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It has the third-highest seating capacity of any indoor venue in the United Kingdom, behind Co-op Live and Manchester Arena, and in 2008 was the world's busiest music arena. [1] As of 2022, it is the ninth-largest building in the world by volume with a diameter of 365 metres (399 yards) and a height of 52 metres (57 yards).
On 15 October 2022, the arena hosted a boxing match between Claressa Shields and Savannah Marshall that was the first time two female boxers headlined at a major venue in the United Kingdom. [ 15 ] [ 16 ] [ 17 ] Shields won, and the fight headlined the first all-female boxing card in the United Kingdom.
The O2 (formerly known as the Millennium Dome) is a large entertainment district on the Greenwich peninsula in South East London, England, including an indoor arena, a music club, a Cineworld cinema, an exhibition space, piazzas, bars, restaurants, and a guided tour to the top of the O2.
Halle Georges Carpentier (French pronunciation: [al ʒɔʁʒ kaʁpɑ̃tje]) is a multi-use indoor sporting arena that is located in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, France.The arena can be used for multiple sporting events, including: boxing, martial arts, badminton, table tennis, volleyball, handball, fencing, basketball, and gymnastics.
Like luxury suites, club seating generates much higher revenues than regular seating. [2] [3] While luxury boxes and personal seat licenses have been around since the 1960s, club-level seating is a recent innovation of the 1990s. The mid-stage is the optimal placement for luxury boxes in order to give them good sightlines to make them ...
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Arenas that are included in this list are venues for basketball (PBA, PBA D-League, MPBL, NBL–Pilipinas, ABL, EASL), volleyball and boxing. Collegiate sports (NCAA, UAAP, CESAFI) include basketball, volleyball, contact sports (judo and taekwondo), and cheerdance competitions. It also includes arenas used for entertainment events including ...
The 12,500-seat facility is London's second-largest indoor arena after the O 2 Arena, and the ninth-largest in the United Kingdom. The Empire Pool (also known as Empire Pool and Sports Arena) [3] was built for the 1934 British Empire Games by Arthur Elvin. As its original name suggested, it was where the games' swimming events were held.