2012 || [[Jennifer Lopez]]<br>[[Enrique Iglesias]] || [[Frankie J]] <br> [[Starshell]] || [[Dance Again World Tour]] || 9,202 / 10,225 || $516,543 || |- | November 17, 2012 || [[Madonna]] || [[Paul Oakenfold]] || [[The MDNA Tour]] || 13,504 / 13,504 || $2,379,792 || |- | January 23, 2013 || [[Justin Bieber]] || [[Carly Rae Jepsen]]<br>[[Cody Simpson]] || [[Believe Tour]] || 12,686 / 12,686 || $995,137 || |- | February 27, 2013 || [[Bon Jovi]] || β || [[Because We Can (concert tour)|Because We Can]] || 14,306 / 14,306 || $1,579,947 || |- | March 1, 2013 || [[P!nk]] || [[The Hives]] || [[The Truth About Love Tour]] || 14,475 / 14,475 || $990,929 || |- | March 27, 2013 || [[Maroon 5]] || [[Neon Trees]]<br>[[Owl City]] || [[Overexposed Tour]] || β || β || |- | March 29, 2013 || [[Alicia Keys]] || β || [[Set the World on Fire Tour]] || 8,785 / 12,219 || $592,200 || |- | April 18, 2013 || rowspan=2|[[Taylor Swift]] || rowspan=2|[[Ed Sheeran]]<br>[[Brett Eldredge]] || rowspan=2|[[The Red Tour]] || rowspan=2|25,471 / 25,471 || rowspan=2|$2,048,023 || rowspan=2|[[B.o.B]] was the special guest.<ref>{{cite web |last=Lee|first=Christina|url=http://www.idolator.com/7453751/b-o-b-taylor-swift-both-of-us-live|title=Taylor Swift Joined By B.o.B in Atlanta: Watch Them Perform "Both of Us"|work=Idolator|date=April 20, 2013}}</ref> |- | April 19, 2013 |- | April 22, 2013 || [[Rihanna]] || [[ASAP Rocky]] || [[Diamonds World Tour]] || 13,233 / 13,233 || $924,581 || |- | June 10, 2013 || [[Fleetwood Mac]] || β || [[Fleetwood Mac Live]] || β || β || |- | June 20, 2013 || [[New Kids on the Block]]<br>[[98 Degrees]]<br>[[Boyz II Men]] || β || [[The Package Tour]] || 12,056 / 12,056 || $829,916 || |- | June 21, 2013 || [[One Direction]] || [[5 Seconds of Summer]] || [[Take Me Home Tour (One Direction)|Take Me Home Tour]] || 14,264 / 14,264 || $917,424 || |- | August 10, 2013 || [[Justin Bieber]] || [[Ariana Grande]]<br>[[Cody Simpson]] || [[Believe Tour]] || 12,407 / 12,407 || $1,019,885 || |- | August 22, 2013 || [[Bruno Mars]] || [[Fitz and the Tantrums]] || [[Moonshine Jungle Tour]] || 13,080 / 13,080 || $906,482 || |- | October 19, 2013 || [[Rod Stewart]] || [[Steve Winwood]] || [[Live the Life Tour]] || 7,596 / 9,518 || $626,539 || Postponed from April 28.<ref name="Rescheduled">{{cite web|url=http://www.rodstewart.com/2013/02/08/rod-stewart-reschedules-live-the-life-tour-dates/|title=Rod Stewart Reschedules "Live The Life" Tour Dates|date=February 8, 2013|publisher=Rod Stewart|access-date=February 18, 2013}}</ref> |- | October 24, 2013 || [[Nine Inch Nails]] || [[Godspeed You! Black Emperor]]<br>[[Explosions in the Sky]] || [[Tension 2013]] || β || β || |- | October 26, 2013 || [[Selena Gomez]] || [[Emblem3]]<br>[[Christina Grimmie]] || [[Stars Dance Tour]] || 9,173 / 9,173 || $431,834 || |- | November 7, 2013 || [[Drake (rapper)|Drake]] || [[Miguel (singer)|Miguel]]<br>[[Future (rapper)|Future]] || [[Would You Like a Tour?]] || 14,244 / 14,244 || $993,612 || |- | November 16, 2013 || [[Elton John]] || β || [[The Diving Board Tour]] || 14,846 / 14,846 || $1,163,425 || |- | December 1, 2013 || [[Kanye West]] || [[Kendrick Lamar]] || [[The Yeezus Tour]] || β || β || |- | December 14, 2013 || [[P!nk]] || [[The Hives]] || [[The Truth About Love Tour]] || 14,683 / 14,683 || $1,316,729 || |- | December 17, 2013 || [[Justin Timberlake]] || β || [[The 20/20 Experience World Tour]] || 13,287 / 13,287 || $1,687,436 || |- | December 27, 2013 || [[Jay-Z]] || β || [[Magna Carter World Tour]] || 14,533 / 14,533 || $1,207,942 || |- | February 5, 2014 || [[Kings of Leon]] || [[Gary Clark Jr.]] || [[Mechanical Bull Tour]] || β || β || |- | February 21, 2014 || [[Demi Lovato]] || [[Fifth Harmony]]<br>[[Little Mix]] || [[The Neon Lights Tour]] || 8,813 / 8,813 || $400,275 || |- | February 24, 2014 || [[Eagles (band)|Eagles]] || β || [[History of the Eagles - Live in Concert]] || 13,625 / 13,625 || $1,698,448 || |- | February 26, 2014 || [[Imagine Dragons]] || [[Nico Vega]] || Into the Night Tour || β || β || |- | March 22, 2014 || [[George Strait]] || [[Sheryl Crow]] || [[The Cowboy Rides Away Tour]] || β || β || |- | March 25, 2014 || [[Miley Cyrus]] || [[Icona Pop]]<br>[[Sky Ferreira]] || [[Bangerz Tour]] || β || β || |- | May 6, 2014 || [[Lady Gaga]] || [[Lady Starlight]]<br>[[Hatsune Miku]] || [[Artrave: The Artpop Ball]] || 10,480 / 10,480 || $941,142 || <ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/jesselawrence/2014/05/05/prices-for-lady-gaga-tickets-rising-for-upcoming-artpop-ball-dates/|title=After Initial Rise, Prices For Lady Gaga Tickets Starting To Dip For ARTPOP Ball Dates|last=Lawrence|first=Jesse|date=May 5, 2014|access-date=May 5, 2014|work=[[Forbes]]|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140510085003/http://www.forbes.com/sites/jesselawrence/2014/05/05/prices-for-lady-gaga-tickets-rising-for-upcoming-artpop-ball-dates/|archive-date=May 10, 2014}}</ref> |- | May 12, 2014 || [[Cher]] || [[Cyndi Lauper]] || [[Dressed to Kill Tour (Cher)|Dressed to Kill Tour]] || 11,337 / 11,337 || $1,088,627 || <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.accessatlanta.com/weblogs/atlanta-music-scene/2014/may/13/concert-review-cher-says-goodbye-atlanta-sequined-/|title=Concert review: Cher says goodbye to Atlanta with a sequined spectacle|first=Melissa|last=Ruggieri|work=[[Access Atlanta]]|date=May 13, 2014|access-date=May 15, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140517152309/http://www.accessatlanta.com/weblogs/atlanta-music-scene/2014/may/13/concert-review-cher-says-goodbye-atlanta-sequined-/|archive-date=May 17, 2014|url-status=dead}}</ref> |- | June 28, 2014 || [[Katy Perry]] || [[Capital Cities (band)|Capital Cities]]<br>[[Ferras]] || [[Prismatic World Tour]] || 12,843 / 12,843 || $1,525,349 || |- | August 28, 2014 || [[Aerosmith]] || [[Slash (musician)|Slash]] feat. [[Myles Kennedy]] and the Conspirators || [[Let Rock Rule Tour]] || β || β || |- | September 19, 2014 || rowspan=5|[[Garth Brooks]]<br>[[Trisha Yearwood]] || rowspan=5|β || rowspan=5|[[The Garth Brooks World Tour (2014β17)|World Tour]] || rowspan=5|β || rowspan=5|β ||2 Shows |- | September 20, 2014 ||2 Shows |- | September 21, 2014 || rowspan=3| <ref name=atl>{{cite news |title=Concert Review: Garth Brooks Roars in Atlanta Return|first=Melissa|last=Ruggieri|url=http://music.blog.ajc.com/2014/09/20/concert-review-garth-brooks-roars-in-atlanta-return/#__federated=1|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]|date=September 20, 2014|access-date=June 17, 2015}}</ref><ref name=chiatl>{{cite web|last1=Hall|first1=Tara|title=Garth Brooks breaks record with Chicago, Atlanta shows and ticket sales|url=http://www.soundspike.com/story/27843/garth-brooks-breaks-record-with-chicago-atlanta-shows-and-ticket-sales/|website=SoundSpike|access-date=September 5, 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924104106/http://www.soundspike.com/story/27843/garth-brooks-breaks-record-with-chicago-atlanta-shows-and-ticket-sales/|archive-date=September 24, 2015|url-status=dead}}</ref> |- | September 26, 2014 |- | September 27, 2014 |- | October 15, 2014 || [[Paul McCartney]] || β || [[Out There (tour)|Out There]] || 13,044 / 13,044 || $2,016,129 || This concert was originally planned to take place on June 21 but was rescheduled due to illness.<ref name="9.6.14-Postponement">{{cite web|title=Paul McCartney June Dates Re-Scheduled To October|url=http://www.paulmccartney.com/news-blogs/news/paul-mccartney-june-dates-re-scheduled-to-october|publisher=PaulMcCartney.com|access-date=June 9, 2014|date=June 9, 2014}}</ref> |- | November 22, 2014 || [[Stevie Wonder]] || β || [[Songs in the Key of Life Tour]] || β || β || |- | December 9, 2014 || [[Usher (entertainer)|Usher]] || [[DJ Cassidy]]<br>[[August Alsina]] || [[UR Experience Tour]] || 11,765 / 11,765 || $880,618 || |- | December 17, 2014 || [[Fleetwood Mac]] || β || [[On with the Show (concert tour)|On with the Show]] || 15,591 / 15,591 || $1,917,322 || |- | February 19, 2015 || [[Maroon 5]] || [[Magic!]]<br>[[Rozzi Crane]] || [[Maroon V Tour]] || 14,620 / 14,620 || $1,296,760 || |- | February 28, 2015 || [[Billy Joel]] || [[Gavin DeGraw]] || [[Billy Joel in Concert]] || 16,596 / 16,596 || $1,616,997 || |- | March 2, 2015 || [[Chris Brown]]<br>[[Trey Songz]] || [[Tyga]] || [[Between the Sheets Tour]] || 11,868 / 12,191 || $1,081,049 || |- | March 24, 2015 || [[Ariana Grande]] || [[Rixton]]<br>[[Cashmere Cat]] || [[The Honeymoon Tour]] || 9,271 / 9,271 || $510,404 || |- | March 25, 2015 || [[Fleetwood Mac]] || β || [[On with the Show (concert tour)|On with the Show]] || 13,711 / 13,711 || $1,600,265 || |- | May 13, 2015 || [[Bette Midler]] || β || [[Divine Intervention Tour]] || 7,058 / 7,058 || $703,777 || |- | June 6, 2015 || [[New Kids on the Block]] || [[TLC (group)|TLC]]<br>[[Nelly]] || [[The Main Event (2015 concert tour)|The Main Event]] || β || β || |- | June 12, 2015 || rowspan=2|[[Kevin Hart]] || rowspan=2|β || rowspan=2|[[What Now? Tour]] || rowspan=2|β || rowspan=2|β || rowspan=2| |- | June 13, 2015 |- | June 27, 2015 || [[ManΓ‘]] || β || Cama Incendiada Tour || β || β || |- | July 14, 2015 || [[Imagine Dragons]] || [[Metric (band)|Metric]]<br>[[Halsey (singer)|Halsey]] || [[Smoke + Mirrors Tour]] || 9,230 / 10,373 || $486,157 || |- | August 1, 2015 || [[Shania Twain]] || [[Gavin DeGraw]] || [[Rock This Country Tour]] || 11,840 / 11,840 || $1,137,640 || |- | August 21, 2015 || rowspan=2|[[Luke Bryan]] || rowspan=2|[[Randy Houser]]<br>[[Dustin Lynch]] || rowspan=2|[[Kick the Dust Up Tour]] || rowspan=2|21,040 / 24,619 || rowspan=2|$1,336,860 || rowspan=2| |- | August 22, 2015 |- | August 30, 2015 || [[MΓΆtley CrΓΌe]] || [[Alice Cooper]]<br>[[The Cringe]] || [[MΓΆtley CrΓΌe Final Tour]] || β || β || |- | September 12, 2015 || [[Ed Sheeran]] || [[Christina Perri]]<br>[[Jamie Lawson (musician)|Jamie Lawson]] || [[x Tour (Ed Sheeran)|x Tour]] || 13,551 / 13,551 || $834,508 || |- | October 22, 2015 || [[Ricky Martin]] || [[Wisin]] || [[One World Tour (Ricky Martin)|One World Tour]] || 5,703 / 7,582 || $269,856 || |- | November 17, 2015 || [[Dead & Company]] || β || [[Dead & Company 2015 Tour]] || 12,037 / 12,783 || $953,506 || |- | December 15, 2015 || [[The Weeknd]] || [[Halsey (singer)|Halsey]]<br>[[Travis Scott]] || [[The Madness Fall Tour]] || 14,438 / 14,438 || $917,808 || <ref>{{cite news|title=The Weeknd Announces Fall Tour, Including Atlanta Concert|first=Melissa|last=Ruggieri|url=http://music.blog.ajc.com/2015/08/20/the-weeknd-announces-fall-tour-including-atlanta-concert/|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]|date=August 20, 2015|access-date=November 7, 2016|archive-date=June 21, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160621201858/http://music.blog.ajc.com/2015/08/20/the-weeknd-announces-fall-tour-including-atlanta-concert/|url-status=dead}}</ref> |- | January 20, 2016 || [[Madonna]] || [[Lunice]] || [[Rebel Heart Tour]] || 10,609 / 10,609 || $1,500,635 || This concert was originally scheduled to take place on September 2, 2015, but was postponed due to arrangement logistics being incomplete within the time given.<ref name="resch">{{cite magazine|url=http://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/pop-shop/6569014/madonna-rebel-heart-tour-rescheduled-dates|title=Madonna Reschedules First Five Rebel Heart Tour Dates|date=May 21, 2015|access-date=May 21, 2015|magazine=Billboard|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150522045416/http://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/pop-shop/6569014/madonna-rebel-heart-tour-rescheduled-dates|archive-date=May 22, 2015}}</ref> |- | February 18, 2016 || [[Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band]] || β || [[The River Tour 2016]] || 16,713 / 17,450 || $1,888,030 || |- | April 12, 2016 || rowspan=2|[[Justin Bieber]] || rowspan=2|[[Post Malone]]<br>[[Moxie Raia]] || rowspan=2|[[Purpose World Tour]] || rowspan=2|25,717 / 25,717 || rowspan=2|$2,726,349 || rowspan=2|[[Ludacris]], [[Usher (entertainer)|Usher]], and [[Akon]] were special guests.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.teenvogue.com/story/justin-bieber-ludacris-baby-purpose-tour|title=Watch Justin Bieber and Ludacris Perform "Baby" Like It's 2010 All Over Again|website=TeenVogue|date=April 14, 2016|language=en-US|access-date=April 14, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.teenvogue.com/story/justin-bieber-usher-purpose-tour|title=Watch Justin Bieber and Usher Reunite on Stage|website=TeenVogue|date=April 14, 2016|language=en-US|access-date=April 14, 2016}}</ref> |- | April 13, 2016 |- | April 15, 2016 || [[Duran Duran]] || [[Chic (band)|Chic]]<br>[[Bag Raiders]] || [[Paper Gods on Tour]] || β || β || |- | May 18, 2016 || [[Rihanna]] || [[Travis Scott]] || [[Anti World Tour]] || 14,397 / 14,397 || $1,249,535 || This concert was originally scheduled to take place on March 9, but was postponed due to "production delays".<ref name="Rihanna Postpones 'Anti' Tour Dates">{{cite magazine |title=Rihanna Postpones 'Anti' Tour Dates|first=Adelle|last=Platon|url=http://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/hip-hop/6882508/rihanna-postpones-anti-tour-dates|date=February 18, 2016|magazine=[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]]|access-date=February 19, 2016}}</ref> |- | June 9, 2016 || [[Selena Gomez]] || [[DNCE]]<br>[[Bea Miller]] || [[Revival Tour]] || 7,850 / 9,106 || $508,645 || |- | June 29, 2016 || [[Demi Lovato]]<br>[[Nick Jonas]] || [[Rich Homie Quan]]<br>[[Migos]] || [[Future Now Tour]] || 7,112 / 7,372 || $410,165 || [[T.I.]] was the special guest.<ref>{{cite news|title=Demi Lovato and Nick Jonas Launch Tour in Atlanta with Heart and Soul|first=Melissa|last=Ruggieri|url=http://music.blog.ajc.com/2016/06/30/concert-review-and-photos-demi-lovato-and-nick-jonas-launch-tour-in-atlanta-with-heart-and-soul/|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]|date=June 30, 2016|access-date=June 30, 2016|archive-date=July 29, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160729070225/http://music.blog.ajc.com/2016/06/30/concert-review-and-photos-demi-lovato-and-nick-jonas-launch-tour-in-atlanta-with-heart-and-soul/|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="Atlanta">{{cite web|last=Estevez|first=Marjua|url=http://www.vibe.com/2016/06/demi-lovato-nick-jonas-honda-civic-tour-atlanta/|title=Demi Lovato & Nick Jonas Open Tour in ATL With Hometown Hero T.I.|work=vibe.com|publisher=SpinMedia|date=June 30, 2016|access-date=June 30, 2016}}</ref> |- | August 25, 2016 || rowspan=2|[[Drake (musician)|Drake]]<br>[[Future (rapper)|Future]] || rowspan=2|[[Roy Wood$]]<br>[[dvsn]] || rowspan=2|[[Summer Sixteen Tour]] || rowspan=2|28,864 / 28,864 || rowspan=2|$3,106,599 || rowspan=2|[[2 Chainz]] was the special guest at the first show. Usher and [[Young Thug]] were special guests at the second show. [[Gucci Mane]] appeared at both shows. |- | August 26, 2016 |- | September 1, 2016 || [[AC/DC]] || [[Tyler Bryant & The Shakedown]] || [[Rock or Bust World Tour]] || 11,173 / 13,012 || $1,169,355 || |- | September 12, 2016 || [[Kanye West]] || β || [[Saint Pablo Tour]] || 16,011 / 16,011 || $1,358,087 || |- | October 28, 2016 || rowspan=2|[[Adele]] || rowspan=2|β || rowspan=2|[[Adele Live 2016]] || rowspan=2|26,507 / 26,507 || rowspan=2|$2,924,777 || rowspan=2| |- | October 29, 2016 |- | November 1, 2016 || [[Sia]] || [[Miguel (singer)|Miguel]]<br>[[AlunaGeorge]] || [[Nostalgic for the Present Tour]] || β || β || |- | November 6, 2016 || [[Stevie Nicks]] || [[The Pretenders]] || [[24 Karat Gold Tour]] || β || β || |- | February 10, 2017 || [[Bon Jovi]] || Maradeen || [[This House Is Not for Sale Tour]] || 16,308 / 16,665 || $1,396,007 || <ref name="concert_review_bon_jovi_proves_resiliency_on_this_house_is_not_for_sale_tour">{{cite web|title=Concert review: Bon Jovi Proves Resiliency on 'This House is Not for Sale' Tour|url=http://music.blog.ajc.com/2017/02/09/concert-review-bon-jovi-proves-resiliency-on-this-house-is-not-for-sale-tour/|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]|date=February 9, 2017|access-date=June 22, 2016}}</ref> |- | April 12, 2017 || [[Ariana Grande]] || [[Victoria MonΓ©t]]<br>[[Little Mix]] || [[Dangerous Woman Tour]] || 10,987 / 11,285 || $780,827 || |- | April 14, 2017 || [[Red Hot Chili Peppers]] || [[Babymetal]]<br>[[Jack Irons]] || [[The Getaway World Tour]] || 13,104 / 13,104 || $1,225,612 || The band shot the music video for their song "[[Goodbye Angels]]".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://twitter.com/RHCPchad/status/852897342743293952|title=Wear something colorful tonite Atlanta! Shooting Goodbye Angels videopic.twitter.com/IyzRQESH0k|first=Chad|last=Smith|date=April 14, 2017|via=Twitter|access-date=June 27, 2017}}</ref> |- | April 23, 2017 || [[Tim McGraw]]<br>[[Faith Hill]] || [[NEEDTOBREATHE]] || [[Soul2Soul: The World Tour]] || 13,033 / 13,033 || $1,170,004 || |- | April 30, 2017 || [[Neil Diamond]] || β || [[50 Year Anniversary World Tour (Neil Diamond)|50 Year Anniversary World Tour]] || 12,235 / 13,197 || $1,207,288 || |- | May 2, 2017 || [[Chris Brown]] || β || [[The Party Tour (2017)|The Party Tour]] || 10,169 / 11,415 || $744,422 || |- | May 13, 2017 || [[The Weeknd]] || [[Rae Sremmurd]]<br>[[Belly (rapper)|Belly]]<br>[[6lack]] || [[Starboy: Legend of the Fall Tour]] || 15,087 / 15,087 || $1,372,065 || |- | November 4, 2017 || [[Fall Out Boy]] || [[Blackbear (musician)|Blackbear]]<br>[[Jaden Smith]] || [[Mania Tour]] || 9,309 / 11,586 || $596,464 || |- | November 7, 2017 || [[Imagine Dragons]] || [[Grouplove]]<br>[[K.Flay]] || [[Evolve World Tour]] || 11,112 / 11,811 || $702,861 || |- | November 14, 2017 || [[Jay-Z]] || [[Vic Mensa]] || [[4:44 Tour]] || 14,118 / 15,039 || $1,832,255 || |- | November 28, 2017 || [[Lady Gaga]] || β || [[Joanne World Tour]] || 12,155 / 12,155 || $1,615,820 || |- | November 29, 2017 || [[Dead & Company]] || β || [[Dead & Company Fall Tour 2017]] || 9,815 / 10,083 || $1,052,383 || |- | December 12, 2017 || [[Katy Perry]] || [[Purity Ring (band)|Purity Ring]] || [[Witness: The Tour]] || 8,782 / 10,580 || $950,017 || |- | December 17, 2017 || [[Janet Jackson]] || β || [[State of the World Tour]] || 12,399 / 12,399 || $789,188 || [[Missy Elliott]] was the special guest performing "Burnitup!". Additionally, Jackson performed her 2006 single "[[So Excited (Janet Jackson song)|So Excited]]".<ref>{{cite news|title=Concert review: Janet Jackson "Controls" Atlanta at Philips Arena|first=Leon|last=Stafford|url=http://music.blog.myajc.com/2017/12/18/concert-review-janet-jackson-controls-atlanta-at-philips-arena-concert/|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]|date=December 18, 2017|access-date=December 24, 2017|archive-date=December 23, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171223003151/http://music.blog.myajc.com/2017/12/18/concert-review-janet-jackson-controls-atlanta-at-philips-arena-concert/|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last1=A.|first1=Sam|title=Janet Jackson Closes 'State of the World Tour' With A Bang / Brings Missy Elliott, 'So Excited,' & More To ATL|url=http://thatgrapejuice.net/2017/12/janet-jackson-closes-state-world-tour-bang-brings-missy-elliott-excited-atl/|access-date=December 24, 2017|publisher=That Grape Juice|date=December 18, 2017}}</ref> |- | June 8, 2019 || [[Ariana Grande]] || [[Normani]]<br>[[Social House]] || [[Sweetener World Tour]] || 12,317 / 12,317 || $1,220,686 || |- | July 5, 2019 || [[Jeff Lynne's ELO]] || [[Dhani Harrison]] || [[Jeff Lynne's ELO Tour 2019]] || β || β || |- | October 12, 2019 || [[Twenty One Pilots]] || [[Misterwives]] || [[Bandito Tour]] || β || β || |- |November 19, 2019 || [[Ariana Grande]] || [[Social House]] || [[Sweetener World Tour]] || 10,599 / 10,599 || $1,121,970 || Grande performed "I Think You're Swell" and "Give It Up" with former ''[[Victorious]]'' co-stars [[Matt Bennett]] and [[Elizabeth Gillies]]. "Successful", "Everytime" and "Break Free" were not performed.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.elle.com/culture/celebrities/a29856582/ariana-grande-matt-bennett-elizabeth-gillies-atlanta-concert-reunion/|title=Ariana Grande Sang 'Victorious' Songs With Matt Bennett And Elizabeth Gillies at Her Atlanta Concert |date=November 20, 2019|website=elle.com|language=en|access-date=2019-11-20}}</ref> |- | January 11, 2020 || [[CΓ©line Dion]] || β || [[Courage World Tour]] || 11,212 / 11,212 || $2,323,672 || |- | February 7, 2020 || rowspan=3|[[Eagles (band)|Eagles]] || rowspan=3|β || rowspan=3|[[Hotel California 2020 Tour]] || rowspan=3| 39,375 / 39,375 || rowspan=3| $8,871,615 || rowspan=3| |- | February 8, 2020 |- |February 11, 2020 |- | October 27, 2021 || rowspan=2|[[Harry Styles]] || rowspan=2| [[Jenny Lewis]] || rowspan=2|[[Love on Tour]] || rowspan=2| 31,146 / 31,146 || rowspan=2| $4,146,897 || rowspan=2| |- | October 28, 2021 |- | November 5, 2021 || [[Dan+Shay]] || β || [[The (Arena) Tour]]|| β || β || |- | February 9, 2022 || [[Kacey Musgraves]] || [[King Princess]]<br>[[MUNA]] || [[Star-Crossed (album)|Star-crossed: unveiled]] || β || β || Musgraves performed a cover of [[Fleetwood Mac]]'s "[[Dreams (Fleetwood Mac song)|Dreams]]". |- |February 12, 2022 |[[Dua Lipa]] |[[Caroline Polachek]]<br>[[Lolo ZouaΓ―]] |[[Future Nostalgia Tour]] |12,110 / 12,110 |$1,235,805 | |- | February 24, 2022 || [[Twice|TWICE]]|| β || [[Twice 4th World Tour III|Twice 4th World Tour "III"]]|| 11,596 / 11,596 || $1,294,524 || |- | August 20, 2022 || [[Roger Waters]] || β || [[This Is Not a Drill]] || 11,676 / 14,445 || $1,308,458 |- | Aug. 30, 2022 || [[Seventeen (South Korean band)|Seventeen]]|| β || [[Be The Sun World Tour]] || 9,503/10,741 || $1,132,775 |- | October 22, 2022 || [[Lizzo]] || [[Latto]]<br>[[Saucy Santana]] || [[The Special Tour]] || 11,650 / 11,650 || $1,359,408 || |- | November 2, 2022 || rowspan="2" | [[Blackpink]] || rowspan="2" | β || rowspan="2" | [[Born Pink World Tour]] || rowspan="2" | 23,434 / 23,434 || rowspan="2" | $6,012,820 | rowspan="2" | |- |November 3, 2022 |- | November 21, 2022 || rowspan="2" | [[Ateez]] || [[Xikers|KQ Fellas]] || rowspan="2" | [[List of Ateez concert tours|The Fellowship: Break the Wall]] || rowspan="2" | 110,000 || rowspan="2" | β | rowspan="2" | |- |November 22, 2022 |- | January 13, 2023 || [[NCT 127]] || β || Neo City - The Link || β || β || |- | February 7, 2023 || [[Carrie Underwood]] ||[[Jimmie Allen]] || [[Denim & Rhinestones Tour]] || β || β || |- | March 7, 2023 || [[SZA]] || [[Omar Apollo]] || [[SOS Tour]] || 11,069 / 11,069 || $1,724,301 || |- | March 22, 2023 || rowspan="2" | [[Stray Kids]] || rowspan="2" | β || rowspan="2" | [[2nd World Tour Maniac|Stray Kids 2nd World Tour "MANIAC"]]|| rowspan="2" | 23,019 / 23, 019 || rowspan="2" | $2,553,505 || rowspan="2" | Originally scheduled for July 3, 2022. Postponed due to members contracting [[COVID-19]]. |- | March 23, 2023 |- |- | April 9, 2023 || [[NCT Dream]] || β || [[The Dream Show 2: In A Dream]] || β || β || |- |- | April 26, 2023 || rowspan="2" | [[Janet Jackson]] || rowspan="2"| [[Ludacris]] || rowspan="2" | [[Janet Jackson: Together Again]]|| rowspan="2" | 22,595 / 22,595 || rowspan="2" | $3,057,192 || |- | April 28, 2023 || The April 28 show was originally scheduled to take place on April 27. |- |- | May 20, 2023 || [[Mamamoo]] || β || [[List of Mamamoo concert tours#Mamamoo World Tour "My Con"|My Con World Tour]] || β || β || |- |- | May 25, 2023 || [[Paramore]] || [[Bloc Party]]<br>[[Genesis Owusu]] || [[This Is Why|This Is Why Tour]] || 11,630/11,630 || $1,133,447 || |- |- | July 3, 2023 || [[Alicia Keys]] || [[Libianca Fonji|Libianca]]<br>[[Simi (singer)|Simi]] || [[Keys to the Summer Tour]] || 7,856 || $527,995 || |- |- | July 13, 2023 || [[blink-182]] || [[Turnstile (band)|Turnstile]]<br>[[KennyHoopla]] || North American Tour 2023 || 12,872/12,872 || $1,718,191 || |- |- | July 15, 2023 || [[Erykah Badu]] || [[Yasiin Bey]]<br>[[Tobe Nwigwe]] || Unfollow Me Tour || β || β || |- |- | September 25, 2023 || rowspan="2" | Drake<br>[[21 Savage]] || rowspan="2"| || rowspan="2" | [[It's All a Blur Tour]] || rowspan="2" | 32,252/32,252 || rowspan="2" | $8,051,818 || rowspan="2" | Originally scheduled for July 1β2, 2023. |- | September 26, 2023 |- |- | October 1, 2023 || Jonas Brothers || [[Lawrence (band)|Lawrence]] || [[Five Albums. One Night. The World Tour]] || 11,791/12,325 || $1,988,654 || |- |- | October 6, 2023 || [[Lauren Daigle]] || β || The Kaleidoscope Tour || β || β || |- |- | October 14, 2023 || [[Aerosmith]] || [[The Black Crowes]] || [[Peace Out: The Farewell Tour]] || β || β || |- |- | October 15, 2023 |[[Depeche Mode]] |[[DIIV]] |[[Memento Mori World Tour]] | 12,232/12,232 | $1,903,326 |- |- | October 18, 2023 || Jonas Brothers || [[Lawrence (band)|Lawrence]] || [[Five Albums. One Night. The World Tour]] || 9,812/11,046 || $852,379 || |- |- | October 25, 2023 || John Mayer || [[JP Saxe]] || Solo Tour || β || β || |- |- | November 6, 2023 || [[Joji (musician)|Joji]] || [[Kenny Beats]]<br>Lil Toe (Ammo)<br>Savage Realm || Pandemonium Tour || β || β || |- |- | November 19, 2023 || [[Doja Cat]] || [[Doechii]] || [[The Scarlet Tour]] || 11,763 / 11,763 || $1,646,469 || |- |- | December 1, 2023 || rowspan=2|[[Travis Scott]] || rowspan=2|[[Teezo Touchdown]] || rowspan=2|[[Circus Maximus Tour]] || rowspan=2|29,779 / 29,779 || rowspan=2|$4,116,231 || rowspan=2| |- | December 2, 2023 |- |- | December 13, 2023 || [[Rod Wave]] || [[Tossii]] || [[Nostalgia Tour]] || β || β || |- | March 9, 2024 || [[Burna Boy]] || || I Told Them... Tour || β || β || |- | March 20, 2024 || rowspan=2|[[Nicki Minaj]] || rowspan=2|[[Monica (singer)|Monica]] || rowspan=2| [[Pink Friday 2 World Tour]] || rowspan=2| 22,117 / 22,117 || rowspan=2| $3,586,119 || |- | March 21, 2024 |- | March 24, 2024 || [[Ive (group)|IVE]] || || [[Show What I Have World Tour]] || 7,154 || $858,770 || |- | April 1, 2024 || Madonna || Mary Mac || [[The Celebration Tour]] || β || β || Originally scheduled for September 5, 2023. Postponed due to health issues. |- | May 14, 2024 || rowspan=2|[[Bad Bunny]] || rowspan=2| || rowspan=2|[[Most Wanted Tour (Bad Bunny)|Most Wanted Tour]] || rowspan=2|25,496 / 25,496 || rowspan=2|$5,404,203 || rowspan=2| |- | May 15, 2024 |- | May 29, 2024 || [[Tomorrow X Together]] || || Act : Promise || β || β || |- | May 31, 2024 || rowspan=2|[[Megan Thee Stallion]] || rowspan=2|[[GloRilla]] || rowspan=2|[[Hot Girl Summer Tour]]|| rowspan="2" | || rowspan=2| || rowspan=2| |- | June 1, 2024 |- | June 8, 2024 || [[Kane Brown]] || || In The Air Tour || β || β || |- | June 10, 2024 || Justin Timberlake || || [[The Forget Tomorrow World Tour]] || 12,982 / 12,982 || $2,711,435 || |- | June 11, 2024 || [[Gunna (rapper)|Gunna]] || [[Flo Milli]] || Bittersweet Tour || β || β || |- | June 14, 2024 || Tim McGraw || [[Carly Pearce]] || Standing Room Only Tour || β || β || |- | July 19, 2024 || [[IU (singer)|IU]] || || [[IU H.E.R.E.H. World Tour|HEREH World Tour]]|| β || β || |- | July 21, 2024 || Janet Jackson || [[Nelly]] || [[Janet Jackson: Together Again|Together Again]] || β || β || |- | July 23, 2024 || [[Olivia Rodrigo]] || [[Pinkpantheress]] || [[Guts World Tour|GUTS World Tour]]|| β || β || |- | July 30, 2024 || [[AJR]] || || [[The Maybe Man Tour]] || β || β || |- | July 31, 2024 || [[Peso Pluma]] || || Exodo World Tour || β || β || |- |August 10, 2024 |[[Suicideboys|$uicideboy$]] |[[Denzel Curry]] [[Pouya]] Haarper Shakewell [[Ekkstacy]] |Greyday 2024 North American Tour | | | |- | August 14, 2024 || rowspan=3|[[Usher (musician)|Usher]] || rowspan=3| || rowspan=3|[[Usher: Past Present Future]] || rowspan=3| || rowspan=3| || |- | August 16, 2024 |- | August 17, 2024 |- | October 3, 2024 || [[Charli XCX]]<br>[[Troye Sivan]] || [[Shygirl]] || SWEAT || β || β || |- | October 17, 2024 || rowspan=3|[[Usher (musician)|Usher]] || rowspan=3| || rowspan=3|[[Usher: Past Present Future]] || rowspan=3| || rowspan=3| || |- | October 18, 2024 |- | October 20, 2024 |- | November 2, 2024 || rowspan=2|[[Billie Eilish]] || rowspan=2| || rowspan=2|[[Hit Me Hard and Soft: The Tour]]|| rowspan="2" | || rowspan=2| || |- | November 3, 2024 |- | November 14, 2024 || [[Pink (singer)|Pink]] || KidCutUp || [[Trustfall Tour]]|| || || |- | November 16, 2024 || Justin Timberlake || || [[The Forget Tomorrow World Tour|Forget Tomorrow World Tour]]|| β || β || |- | April 11, 2025 || [[Kylie Minogue]] ||[[Rita Ora]]|| [[Tension Tour]]|| β || β || |- | June 2, 2025 || [[Shakira]] || β || [[Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran World Tour]]|| β || β || |- |September 5, 2025 |[[Babymonster]] | |[[Hello Monsters World Tour]] | | | |} ===Other events=== The arena hosted the 2004 [[US Figure Skating Championships]]. Every few years, in early January, the State Farm Arena hosts one of the largest Christian college aged conferences: [[Passion Conferences|Passion Conference]], when Mercedes-Benz Stadium is unavailable; the Passion 2025 Conference will be held at the State Farm Arena. The conference typically takes place over the first weekend in the new year and features big names in the Christian world such as Louie Gigilio, [[Chris Tomlin]], Matt Redman, Kristian Stanfill, John Piper, rap artist Lecrae and many more. The conference is typically sold out.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}} The arena served as the venue for the semifinals of the [[2022 League of Legends World Championship]]. The semifinals saw South Korean teams [[T1 (esports)|T1]] and [[DRX (esports)|DRX]] progress to the finals, held at the [[Chase Center]] in [[San Francisco]]. DRX would eventually win the finals and become the 2022 League of Legends World Champions. The arena hosted Hot Wheels Monster Trucks Live in 2024 and hosted it again in 2025 {{Citation needed|date=February 2025}} ==Renovations== [[File:State Farm Arena - Bulls VS Hawks NBA Game.jpg|thumb|State Farm Arena after renovations during a 2019 [[2019β20 Atlanta Hawks season|Hawks]] game vs the [[2019β20 Chicago Bulls season|Chicago Bulls]]]] Shortly after acquiring the Hawks and the operating rights to Philips Arena on June 24, 2015, Tony Ressler announced his intentions of remodeling the arena to keep the Hawks in Downtown Atlanta at a cost between $150 million and $250 million. The proposed renovation would rebuild the entire seating bowl to optimize its sightlines for basketball and remove the wall of suites which dominate one side of the arena and replace them with a more traditional suite configuration.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Trubey|first1=J. Scott|last2=Vivlamore|first2=Chris|title=Atlanta may help pay for arena remodel to keep Hawks downtown|url=http://www.myajc.com/news/news/local/atlanta-to-help-pay-for-arena-remodel-to-keep-hawk/nn757/|access-date=August 3, 2016|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]] |date=October 22, 2015}}</ref> The Hawks are also in discussions with the city about building a mixed-use entertainment district similar to [[L.A. Live]] around Philips Arena, to better connect it to other nearby attractions such as [[Centennial Olympic Park]] and [[Mercedes-Benz Stadium]].<ref>{{cite news|last1=Bluestein|first1=Greg|last2=Trubey|first2=J. Scott|title=Hawks, city in talks for entertainment district at Philips Arena|url=http://www.ajc.com/news/news/local-govt-politics/hawks-city-in-talks-for-entertainment-district-at-/nqfnk/|access-date=August 3, 2016|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]|date=March 7, 2016}}</ref> On November 1, 2016, the Hawks and the city of Atlanta reached a financing agreement on renovating Philips Arena, with the city contributing $142.5 million and the Hawks $50 million plus cost overruns to the project. With the renovation, the Hawks signed a lease extension lasting through June 30, 2046, with an early termination penalty of $200 million plus the remaining balance of the arena's bonds.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Trubey|first1=J. Scott|last2=Vivlamore|first2=Chris|title=Kasim Reed announces deal to keep Hawks in Philips Arena|url=http://www.ajc.com/sports/basketball/kasim-reed-announces-deal-keep-hawks-philips-arena/c7DlM4z25CEfcGwqux3yUK/|access-date=November 2, 2016|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last1=Tucker|first1=Tim|title=LEADOFF: Hawks 'set to begin' Philips Arena renovation today|url=http://www.ajc.com/sports/basketball/leadoff-hawks-set-begin-philips-arena-renovation-today/x2Jf0WcLDfuzUtk1kLanBP/|access-date=June 26, 2017|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]}}</ref> The first phase of renovations, completed during the Hawks' 2017 off-season, removed the upper levels of the suite wall, reducing the total number of suites from 90 to 40, and added the Courtside Club behind one of the baskets. Renovations for 2018 were described by Hawks chief operating officer [[Thad Sheely]] as a "gut rehab". The arena renovations brought new premium seating areas, connected 360-degree concourses, a new center-hung videoboard three times larger than its predecessor as well as additional videoboards in the corners of the upper decks, new dining options including a bar and grill operated by country group [[Zac Brown Band]] and other unique features including an in-arena barber shop operated by Atlanta rapper [[Killer Mike]] and [[Topgolf]] suites. Over {{convert|100000|ft2|m2|-2|abbr=on}} of former office and storage space within the arena was repurposed as "fan space". The first ticketed event at the renovated State Farm Arena was [[So So Def Recordings|So So Def]]'s 25th anniversary concert on October 21, 2018, while the Hawks' first regular season home game took place on October 24 against the [[2018β19 Dallas Mavericks season|Dallas Mavericks]].<ref>{{cite news |last1=Tucker|first1=Tim|title=Extreme makeover is transforming Philips Arena|url=https://www.ajc.com/sports/extreme-makeover-transforming-philips-arena/dyJls5VLE2Qop1OwhIvEBO/#2|access-date=June 9, 2018|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Zac Brown's Social Club|url=http://transformation.hawks.com/neighborhoods/zac-browns-social-club/|publisher=Atlanta Hawks|access-date=April 30, 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=The New Philips Arena Entertainment|work=State Farm Arena |url=http://transformation.hawks.com/entertainment/|publisher=Atlanta Hawks|access-date=April 30, 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Oliviero|first1=Helena|last2=Tucker|first2=Tim|title=Fans appreciate open feel of Hawks' new home|url=https://www.ajc.com/lifestyles/fans-appreciate-open-feel-hawks-new-home/1z505aswBs5LwXRuEesqqI/|access-date=October 26, 2018|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]|date=October 24, 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last=Ruggieri|first=Melissa|title=Concert review: So So Def 25th anniversary concert opens State Farm Arena with hits, surprise guests|url=https://www.ajc.com/blog/music/concert-review-def-25th-anniversary-concert-opens-state-farm-arena-with-hits-surprise-guests/hf4elsdJuGzr0uTDhATOaO/|access-date=October 26, 2018|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]|date=October 22, 2018}}</ref> Due to the renovations conflicting with the WNBA schedule, the Dream announced that they would move their 2017 and 2018 home schedules to [[McCamish Pavilion]] on the campus of [[Georgia Institute of Technology|Georgia Tech]], mirroring the Hawks' move to the same venue (then known as Alexander Memorial Coliseum) between the time the Omni was razed and State Farm Arena was built.<ref>{{cite news|last=Vivlamore|first=Chris|title=What Philips Arena renovations will mean for Hawks seasons|url=http://www.ajc.com/news/sports/basketball/renovations-to-philips-arena-wont-interrupt-hawks-/nsK2P/|access-date=August 24, 2016|newspaper=[[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]}}</ref> With the release of the 2019 WNBA schedule on December 18, 2018, the Dream confirmed that they would be returning to State Farm Arena.<ref>{{cite web |title=Atlanta Dream Unveil 2019 Schedule |url=https://dream.wnba.com/news/atlanta-dream-unveil-2019-schedule/|publisher=Atlanta Dream|access-date=December 20, 2018}}</ref> However, following the conclusion of the 2019 WNBA regular season, team officials indicated that the Dream would not be returning to State Farm Arena for the next season (which would be in 2021 due to the 2020 WNBA season being played in a COVID-19 bubble), citing disagreements with the Hawks' management.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Hummer |first1=Steve |title=Dream owners look to future that doesn't include State Farm Arena |url=https://www.ajc.com/sports/dream-owners-look-future-that-doesn-include-state-farm-arena/Cj8a2omttvjnSCF1nwMMdO/# |access-date=September 13, 2019 |work=The Atlanta Journal-Constitution |date=September 9, 2019}}</ref> On October 18, 2019, the Dream announced that they would move to the [[Gateway Center Arena]] in suburban [[College Park, Georgia|College Park]], sharing the venue with the Hawks' [[NBA G League]] affiliate, the [[College Park Skyhawks]].<ref name="Dream new home, new logo">{{Cite web |url=https://www.11alive.com/article/sports/wnba/atlanta-dream/new-atlanta-dream-logo/85-b3c98880-fd76-4345-b5da-b8d06a7ca9dc |title=Atlanta Dream getting new logo, new home |website=11Alive |publisher=WXIA TV |date=October 18, 2019}}</ref> On June 21, 2024, the Dream returned to State Farm Arena for the first time since 2019 when it hosted the [[Indiana Fever]] and its highly touted rookie [[Caitlin Clark]]. The game was originally slated for Gateway Center Arena, but high demand for tickets and Clark's immense popularity led to the Dream relocating to State Farm Arena for this contest.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.wtoc.com/2024/06/21/dream-sell-out-state-farm-arena-ahead-hosting-caitlin-clark-indiana-fever/ |title=Dream sell out State Farm Arena ahead of hosting Caitlin Clark and Indiana Fever |publisher=WTOC-11 TV|date=June 22, 2024}}</ref> ==See also== *[[List of indoor arenas by capacity]] ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== {{Commons category}} * {{Official website|https://www.statefarmarena.com}} {{s-start-collapsible|header={{s-sta|et}}}} {{succession box | before = [[Georgia Dome]] | title = Home of the<br>[[Atlanta Hawks]] | years = 1999βpresent | after = current}} {{succession box | before = first arena | title = Home of the<br>[[Atlanta Thrashers]] | years = 1999β2011 | after = [[Bell MTS Place]] (as [[Winnipeg Jets]])}} {{succession box | before = [[Infinite Energy Arena|Arena at Gwinnett Center]] | title = Home of the<br>[[Georgia Force]] | years = 2004β2007 | after = Arena at Gwinnett Center}} {{succession box | before = first arena<br>[[McCamish Pavilion]] | title = Home of the<br>[[Atlanta Dream]] | years = 2008β2016<br>2019 | after = [[McCamish Pavilion]]<br>[[Gateway Center Arena]]}} {{succession box | before = [[Smoothie King Center|New Orleans Arena]]<br>[[Joe Louis Arena]] | title = Home of the<br>[[Royal Rumble]] | years = 2002<br>2010 | after = [[TD Garden|FleetCenter]]<br>[[TD Garden]]}} {{succession box | before = [[American Airlines Center]] | title = Host of the<br>[[NHL All-Star Game]] | years = [[2008 NHL All-Star Game|2008]] | after = [[Bell Centre]]}} {{succession box | before = [[United Center]] | title = Host of the<br>[[NBA All-Star Game]] | years = [[2021 NBA All-Star Game|2021]] | after = [[Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse]]}} {{s-end}} {{Atlanta sports venues}} {{Atlanta Dream}} {{Atlanta Hawks}} {{Atlanta Thrashers}} {{Georgia Force}} {{Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets men's basketball navbox}} {{NBA Arenas}} {{Former NHL arenas}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:1999 establishments in Georgia (U.S. state)]] [[Category:Atlanta Dream]] [[Category:Atlanta Hawks]] [[Category:Atlanta Thrashers]] [[Category:Basketball venues in Atlanta]] [[Category:College basketball venues in Georgia (U.S. state)]] [[Category:Defunct National Hockey League venues]] [[Category:Indoor arenas in Georgia (U.S. state)]] [[Category:Ice hockey venues in the United States]] [[Category:Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design certified buildings]] [[Category:Music venues completed in 1999]] [[Category:Music venues in Georgia (U.S. state)]] [[Category:NBA venues]] [[Category:State Farm]] [[Category:Sports venues completed in 1999]] [[Category:Sports venues in Atlanta]] [[Category:Arquitectonica buildings]] [[Category:Women's National Basketball Association venues]] [[Category:Philips]]
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