Panellinios Indoor Hall

Panellinios Indoor Hall, or Panellinios AC Indoor Hall, is a multi-purpose indoor sporting arena that is located in the district of Kypseli, Athens, Greece. The arena can host basketball, volleyball, and handball matches. The arena is small, with a permanent seating capacity 1,100, and a capacity of 1,800 spectators with temporary seating.[1]

Panellinios Indoor Hall
Panellinios Indoor Hall's exterior
Full namePanellinios AC Indoor Hall
LocationKypseli, Athens, Greece
Public transit Victoria metro station
OwnerPanellinios G.S.
CapacityBasketball:
1,100
(permanent tier seats)
1,800
(with temporary tier seats)
SurfaceParquet
Opened1976
Tenants
Panellinios B.C.

The arena has modern locker room facilities for the home and visiting teams, for the referees and the game judges, a complete press room, an anti-doping control room, club management offices, and a fully furnished press room for the media. The arena is owned by Panellinios G.S..

History

The hall was constructed in 1976, by O.M.E.T.E. and Consulting Engineers of Greece. It has been the long-time home arena of the Panellinios B.C. basketball team, for Greek Basket League games. Since 2012, the arena hosts the home matches of Panathinaikos women's volleyball team, and since 2013, the home matches of the Panathinaikos men's volleyball team.

gollark: RotaryCraft has a "bedrock breaker" machine actually.
gollark: You would probably run into... friction issues, I think, big ones at high velocities... if it was very curved.
gollark: There's a lot of redundant information or space where more could be packed in in most languages, but this is actually good in that it acts as error correction.
gollark: Actually, maybe you could test it by seeing how much of a sentence or whatever you could remove/change before people can't guess the original.
gollark: I don't think so. It would be far too subjective.

References

  1. "PANELLINIOS G.S. 1800". Archived from the original on 2017-08-12. Retrieved 2017-08-12.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.