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The following is a list of indoor arenas in Canada with a capacity of at least 1,000 for sporting events. The arenas in the table are ranked by capacity; the arenas with the highest capacities are listed first.
Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre: 6,100 1981 Hong Kong Coliseum: 12,500 December 21, 2005 AsiaWorld–Arena: 14,000 June 12, 2013 East Kowloon Cruise Terminal Outdoor Activities Square: 20,000 Macau February 13, 2018 MGM Cotai Dynamic Theatre Macau: 2,000 October 27, 2015 Studio City Events Center: 5,242 April 8, 2007 Cotai Arena: 13,000
The 2015 Pan and Parapan American Games venues were mostly located in the host city of Toronto, Ontario, though some events required facilities located elsewhere.Besides Toronto, fourteen other municipalities in Southern Ontario hosted competitions: Ajax, Hamilton, Innisfil, Markham, Milton, Minden, Mississauga, Mono, Oro-Medonte, Oshawa, Palgrave, St. Catharines, Welland and Whitby.
Hong Kong Arts Centre: Shouson Theatre: 1977 439 City Hall: Concert Hall: 1962 1,434 Hong Kong Sinfonietta [8] Sai Wan Ho Civic Centre: Theatre: 471 The Absolutely Fabulous Theatre Connection [8] Sheung Wan Civic Centre: Theatre: 480 Perry Chiu Experimental Theatre [8] University of Hong Kong: Loke Yew Hall 1912 595 The Grand Hall 2013 934 Kowloon
The Living Arts Centre is a 225,000 sq ft (20,900 m 2) multi-use facility which opened in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada, on October 7, 1997.The complex houses three theatres for the performing arts, Hammerson Hall, RBC Theatre and Rogers Theatre [1]), an exhibition gallery (the Laidlaw Hall [2]), seven art studios and facilities for corporate meetings.
The Mississauga Entertainment Centrum is a large regional shopping mall located at the southeast corner of Hurontario Street & Courtney Park Drive in Mississauga, Ontario. [4] The plaza lies south of Ontario Highway 407 and North of Ontario Highway 401 .
It opened in 2007 and has a seating capacity of 14,000. The facility was known as Venetian Arena from 2007 to 2010, and was renamed the Cotai Arena from 2010 until 2024, when it reverted back to its original name. It hosts sporting events such as basketball, tennis and boxing, as well as concerts and internationally-televised awards shows.
The stadium is part of the Olympic Sports Center in Taipa, which is the largest sporting complex in Macau. The complex comprises the stadium - a grass pitch (105 x 68 m) surrounded by an 8-lane athletic track and a long jump area, a 900-seated indoor stadium, a hockey centre, a practicing track and several tennis courts.