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List of indoor arenas in Japan

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The following is a list of indoor arenas in Japan with capacity for at least 4,000 spectators, most of the arenas in this list are for multi use purposes such as individual sports, team sports as well as cultural and political events.

Currently in use

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Location Arena Date built Capacity Image
Akita Akita Prefectural Gymnasium 1968 6,000
CNA Arena 1994 5,000
Aomori Maeda Arena 2002 5,500
Chiba Port Arena 1991 7,512
Echizen Sun Dome Fukui 1995 10,000
Fukuoka Marine Messe Fukuoka 1995 15,000
Fukuoka City General Gymnasium 2018 5,042
Fukuroi Ecopa Arena 2001 10,000
Funabashi Funabashi Arena 1993 4,368
Ginowan Okinawa Convention Center 1987 5,000
Hakodate Hakodate Arena 2015 5,000
Hamamatsu Hamamatsu Arena 1990 8,000
Hiroshima Hiroshima Prefectural Sports Center 1994 10,000
Hiroshima Sun Plaza 1985 6,052
Ise Sun Arena 1994 11,000
Kagoshima Kagoshima Arena 1992 5,700
Kanazawa Ishikawa Sports Center 2008 5,000
Kawasaki Todoroki Arena 1995 6,500
Kobe Kobe Green Arena 1993 6,000
World Memorial Hall 1964 8,000
Koriyama Koriyama General Gymnasium 1973 7,056
Koshigaya Koshigaya Municipal Gymnasium 1987 4,472
Kumamoto Kumamoto Prefectural Gymnasium 1982 4,110
Maebashi Yamada Green Dome[1] 1990 20,000
Matsumoto Matsumoto City Gymnasium 1991 6,000
Mito Adastria Mito Arena 2019 5,000
Morioka Morioka Takaya Arena 1989 5,058
Nagano M-Wave[2] 1996 18,000
Big Hat 1995 10,104
White Ring 1996 7,000
Nagaoka City Hall Plaza Aore Nagaoka 2012 5,100
Nagoya Aichi Prefectural Gymnasium 1964 7,514
Nippon Gaishi Hall 1987 10,000
Obihiro Obihiro City General Gymnasium 1972 4,310
Okayama Okayama General and Cultural Gymnasium 1982 8,000
Momotaro Arena 2005 11,000
Okinawa Okinawa Arena 2021 10,000
Osaka Edion Arena Osaka 1987 8,000
Fumin Kyosai Super Arena 1996 7,056
Towa Pharmaceutical Ractab Dome 1996 10,000
Osaka Municipal Central Gymnasium 1996 8,200
Osaka-jō Hall 1983 16,000
Ōta OPEN HOUSE ARENA OTA 2023 5,000
Otsu Ukaruchan Arena 1973 4,896
Shiga Arena 2022 5,000
Rifu Sekisui Heim Super Arena 1997 7,063
Saga Saga Arena 2023 8,400
Saitama[3] Saitama Super Arena 2000 36,500
Sapporo Hokkaido Prefectural Sports Center 1999 8,000
Makomanai Ice Arena 1970 11,500
Sendai Kamei Arena 1984 7,000
Xebio Arena 2012 4,002
Tokorozawa Tokorozawa Municipal Gymnasium 2004 4,308
Tokushima Asty Tokushima 1993 5,000
Tokyo Ariake Arena 2020 15,000
Ariake Coliseum 1987 10,000
Musashino Forest Sport Plaza 2017 10,000
Nippon Budokan 1964 14,471
Ota City General Gymnasium 2013 4,012
Ryōgoku Sumo Hall 1985 11,098
Tokyo Metropolitan Gymnasium 1954 10,000
Yoyogi National Gymnasium 1964 13,291
Tokyo Dome 1988 55,000
Tokyo Garden Theater 2020 6,985
Tomakomai Hakucho Arena 1996 4,015
Toyama Toyama City Gymnasium 1999 5,000
Yokkaichi Yokkaichi Dome 1997 4,704
Yokohama Yokohama Arena[4] 1989 17,000
Yokohama International Pool 1998 4,000
Yokohama Budokan 2020 3,000
Pia Arena MM[5] 2020 10,000
K-Arena Yokohama 2023 20,000

Under construction

[edit]
Arenas Capacity City Status Planned opening year
GLION Arena Kobe 10,000 Kobe, Hyōgo Under construction 2025
LaLa arena TOKYO-BAY 10,000 Funabashi, Chiba Under construction 2024
Toyota Arena Tokyo 10,000 Tokyo Under construction 2025
IG Arena 15,000 Nagoya Under construction 2025

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Green Dome Maebashi Retrieved 24 July 2020
  2. ^ M-WAVE Nagano Arena Retrieved 24 July 2020
  3. ^ Saitama Super Arena Retrieved 24 July 2020
  4. ^ Yokohama Arena Retrieved 24 July 2020
  5. ^ Pia Arena MM Retrieved 24 July 2020