The idea of a new basketball arena to replace the Wolfpack's longtime home,
Reynolds Coliseum, first emerged in the 1980s under the vision of then-Wolfpack
coach Jim Valvano. In 1989, the NCSU Trustees approved plans to build a 23,000-seat arena. The Centennial Authority was created by the
North Carolina General Assembly in 1995 as the governing entity of the arena, then financed by state appropriation, local contributions, and university fundraising. The Centennial Authority refocused the project into a multi-use arena, leading to the 1997 relocation agreement of the then-
Hartford Whalers, who would become the
Carolina Hurricanes. Construction began that year and was completed in 1999 with an estimated cost of
$158 million, which was largely publicly financed by a hotel and restaurant tax. The Hurricanes agreed to pay $60 million of the cost, and the state of North Carolina paid $18 million. As part of the deal, the Hurricanes assumed operational control of the arena. Known as the Raleigh Entertainment and Sports Arena (ESA) from 1999 to 2002, it was renamed the RBC Center after an extended search for a corporate sponsor.
RBC Bank, the US division of the
Royal Bank of Canada (whose headquarters were in Raleigh), acquired 20-year
naming rights for a reported $80 million. On June 19, 2011, it was announced that
PNC Financial Services bought US assets of RBC Bank and acquired the naming rights to the arena pending approval by the regulatory agencies. On December 15, 2011, the Centennial Authority, the landlord of the arena, approved a name change for the facility to PNC Arena. The name change officially took place on March 15, 2012. PNC's naming rights expired on August 31, 2024. On September 12, 2024, the Centennial Authority approved a name change to Lenovo Center after the Chinese technology company
Lenovo, whose American headquarters are based in nearby
Morrisville, secured naming rights for ten years. On a normal hockey day, Lenovo Center has more than 400 people on duty for security and concessions. The arena has also seen use in fictional media, in
The CW series
One Tree Hill. The
season four episode, "Some You Gove Away", saw the Tree Hill High School Ravens playing a
NCHSAA championship game in the venue. It was also the taping site for the 2005
Jeopardy! College Tournament.
Hockey Raleigh experienced its first NHL game on October 29, 1999, when the Hurricanes hosted the
New Jersey Devils on the building's opening night. The first playoff series at the Entertainment and Sports Arena were held in 2001 when the Hurricanes hosted the Devils in games 3, 4, and 6, of the
2001 Stanley Cup playoffs, but the Hurricanes lost in 6. The ESA (by then the renamed RBC Center) hosted games of both the
2002 Stanley Cup playoffs and
Stanley Cup Finals; however, the Hurricanes lost in the Stanley Cup Finals. On June 19, 2006, the Hurricanes were on home ice for a decisive
game seven of the Stanley Cup Finals, defeating the
Edmonton Oilers 3–1 to bring the franchise its first
Stanley Cup and North Carolina its first and only major professional sports championship. The arena hosted the playoffs again in
2009, with the Hurricanes losing in the Eastern Conference Finals. In 2019, the arena hosted the
Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time in 10 years, with fans setting a single-game record attendance of 19,495 in game 4 of the
second round versus the
New York Islanders. This record would be further extended on May 14, 2022, when the Hurricanes defeated the
Boston Bruins 3–2 in game 7 of the
first round, to advance to the Second Round, in front of 19,513 fans. On March 7, 2025, the arena hosted a
PWHL Takeover Tour game between the
Minnesota Frost and
Ottawa Charge of the
Professional Women's Hockey League during the
2024–25 PWHL season. The Frost won 5–0 in front of 10,782 fans.
Top attended Hurricanes games at the Lenovo Center Attendance numbers come from press numbers from ESPN, Lenovo Center, the Raleigh
News and Observer, as well as Hockey Reference.com. Numbers in italics represent playoff games. ==Renovations==