History & Culture · Mohawk Valley
Utica Built the Aud on an Old Canal Line
Utica Memorial Auditorium turns the city's Erie Canal layer into a modern civic and sports landmark.
Published July 5, 2026 · Last verified July 5, 2026
Utica’s canal history is not just something for old maps. Utica Memorial Auditorium was built in 1959 on the site of the old Erie Canal, then dedicated to area veterans and the wars in which they served.
That gives the Aud a layered local meaning. It is a hockey, concert, and civic gathering place, but it also sits on ground where the canal once helped pull Utica into a larger economy. Old transportation corridor, public memory, and modern crowds all share the same downtown address.
That is a very Utica kind of stack. The city has long been shaped by movement: canal traffic, railroad lines, immigrant neighborhoods, mill work, and the steady push of people crossing the Mohawk Valley. The Aud turns one piece of that movement into a public room.
A person might know the building for games, graduations, or shows before thinking about the canal below it. Once you know the older layer, the place feels deeper. The arena is not just where people gather now. It is also a veterans memorial built on transportation ground that helped make the city.