Armeets Arena
Arena Armeec Sofia is a multi-purpose indoor arena located in Sofia, Bulgaria. It has a seating capacity of 12,373.[1] For concerts it can grow to 17,906. It was originally called Arena Sofia before the Bulgarian insurance company Armeec purchased the naming rights. There are 887 parking lots, 614 of them placed in a central exterior parking, 231 placed in near streets and 42 designated for disabled people.
Многофункционална спортна зала "Арена Армеец София" | |
Arena Armeec draped with two large banners of Bulgaria's GERB party. (April 2012) | |
Full name | Arena Armeec Sofia |
---|---|
Former names | Arena Sofia (planning/construction) |
Location | 1 Asen Yordanov Blvd 1113 Sofia Bulgaria |
Coordinates | 42°40′16″N 23°22′9″E |
Owner | National Sport Base PLC |
Capacity | 12,373 |
Surface | Parquet |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 2 July 2009 |
Opened | 30 July 2011 |
Construction cost | BGN 90 million |
Architect | Zheko Tilev |
Main contractors | Glavbolgarstroy |
Tenants | |
Bulgaria men's national volleyball team (European Volleyball Confederation Sofia Open (ATP 250) | |
Website | |
Venue Website |
Designed as a universal hall for cultural events and sports, the arena could host up to 30 types of sports, including basketball, volleyball, handball, futsal, boxing, tennis, weightlifting, fencing and gymnastics competitions as well as concerts.
Major events and notable firsts
The first major concert in the arena was held by Jean Michel Jarre, followed by artists Sade and Amorphis.
The arena has hosted the 2012 European Taekwon-do ITF championship in May, followed by the 2012 Aerobic Gymnastics World Championships in the first three days of June. The city was previously awarded the 2004 edition of the event.[2]
During three days in February 2012 the arena hosted the Cirque du Soleil show Saltimbanco for the first time in Bulgaria.[3] Between 9 and 11 November 2012 it also hosted the travelling ice show Disney on Ice, another debut for the country.[4]
The Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2015 was held in the arena on 21 November 2015, the first time a Eurovision event was held in Bulgaria.[5]
The arena recorded its first sold-out game on 9 June 2012, when 12,501 fans (128 more than the official capacity) came to see the Olympic qualification volleyball match between France and Bulgaria. It will be used for the 2020 FIBA Under-17 Basketball World Cup.
Bulgaria's ruling GERB party is a consistent user of the arena, having held it's rallies and conferences within it for years. This trend was bucked during late 2019 Bulgarian local elections, as the party wanted to undertake a "humble" campaign.[6]
List of major concerts
- Jean Michel Jarre – 9 October 2011
- Sade – 29 October 2011
- Amorphis – 10 November 2011
- Tom Jones – 18 November 2011
- Lepa Brena – 3 December 2011
- Mark Knight – 25 December 2011
- Tarja Turunen – 27 January 2012
- Solar Easter: Marco Carola and Victor Calderone – 13 April 2012
- Ceca – 22 May 2012
- Julio Iglesias – 13 June 2012
- Lady Gaga – 14 August 2012
- Red Hot Chili Peppers – 1 September 2012[7]
- Jennifer Lopez – 18 November 2012[8]
- Lili Ivanova – 22 November 2012
- Goran Bregović – 29 November 2012[9]
- Giorgos Mazonakis – 12 December 2012
- Solar Christmas 2012: Sunnery James & Ryan Marciano, Fedde le Grand, Sophie Ellis-Bextor – 21 December 2012
- Armin van Buuren – 8 March 2013 – A State of Trance 600, with Dash Berlin, Ferry Corsten, Myon & Shane 54, Dennis Sheperd and Ruben de Ronde
- Helloween and Gamma Ray – 15 March 2013
- We Will Rock You (musical) – 15–19 May 2013
- Jamiroquai – 28 June 2013
- Jessie J – 29 June 2013
- Snoop Dogg – 8 July 2013
- Signal – 27 November 2013
- Ennio Morricone – 10 December 2013[10]
- Scorpions – 16 December 2013
- Armin van Buuren – Armin Only: Intense – 7 February 2014
- Iron Maiden – 16 June 2014
- Ceca - 7 November 2014
- Slavi Trifonov & Ku-Ku Band - 25 April 2015
- OneRepublic – 2 June 2015
- Skrillex – 5 June 2015
- Roxette – 17 June 2015
- Toto - 28 June 2015
- Judas Priest - 30 June 2015
- Lepa Brena – 22 October 2015
- Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2015 – 21 November 2015
- Violetta - 6 November 2015
- Whitesnake - 24 November 2015
- Enrique Iglesias – 14 December 2015
- Al Bano – 16 December 2015
- Ricchi e Poveri – 16 April 2016
- Enrique Iglesias – 14 May 2016
- Tiësto – 5 June 2016
- Foreigner - 12 June 2016
- Scorpions - 17 July 2016
- Nightwish - 14 September 2016
- Bryan Adams - 11 October 2016
- Mile Kitić – 20 October 2016
- Lyube - 10 December 2016
- Dragana Mirkovic - 16 December 2016
- Intersolar 2016: Richie Hawtin, Tale Of Us, The Martinez Brothers, Liubo Ursiny - 31 December 2016
- Ceca – 16–17 March 2017
- Vivaldianno - 19 March 2017
- Vladimir Ampov - Grafa - 6 April 2017
- Goran Bregović & Bijelo Dugme - 07 April 2017
- Hits Only: C. C. Catch, Sandra & Samantha Fox - 29 April 2017
- Vasilis Karras - 10 May 2017
- Upsurt - 13 May 2017
- Deep Purple - 14 May 2017
- Europe - 16 May 2017
- Moscow State Circus - 20 May 2017
- Cirque du Soleil - Varekai - 26-28 May 2017
- 50 Years Shturtsite - 03 June 2017
- Slavi Trifonov & Ku-Ku band - 16-18 June 2017
- Sting - 16 September 2017
- Sully Erna - 26 September 2017
- 40 Years FSB - 07 October 2017
- Dubioza Kolektiv - 27 October 2017
- Charles Aznavour - 30 November 2017
- 2Cellos - 04 December 2017
- Sofi Marinova - 09 December 2017
- Helloween - 14 December 2017
- Solar Christmas 2017: Armin van Buuren, Fedde Le Grand - 22 December 2017
- Intersolar 2017 Marco Carola, Liubo Ursiny - 31 December 2017
- Lepa Brena - 23 March 2018
- Goran Bregović - 13 April 2018
- 45 Years Tonika - 14 April 2018
- Nova Generacia, Kontrol, Review & Hipodil - 21 April 2018
- Roger Waters - 04 May 2018
- Foreigner - 09 May 2018
- David Garrett - 6 June 2018
- Enrique Iglesias - 06 November 2018
- Hits Only: DJ BoBo - 10 November 2018
- Skandau - 06 April 2019
- Lenny Kravitz - 04 May 2019
- Deep Purple - 07 December 2019
- Five Finger Death Punch & Megadeth – 22 February 2020[11]
- Kiss (band) - 18 July 2020
- Skandau - 24 October 2020
List of major sporting events
- European qualification tournament for Wrestling at the 2012 Summer Olympics – April 2012
- European qualification for the 2012 Men's Olympic Volleyball Tournament – 8–13 May 2012
- 2012 Aerobic Gymnastics World Championships – 1–3 June 2012
- World qualification for the 2012 Men's Olympic Volleyball Tournament – 8–10 June 2012
- 2012 FIVB World League Final Round – 4–8 July 2012
- 2012 WTA Tournament of Champions – 30 October – 4 November 2012
- 2013 Summer Deaflympics – 26 July – 4 August 2013
- 2013 WTA Tournament of Champions – 29 October – 3 November 2013
- 2013 Trampoline World Championships - 7-10 November 2013
- 2014 European Women's Artistic Gymnastics Championships – 12–18 May 2014
- 2014 European Men's Artistic Gymnastics Championships – 19–25 May 2014
- 2014 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup Sofia - 9-10 August 2014
- 2014 WTA Tournament of Champions – 28 October – 2 November 2014
- 2015 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup Sofia - 15-16 August 2015
- 2015 Men's European Volleyball Championship - 9–18 October 2015
- 2016 Garanti Koza Sofia Open - 1–7 February 2016
- 2016 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup Sofia - 27-29 May 2016
- 2016 World Sambo Championships - 10-14 November 2016
- 2017 Garanti Koza Sofia Open - 5–12 February 2017
- 2017 European Taekwondo Championships 20-23 April 2017
- 2017 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup Sofia - 5-7 May 2017
- 2017 Trampoline World Championships - 9-12 November 2017
- 2018 Diema Xtra Sofia Open - 4–11 February 2018
- 2018 World Junior Figure Skating Championships - 5-11 March 2018
- 2018 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup Sofia - 30 March-1 April 2018
- 2018 Rhythmic Gymnastics World Championships - 10-16 September 2018
- 2018 FIVB Volleyball World Championship - 9–30 September 2018
- 2020 FIBA Under-17 Basketball World Cup - 4–12 July 2020
References
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-09-20. Retrieved 2016-09-15.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- "2012 Sofia AER World Championships : Homepage". Sofia2012.fig-gymnastics.com. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
- Archived January 9, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
- "Дисни на лед - Събитие - Арена Армеец София". Arenaarmeecsofia.com. Archived from the original on 2012-11-03. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
- "Junior Eurovision 2015: 21 November in Sofia, Bulgaria". JuniorEurovision.tv. 30 March 2015. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
- "За първи път: Без зала „Арена Армеец" в кампанията на ГЕРБ". www.24chasa.bg. Retrieved 2019-10-28.
- Archived July 23, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
- "Дженифър Лопес - Събитие - Арена Армеец София". Arenaarmeecsofia.com. Archived from the original on 2012-11-04. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
- "Горан Брегович - Събитие - Арена Армеец София". Arenaarmeecsofia.com. Archived from the original on 2015-04-02. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
- "ENNIO MORRICONE – THE BEST MOVIE MUSIC COMPOSER OF THE 20TH CENTURY FOR THE FIRST TIME IN BULGARIA (ArenaArmeecSofia.com)". Archived from the original on 2013-10-19. Retrieved 2013-10-18.
- http://www.sme.bg/en/concerts/347/five-finger-death-punch
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arena Armeets, Sofia. |
- Official website (in Russian)
- Official website (in English)
- List with actual events (in Bulgarian)
- Cabinet to finance Sofia sports hall construction with 108M leva from fiscal reserve
- Borisov promises a new sports hall in Sofia
Preceded by Ergo Arena Gdańsk / Sopot |
FIVB Volleyball World League Final Venue 2012 |
Succeeded by Polideportivo Islas Malvinas Mar del Plata |
Preceded by Malta Shipbuilding Marsa, Malta |
Junior Eurovision Song Contest Venue 2015 |
Succeeded by Mediterranean Conference Centre Valletta |