List of indoor arenas in Russia
Appearance
The following is a list of indoor arenas in Russia with capacity of at least 4,000 spectators. Most of the arenas in this list are for multi use proposes such as individual sports, team sports as well as cultural and political events.
Currently in use
[edit]Russian indoor arenas sorted by capacity
[edit]Rank | Location | Arena | Date built | Capacity | Tenants | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Saint Petersburg | SKA Arena | 2023 | 21,500 | SKA | |
2 | Moscow | CSKA Arena | 2015 | 14,000 | HC CSKA Moscow | |
3 | Moscow | Megasport Arena | 2006 | 13,926 | HC Spartak Moscow, PBC CSKA | |
4 | Moscow | VTB Arena | 2019 | 12,273 | HC Dynamo Moscow | |
5 | Sochi | Bolshoy Ice Dome | 2012 | 12,000 | HC Sochi | |
6 | Omsk | G-Drive Arena | 2022 | 12,000 | Avangard Omsk | |
7 | Sochi | Iceberg Skating Palace | 2012 | 12,000 | ||
8 | Moscow | Luzhniki Palace of Sports | 1956 | 11,500 | ||
9 | Novosibirsk | Sibir Arena | 2023 | 10,500 | HC Sibir | |
10 | Kazan | TatNeft Arena | 2005 | 10,400 | HC Ak Bars | |
11 | Belgorod | Belgorod Arena | 2021 | 10,100 | VC Belgorie |
Historic arenas
[edit]Arenas | Capacity | City | Duration |
---|---|---|---|
Arena Omsk | 10,318 | Omsk | 2004–2019 |
SCC Peterburgsky[4] | 20,000 | Saint Petersburg | 1980–2020 |
Olympiskii[5] | 35,000 | Moscow | 1980-2020 |
CSKA Universal Sports Hall | 5,500 | Moscow | 1979–2021 |
Under construction
[edit]Arenas | Capacity | City | Planned opening year |
---|---|---|---|
New CSKA Ice Palace | 14,000[6] | Moscow | 2026 |
UMMC Arena | 12,000 | Yekaterinburg | 2024 |
New Torpedo Arena | 12,000[7] | Nizhny Novgorod | 2025 |
New Olimpiisky Arena | 12,000[8] | Moscow | 2025 |
Luzhniki Palace of Sports | 12,000[9] | Moscow | 2026 |
Perm Ice Palace | 10,000[10] | Perm | 2027 |
RMK Arena | 5,000[11] | Chelyabinsk | 2025 |
CSKA Basketball Center | 5,129[12] | Moscow | 2024 |
Multifunctional Volleyball Center | 6,000[13] | Yaroslavl | 2024 |
Gazprom Arena | 5,500[14] | Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk | 2027 |
Rostov-on-Don Palace of Sports | 5,000[15] | Rostov-on-Don | 2024 |
Under proposition
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See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Luzhniki Palace Official website Retrieved 24 July 2020
- ^ Megasport Official website Retrieved 20 July 2020 (in Russian)
- ^ Official website (in Russian) Retrieved 24 July 2020
- ^ Официальный сайт Retrieved 24 July 2020
- ^ Olympic Stadium Official website Retrieved 24 July 2020 (in Russian)
- ^ "«Ледовый дворец Красная Армия» — новую арену ЦСКА на Ленинградке — построят к 2026 году - Москвич Mag". January 21, 2023.
- ^ "The general director of "Torpedo" announced when the club will move to a new arena in Nizhny Novgorod - Athletistic". athletistic.com. September 3, 2023. Retrieved 25 September 2023.
- ^ "Sergei Sobyanin on how Olimpiyskiy Sports Complex to change after reconstruction / News / Moscow City Web Site". www.mos.ru.
- ^ "In Luzhniki, they began to demolish the Sports Palace, which they promised to reconstruct". www.vk.com.
- ^ "Construction of a sports arena is planned to begin in Perm". www.vk.com.
- ^ "The RMK Arena is planned to be built by 2025, and its contours and outlines are already visible..." www.vk.com.
- ^ "Specialists have already completely completed the monolithic zero-cycle work and are now pouring a monolith of 2-3 floors. In total, 44 tons of concrete will need to be cast, more than half of the work has already been done". www.vk.com.
- ^ "It will become one of the largest cultural and sports complexes in the region". www.vk.com.
- ^ "The new Ice Palace". www.vk.com.
- ^ "The facades of the Rostov Sports Palace were glazed and the roof was completely renovated. The construction readiness of the facility is 55%". www.vk.com.