The American Airlines Center opened in 2001 at a cost of $420 million. At 25 years old, it is entering the stage where significant renovations are needed to remain competitive with newer arenas. Here is what we know.
Confirmed upgrades (source: Dallas Morning News, AAC official announcements):
- New center-hung video board: The current scoreboard is being replaced with a state-of-the-art LED board comparable to what the Clippers have at the Intuit Dome. Expected completion: Fall 2026.
- Concourse food and beverage overhaul: New vendor partnerships with local DFW restaurants replacing generic Aramark options. Rolling out through 2026-27 season.
- Wi-Fi infrastructure upgrade: Supporting 20,000+ simultaneous connections for mobile ordering and streaming.
Rumored future upgrades:
- Club level redesign with premium dining options
- New VIP entrance on the west side of the building
- Expanded retail space for team merchandise
- Enhanced ADA accessibility throughout the arena
The comparison problem: Newer arenas like the Intuit Dome (opened 2024) and the new arenas in Sacramento and Milwaukee have set a new standard for the fan experience. The AAC, while well-maintained, feels dated in comparison.
The renovation vs. new build question: There have been no credible reports of a new arena. The Victory Park location is too valuable and the infrastructure is too good to abandon. Renovations are the path forward.
Cost estimate: Industry experts suggest a comprehensive renovation of a 25-year-old arena costs $250-400M. Source: Sports Business Journal arena renovation survey.
Sources:
- Dallas Morning News — AAC renovation reporting
- AAC official press releases
- Sports Business Journal — arena renovation cost analysis
DFW, what say you?
The new video board alone will transform the in-arena experience. The current one is functional but compared to what the Clippers built at Intuit Dome, it looks like it belongs in 2005.