O2 Arena (Prague)

Multi-purpose arena in Czechia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

O2 Arena (Prague)map

O2 Arena (stylised as O2 arena) is a multi-purpose arena, in Prague, Czech Republic. It is home to HC Sparta Prague of the Czech Extraliga and is the third-largest ice hockey arena in Europe.

Quick Facts Former names, Location ...
O2 Arena
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O2 Arena in July 2018
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Former namesSazka Arena (2004 – March 2008)
LocationOcelářská 460/2, 190 00 Prague 9 – Libeň, Czech Republic
Coordinates50°6′17.14″N 14°29′36.59″E
OperatorBESTSPORT akciová společnost
CapacityConcerts: 20,000
Ice hockey:17,383
Basketball:16,805[1]
Tennis:14,000
Construction
Broke groundSeptember 2002
Built2004
Opened27 March 2004[2]
Construction cost17 billion CZK
630 Million
ArchitectATIP, a.s. – Vladimír Vokatý, Martin Vokatý, Jiří Vít
Tenants
Czech Republic men's national ice hockey team (2004-present)
HC Slavia Praha (Czech Extraliga) (2004–2015)
HC Sparta Praha (Czech Extraliga) (2015–present)
HC Kladno (Czech Extraliga) (3 games) (2012)
HC Lev Praha (KHL) (occasional games) (2012–2014)
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It has hosted important sporting events such as three Ice Hockey World Championships (2004, 2015 and 2024), the first edition of the prestigious tennis Laver Cup, the European Athletics Indoor Championships, the Euroleague Final Four 2006, the World Floorball Championship, the 2012 Davis Cup finals, four Fed Cup finals, as well as a handful of NHL and KHL games, including a 2014 Gagarin Cup final. It can also host stage shows, such as concerts, and other large-scale events.

History

Summarize
Perspective
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Czech Extraliga match, Sparta Praha vs Rytíři Kladno
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Imagine Dragons concert in 2018
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During the EuroBasket 2022

The idea of building a new arena in Prague came on the heels of the "golden era" of Czech ice hockey: winning the gold medal at the 1998 Winter Olympics and three gold medals in a row at the Ice Hockey World Championships from 1999 to 2001. The arena was proposed to be built in time to host the 2003 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships, but due to unforeseen complications with the investors,[citation needed] the ice hockey governing body had to switch that tournament to Finland. The arena's main backer then became Sazka a.s., a Czech betting company.

The construction of the arena (which began in September 2002) was not without problems, but it was opened in March 2004 as Sazka Arena, in time to host the 2004 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships.[3] In March 2008, the building was renamed O2 Arena.[4]

In March 2011, Sazka filed for insolvency due to debts from building the arena and other problems.[5][6] Sazka was then re-organized and financially stabilized.

From its opening until 2015, it was home to HC Slavia Prague of the Czech Extraliga. Slavia won the national championship on home ice in Game 7 of the 2008 Extraliga finals against HC Karlovy Vary 4–0 in front of a then-league-record crowd of 17,117. For two seasons, 2012–13 and 2013–14, O2 Arena also hosted occasional home games of HC Lev Prague of the Kontinental Hockey League. The club played its home games of the 2014 Gagarin Cup Finals at O2 Arena, attracting the three largest crowds in league history.[7] In 2015, Slavia was relegated to the 1.liga, and the club chose to move back to the smaller Zimní stadion Eden, the team's former home and current training centre. In its place, O2 Arena reached an agreement with cross-town rivals Sparta Prague on 24 June 2015. Sparta ownership cited the need for significant renovations at Tipsport Arena as the main reason for the move.[8]

In 2015, O2 Arena co-hosted the IIHF World Championship with ČEZ Aréna in Ostrava for the second time. This time, the tournament re-established the record for World Championship attendance, which stood until being surpassed in 2024 with the tournament held in the same two cities.[9]

In 2017, it hosted the 1st edition of Laver Cup international indoor hard court men's tennis tournament between Europe and Team World.

In 2021, the venue was scheduled to host some group phase matches at the FIBA EuroBasket 2021, which the country was to cohost with Georgia in Tbilisi, Germany in Berlin/Cologne and Italy in Milan. The event was canceled.[10]

Notable events

Music

Sport

Technical facts

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Panorama of O2 Arena (March 2007)
  • Number of floors: 6
  • Floor space: 35,000 m2
  • Capacity: up to 18,000 spectators (depends on event)
  • Club and Luxury seats: 2,460
  • Sky boxes: 66
  • Party Boxes: 4
  • Seats in bars, restaurants and cafés: 2,900
  • Beers that can be tapped in one break: 30,000[22]
  • Parking: 280 places
  • Population of its catchment area: 1.5 to 1.8 million people

See also

References

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