The wild history of the Memphis Pyramid - Lonely Planet (2024)

On the banks of the Mississippi River, just north of downtown Memphis, stands one of the largest pyramids in the world, 321 feet from base to apex. Put it next to the most famous of all pyramids, in Giza, and it would be the third-tallest in the group, and though it might not have quite the same level of historic intrigue as its Egyptian counterparts, there’s still layer upon layer of stories to tell.

The Memphis Pyramid was always going to be a big deal. That was the point. Music may have helped put the Tennessee city on the map — Graceland is here; so is Sun Studio, the self-proclaimed “Birthplace of Rock ‘n’ Roll”— but city boosters wanted an eye-catching landmark, a skyline signature like the Gateway Arch in St. Louis. A pyramid was a logical fit, given the city’s namesake in Egypt, and the local precedent for Egyptian-inspired architecture, like the historic Universal Life Insurance building.

The origin of the Memphis Pyramid

The original idea, which came from an artist named Mark Hartz in the 1950s, involved three pyramids built high atop bluffs, a truly eye-catching sight. That one didn’t pan out, but in the mid-1980s, at the encouragement of his son, Jon, Hartz created an elegant rendering for a new plan featuring a single pyramid, gold and gleaming. The two Hartz men “had no [concrete] plans or money for it,” recalls Michael Finger, a historian and executive editor of Memphis magazine. “They just thought it was a cool idea. And so [Jon] went around to try to get to drum up interest. And everybody thought, ‘Well, it's either crazy or crazy good. We can't decide that.’ And also it wasn't clear what it would be used for.”

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This second effort caught the attention of a pair of men who did think it was crazy-good, and who had money, clout, and a fondness for offbeat ventures: John Tigrett, a Memphis local who built a fortune on Glub-Glub (the drinking duck toy), and Sidney Schlenker, who was best known for running the Astrodome and its assorted headline-grabbing events, like the “Battle of the Sexes” tennis match.

The revived, businessman-hyped vision for the Pyramid was fittingly eccentric, far beyond anything Mark Hartz ever conceptualized. In this plan, the monumental building would rise on the banks of the Mississippi near downtown, just across from Mud Island, which would also be incorporated into the site.

The whole thing would be a theme park known as Rakapolis, with Egyptian architecture and reed boats ferrying people from Mud Island to the Pyramid, and an emphasis on American music. The Pyramid would have a rock ‘n’ roll museum, or maybe a Grammy museum, and, Finger says, you’d enter the structure “by going through a replica of the world's largest trumpet,” in honor of local hero W.C. Handy.

For better or for worse, most of that didn’t come to pass – no reed boats, no walk-through trumpet, no music museum. But the Pyramid itself was built, with groundbreaking in September 1989. Finger was there and recalls the event included an “easily 50ft, maybe longer, shovel outlined in neon, flown from a helicopter. And it hovered over the site. I guess we played some sort of patriotic music. And then at the proper moment, they dropped the shovel and sure enough, it fell a couple hundred feet and stuck in the ground.”

An unlucky start

The Pyramid finally opened as an arena in November 1991. It had stainless steel paneling on the outside and 20,000 seats inside. Less prominently, but fueling much local discussion, was a metal box welded to a beam near the top, inside of which was a crystal skull, secretly placed at the behest of John Tigrett’s son, Isaac. (Every factual sentence about the Pyramid sounds like a Mad Lib). The first event was a concert by country music duo the Judds, who were immediately upstaged whenthe building began flooding from backed-up restrooms, and workers had to break out the sandbags.

It was an inauspicious beginning, to be sure, but there were plenty of better moments to come. In addition to concerts, the Pyramid was the home of the University of Memphis Tigers basketball team and hosted various professional wrestling matches, arena football games (for the short-lived Memphis Pharaohs), and other events.

It was also part of the package that drew the NBA team the Grizzlies from Vancouver to Memphis in 2001.The new Memphis Grizzlies initially played at The Pyramid, but the acoustics were terrible and the building lacked certain amenities that modern-day NBA teams desire, like luxury suites, and,,given the fixed size and form of the building, major alterations were impossible or expensive. The Grizzlies quickly decided they needed a new, custom-built home, and in 2004, the team moved to the new FedExForum, taking the University of Memphis Tigers with it. The Pyramid stood vacant.

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Two years later, Bass Pro Shops proposed taking over the building and making it into a giant store with other attractions. “That brought out all these jokes,” Michael Finger says. “Like, ‘Oh my God, we're moving a bait shop into the Pyramid.’ But I told people, you don't have to be a hunter or a fisherman to appreciate what Bass Pro has up there.”

It took until 2015 for the new store to open – the building is now called the Bass Pro Shops Pyramid – and it is, indeed, quite a bit more than a place to shop. There’s a gun range and an aquarium. A couple of restaurants, including one at the top, accessible by a free-standing elevator. And … afew even more unusual things, like an entirely indoor, 103-room Big Cypress Lodge, built into the upper floors, with porches overlooking an alligator-filled cypress swamp far below.

And it’s popular. Three million people went there the first year, and it continues to draw crowds. There’s no question it’s a bit absurd – it always has been. But it’s a point of local pride, Michael Finger says. The Memphis Pyramid, for all its quirks, is finally and definitively a big deal.

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The wild history of the Memphis Pyramid - Lonely Planet (2024)

FAQs

What is the history of the pyramids in Memphis? ›

Where did the Pyramid come from? The building was originally envisioned as a major cultural attraction called The Great American Pyramid in the 1950s by a Memphis local. Plans were resurrected in the 1980s by the man's son, and the Great American Pyramid and/or the Pyramid Arena opened in 1991.

Is Memphis Pyramid bigger than Giza? ›

The largest of the three would have been scaled at two-thirds the size of the Great Pyramid of Giza near Memphis, Egypt; the flanking structures would have been scaled at two-thirds the size of the main pyramid.

Is there a crystal skull in the Bass Pro Shop pyramid? ›

When the great glass pyramid of the city of Memphis was first constructed in 1991, it included a black velvet-lined box welded to its apex containing a crystal skull placed there by Hard Rock Café tycoon Isaac Tigrett.

Is there an ancient pyramid in the USA? ›

Take a trip to Cahokia in Southern Illinois, across the river from St. Louis. There you will find a complex of pyramids built out of soil, not stone. These temples as well as others were built by the Mississippian peoples.

Which pharaoh built Memphis? ›

Memphis was the capital of Lower Egypt before the two lands were unified around 3100 BCE by the Pharaoh Menes, also known as Narmer, who founded the first of the thirty dynasties that would rule the kingdom for the next two and a half thousand years.

What did ancient Egyptians call Memphis? ›

Memphis, background. Name in Egyptian: inb-HD - white wall. Later names of the city include mn-nfr (which was the name of the Pyramid of Pepy II) and Hwt-kA-ptH (the house of the ka of Ptah). The Greek form Memphis derives from mn-nfr.

What is the oldest pyramid on Earth? ›

According to Guinness World Records, the title of world's oldest pyramid is shared between the Djoser Step Pyramid of Saqqara, Egypt, built in approximately 2630 B.C. and the Caral Pyramids of Caral, Peru, built between 2700 and 2600 B.C.

What is the largest pyramid on Earth? ›

The Great Pyramid of Cholula, also known as Tlachihualtepetl (Nahuatl for "constructed mountain"), is a complex located in Cholula, Puebla, Mexico. It is the largest archaeological site of a pyramid (temple) in the world, as well as the largest pyramid by volume known to exist in the world today.

Is the Memphis Pyramid worth visiting? ›

Whether you're a camper, hunter or just looking to escape the Memphis heat, Bass Pro Shops at the Pyramid is a must-see modern architectural marvel. From shopping to bowling or spending a few hours at the spa, there is something for every member of the family to enjoy.

What's inside the Memphis Pyramid? ›

In addition to an incredible assortment of fishing, boating, hunting and outdoor gear, the mega store includes a 103-room hotel with treehouse cabins (see Big Cypress Lodge below); 600,000 gallons of water teeming with over 1,800 fish; a cypress swamp with alligator pools and duck aviaries; and a breathtaking ...

Where is the real crystal skull? ›

The skull was auctioned off by Tiffany and Co to the British Museum in 1898, where it was placed on display as an Aztec artefact. Boban sold another crystal skull to French ethnologist and collector, Alphonse Pinart, who donated the skull to the Trocadéro Museum, now displayed at the Musée du Quai Branly.

What was the box found in the Memphis Pyramid? ›

When construction workers were on top of the giant pyramid in downtown Memphis, Tennessee, they discovered a small metal box welded to the structure. Inside, they were shocked to find a small crystal skull. The story of how the skull got there has become Memphis Legend.

Why did they build a pyramid in Memphis? ›

Plans for the pyramid date back to the 1950s when Memphis artist Mark Hartz decided he wanted his city to have a signature piece of architecture, just like the Gateway Arch in St. Louis. But it was not until 1989 when construction would actually begin on one of the three envisioned pyramids.

What was the pyramid that was in Memphis and what was it used for? ›

The Memphis Pyramid, formerly known as the Great American Pyramid, was built in 1991 as a 20,000 seat sports arena. However, it had a rocky road. On opening night a pipe burst and flooded the floor. Not long after, Luxor in Las Vegas surpassed it as the tallest pyramid in America.

Did Memphis Egypt have pyramids? ›

2650–c. 2465 bce) Memphite, and the huge royal pyramid tombs of this period, in the necropolises of Memphis, confirm this. Djoser, the second king of the 3rd dynasty, was the builder of the Step Pyramid of Ṣaqqārah, the earliest royal foundation at Memphis and the first important stone building in Egypt.

What is the history of Memphis ancient Egypt? ›

History. During the Early Dynastic Period and Old Kingdom, Memphis became the capital of Ancient Egypt for more than six consecutive dynasties. The city reached a peak of prestige under the Sixth Dynasty as a centre for the worship of Ptah, the god of creation and artworks.

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