Arts & Entertainment
Patch Editor Interviewed On Science Channel Documentary
The 1978 collapse of the Hartford Civic Center roof is the subject of an all-new episode Wednesday.

HARTFORD, CT — One of the biggest engineering disasters in Connecticut history will be profiled this week on Science Channel: the 1978 collapse of the Hartford Civic Center roof. Connecticut Patch sports editor Tim Jensen, who has interviewed a number of people close to the incident and written several stories on the subject, is among the featured guests on the documentary series "Engineering Catastrophes," which began its third season on Oct. 2.
The fifth episode of the new season, produced for the network by BriteSpark Films of Great Britain, will air Wednesday at 9 p.m. It focuses on the roof's collapse under the weight of heavy snow and ice in the early morning hours of Jan. 18, 1978. Faulty design was ultimately ruled as the culprit.
Just a few hours earlier, more than 4,700 spectators had been in the building to watch a UConn men's basketball game. Had the collapse taken place at that time, one of the largest single-day losses of life would likely have occurred - more than the bombing of Pearl Harbor, the 9/11 terrorist attacks and the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, and only trailing the 1900 Galveston hurricane in terms of human devastation.
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Instead, the city of Hartford suffered deep financial wounds, as the Civic Center had been part of a revitalization project that included Bushnell Plaza. The Civic Center complex contained not only the arena, known as the Veterans Memorial Coliseum, but a shopping mall that was 100 percent filled.
The building's primary tenants were the New England Whalers of the World Hockey Association, with UConn basketball also playing key games at the spacious venue. Concerts were a huge attraction at the time; in 1977 alone, the building played host to performances by, among others, Fleetwood Mac, America, Boston, the Grateful Dead and Jethro Tull. The King himself, Elvis Presley, was scheduled to perform at the Civic Center on Aug. 21, 1977; unfortunately, he passed away five days earlier in his Graceland mansion at age 42.
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Following the roof collapse, which took place just three years and nine days after the building opened, the Whalers took up temporary residence in Springfield, Mass., where members of the "91 Club" made the 27-mile drive up Interstate 91 to follow the team. By the time the Civic Center was reopened on Jan. 17, 1980 (exactly two years after the final pre-collapse event), the World Hockey Association had folded, the Whalers had been admitted into the National Hockey League and changed their name to the Hartford Whalers, and their home arena's seating capacity had increased to nearly 15,000.
The Whalers remained the primary tenant until moving to North Carolina in 1997. Today, the XL Center is home to the Hartford Wolf Pack, the American Hockey League affiliate of the New York Rangers, as well as hosting occasional basketball games, concerts and expos.
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