Chicago Stadium
Reliable shipping
Flexible returns
Chicago Stadium was the Madhouse on Madison — a thundering, barn-shaped colosseum where the Blackhawks, the Bulls, and a 3,663-pipe organ turned West Madison Street into the loudest room in sports.
Opened in 1929 as the largest indoor arena in the world, the Stadium hosted Bobby Hull's slap shot, Michael Jordan's six championship runs, and five presidential nominating conventions, including three for Franklin Roosevelt. There were no elevators — kegs were rolled down the stairs and passed hand to hand to the cheap seats, where 26,000 fans could pack in tight enough to shake the broadcast booth.
The doors closed for good in 1994, and the wrecking ball came the next spring. The United Center rose across the street, but the roar it inherited started here.
A piece of the Madhouse for the wall — understated enough for any room, specific enough to mean something to anyone who was there.