Early years Originally named the
Boston Arena,
groundbreaking took place on October 11, 1909. The 1896 United States skating champion Herbert S. Evans dug the first portion of earth. The arena was to have a capacity of 5,000 and was to be used for ice skating, curling, horse shows, and a variety of sporting events. The arena had its own power plant, which powered the two 100-ton ice machines and all of the arena's lighting. Charles C. Abbey was the first president and treasurer of the Boston Arena Company and William T. Richardson was the building's first general manager. The arena was scheduled to open on Christmas Day 1909, but construction delays pushed back the opening until April 25, 1910. The Arena's original ice surface was larger than the current standard at . The first games of professional ice hockey at the Arena took place in March 1911 when a two-game $2,500 competition between two
NHA teams, the
Montreal Wanderers and the
Ottawa Senators took place. The Arena was the home ice for a number of amateur and college hockey teams, including the
Boston Athletic Association,
Boston Arenas,
Westminster Hockey Club,
Boston College,
Boston University,
Harvard, and
MIT. The rink was also home to the
Boston Girls' Hockey Club, one of the first women's hockey teams in the United States (1916–1918).
Fire and reconstruction The Arena was destroyed by fire on December 18, 1918. It was rebuilt, and the new facility opened January 1, 1921, with an ice show. From 1921 to 1932, the
Boston Athletic Association Indoor Games were held at the arena. The
NHL's first US-based franchise, the
Boston Bruins, made the Boston Arena their home from 1924 to 1928. Before the team began play, the Arena reduced its ice surface from 220 x 90 feet down to 200 x 80 feet to conform to NHL regulations. This also allowed the Arena to add 1,000 seats. The
Boston Garden opened in 1928 and replaced the Arena as the city's venue for premier boxing, wrestling, and track events. Boston Arena general manager
George V. Brown was able to keep the venue running with college hockey and figure skating. In 1934, the smaller Boston Arena Corporation, led by
Henry G. Lapham, purchased a controlling interest in the Boston Garden. In 1936, the
Boston Garden-Arena Corporation bought out the remaining stock owned by the Madison Square Garden Corporation.
Metropolitan District Commission ownership On April 16, 1953, the Boston Garden-Arena Corporation sold the Boston Arena to Samuel L. Pinsly for $240,000. He planned on doubling the size of the building and converting it into a garment manufacturing facility, as the purchase agreement included a five-year ban on sports or events at building unless it was acquired by a government entity. Three months later, the building was purchased by the
Metropolitan District Commission for $280,000, which planned on using it for high school sports and other athletic events.
Francis Ouimet was named chairman of the MDC's Boston Arena Authority and
Clark Hodder was named manager of the Arena. In 1975, the MDC offered to sell the Arena to the city of Boston for $450,000. The city leased the building from the MDC pending completion of the purchase. The sale never took place and in 1977, the MDC leased the Arena at no cost to Northeastern University.
Northeastern University's Matthews Arena The Arena was purchased by Northeastern University on October 3, 1979. The arena was known as Northeastern Arena until November 14, 1982, when it was renamed Matthews Arena in honor of the university's chairman emeritus George Matthews. A 1995 renovation expanded the ice surface from . This came as concerns surrounding the structural integrity of Matthews Arena increased: scaffolding was erected to support the east end of the arena in 2024, part of the student section as well as the Varsity Club (home to the arena's only licensed bar) were closed, and the foundation, built on reclaimed land once part of a
wharf, was found to be sinking. The final hockey game played in the Arena was held on December 13, between Boston University and Northeastern. Boston University won 4–3. The arena's demolition, originally scheduled to begin in February 2026 and be complete by the end of April 2026, instead started in early March. The building is being disassembled to minimize disruption to the densely developed area; much of the material will be recycled, and many arena artifacts are being preserved. The arena's historic arch, which dates to 1901, will be used in the new arena, and the university plans to sell 1,000 bricks salvaged from the arena. While the new arena is being constructed, Northeastern's basketball programs will play home games at the on-campus
Cabot Center. The hockey programs will play at a variety of sites due to many rinks in greater Boston large enough to accommodate crowds for Huskies games already occupied by other Division I programs. To close out the 2025-26 campaign, the men's and women's teams played designated home games at
Walter Brown Arena on the
Boston University campus and
Bentley Arena at
Bentley University in
Waltham. The men's team also played a "home" series versus
Maine at
Tsongas Center in
Lowell (home to
UMass Lowell) and
Cross Insurance Arena in
Portland, Maine. The women's team used Walter Brown Arena as its home site for the
Hockey East tournament and the men's team will play its postseason home games at
Boston College's
Conte Forum. ==Notable events==