Royal Arena

Royal Arena
Copenhagen Arena

Artist's impression of the proposed Royal Arena
Location Ørestad Syd, Copenhagen
Coordinates 55°37′26″N 12°34′26″E / 55.624°N 12.574°E / 55.624; 12.574Coordinates: 55°37′26″N 12°34′26″E / 55.624°N 12.574°E / 55.624; 12.574
Owner Arena CPHX P/S
Operator Danish Venue Enterprise
Capacity 10,000 (ice hockey)
13,000 (handball)
16,000 (concerts)
11,800 (Seats)
Construction
Broke ground 26 June 2013
Built 2013–2016
Opened 3 February 2017
Construction cost DKK 1 billion
EUR € 134 million
Architect 3XN (primary)
HKS, Inc. (arena experts)
Planit IE (landscape)
Structural engineer Arup and ME Engineers
Website
www.royalarena.dk
The arena under construction in September 2016

Royal Arena[1] is an upcoming multi-use indoor arena in Ørestad Syd, a new development in the city of Copenhagen, Denmark. The ground was broken for construction on 26 June 2013[2] with the arena expected to open in February 2017. It will have a capacity of 13,000 for sporting events and up to 16,000 (either sitting or standing) for concerts.

The project was presented at a press conference at Bella Sky Hotel on 23 September 2011.

The design of the arena was presented on 7 June 2012. The winning design team consists of 3XN, HKS, Inc., Arup, ME Engineers and Planit. The arena will have a distinctly Nordic design.[3][4]

Background

In Copenhagen, Parken Stadium, which is primary a football stadium, is the largest indoor arena, with a seating capacity of 38,065. There is a lack of indoor areas with a capacity of 10,000–20,000 in the region. The last time Denmark hosted the Eurovision Song Contest in 2014, the city used the B&W Hallerne, which is a former industrial complex, and became too expensive. For most international sporting events, Brøndby Hall and Ballerup Super Arena are not big enough, while Parken Stadium is too big.

For hosting events such as the Eurovision Song Contest, World Men's Handball Championship, Ice Hockey World Championship, FINA World Aquatics Championships, Disney on Ice, and Cirque du Soleil an arena of this size is required.

Financing and operation

Realdania and Copenhagen Municipality will each make DKK 325,000,000 available for the project, while the Elite Facility Committee is expected to make a construction grant, and operating grants are expected from the National Olympic Committee and Sports Confederation of Denmark. The site is made available by CPH City & Port Development. The chosen operator will have to lend the rest of the financing.

Five companies qualified to bid as arena operators. In December 2011, Live Nation was selected as operator ahead of AEG Facilities.

Notable events

On 26 September 2016, Metallica announced via their blog[5] that they will be "the first event ever held" at the new arena. Their shows are scheduled for the first week of February 2017. The Weeknd will perform at the arena as part of his Starboy: Legend of the Fall Tour on February 20, 2017.[6] The 2017 European Short Course Swimming Championships will be the first major sporting event in the arena, which will have a capacity of circa 12,500.[7] The arena will be one of two arenas (the other being Jyske Bank Boxen) to host the 2018 IIHF World Championship.[8][9] The Royal Arena will be one of eight venues in Denmark and Germany to host the 2019 World Men's Handball Championship.

See also

References

  1. "Den kommende arena i hovedstaden hedder nu Royal Arena". Retrieved 30 April 2014.
  2. "Nyheder: Nu begynder byggeriet af Københavns nye arena". Copenhagen-arena.dk. 26 June 2013.
  3. Gregersen, Rasmus. "Copenhagen Arena får markant nordisk design". Building Supply. Retrieved 6 June 2012.
  4. "Copenhagen Arena". 3XN. Retrieved 13 June 2012.
  5. "WORLDWIRED TOUR TRAVELS TO COPENHAGEN". Retrieved 29 September 2016.
  6. Yoo, Noah (October 31, 2016). "The Weeknd Announces Tour". Pitchfork. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
  7. Butler, Nick (20 October 2015). "Copenhagen to host 2017 European Short Course Swimming Championships". Inside the Games. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  8. Denmark to host Ice Hockey World Championship in 2018
  9. To Denmark in 2018

External links

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