Pais Arena

Coordinates: 31°45′4.05″N 35°11′38.92″E / 31.7511250°N 35.1941444°E / 31.7511250; 35.1941444
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Pais Arena Jerusalem
פיס ארנה ירושלים
Jerusalem Arena
Map
LocationIsrael Jerusalem, Israel
Public transitLight Rail interchange at Malcha Sports Complex
Israel Railways Old Jerusalem–Tel Aviv Railway Line at Jerusalem Malha
OwnerJerusalem Municipality
OperatorAriel Municipal Company Ltd.
Capacity11,000[2]
Field size441,300 square feet (41,000 m2)
SurfaceParquet
Ice
Construction
Broke groundSeptember 2009
Opened11 September 2014
Construction costNIS 400 million
EUR € 85 million
ArchitectArthur Spector[1]
Tenants
Hapoel Jerusalem (2014-present)

The Jerusalem Arena (Hebrew: הארנה ירושלים, HaArena Yerushalayim), renamed for the National Lottery Mifal HaPais grant as Pais Arena Jerusalem (Hebrew: פיס ארנה ירושלים, HaPais Arena Yerushalayim), is a multi-purpose sports arena that was built in Jerusalem by the city council and National Lottery grant of Mifal HaPais. Opened in September 2014, the arena is located in the Jerusalem Sports Quarter, in the southwestern Malha neighborhood, adjacent to Teddy Stadium. The arena seats 11,000 for basketball games.

Features

Jerusalem Arena, June 2015
Jerusalem Arena in October 2016

The arena interior itself covers 40,000 square metres (430,000 sq ft) and, according to Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat, the arena is the largest indoor space in Jerusalem.[citation needed] The arena is able to host professional sports, world-class concerts, international conferences, and cultural events.[3] The arena also contains a medical sports center, club rooms, offices, and two additional halls. The entire complex includes 47,370 square metres (509,900 sq ft).

The arena is part of a number of sports facilities in the Jerusalem Sport Quarter, which include an indoor Olympic-size swimming pool, tennis courts, and an ice rink. It is also a multi-purpose site, with hotels and residences for athletes with accommodations of 240 rooms, that is able to provide facilities for exhibitions, cultural and business events. There is also an underground parking space for 1,700 cars, and a retail power center.

History

Jerusalem Pais Arena during the 2015 playoff semi-finals

In 2004, Jerusalem mayor, Ehud Olmert, declared a new basketball arena would be built within a year. In December 2005, the cornerstone was laid. In July 2009, the city hall publicized tenders for building the arena's infrastructure.

The building project was originally scheduled to be finished in late 2014, and originally estimated at a cost 240 million NIS. Of which, 187 million NIS was to be covered by Mifal HaPais, 20 million NIS from a grant from the Israeli National Sports Betting Council, and 33 million NIS from the Jerusalem municipality. However, the final eventual cost of the project ended being over 400 million NIS.[3]

Upon completion, the arena became the new home arena of the Israeli Basketball Premiere League club Hapoel Jerusalem B.C., as they moved into it from the smaller Malha Arena, which was their previous home arena. The arena was officially opened on 11 September 2014.[4]

During the 20th Maccabiah games in 2017, a temporary full-size Ice Hockey rink was established. The capacity of the arena (10,000 for hockey) made the tournament an attraction for thousands of fans, with the final game of the open tournament, in which Canada beat the United States 7:2, attracting an attendance of 9000 and becoming the highest attended hockey game in history on Israeli soil. [5]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Middle East's largest sports, cultural and recreational center unveiled in Jerusalem".
  2. ^ "Pais Arena Jerusalem".
  3. ^ a b "Pais Arena Jerusalem". Archived from the original on 17 April 2015. Retrieved 28 May 2015.
  4. ^ הפועל ירושלים תחנוך את הארנה בגביע ווינר (in Hebrew). Retrieved 2014-09-03.
  5. ^ Lungen, Paul. "Canada wraps up Maccabiah games with 50 medals". thecjn.ca.

31°45′4.05″N 35°11′38.92″E / 31.7511250°N 35.1941444°E / 31.7511250; 35.1941444

External links

Media related to Jerusalem Arena at Wikimedia Commons