Kanteerava Indoor Stadium

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Sri Kanteerava Indoor Stadium
Kanteerava Indoor 40.JPG
LocationBangalore, India
Coordinates12°58′7.75″N 77°35′28.71″E / 12.9688194°N 77.5913083°E / 12.9688194; 77.5913083
OwnerKarnataka Athletic Association
Capacity4,000
Field size120m x 90m
Construction
Built1995
ArchitectSundaram Consultants, Bangalore
Tenants
Bengaluru Bulls
Bengaluru Beast
Bengaluru FC Futsal
Interior view of Stadium

Kanteerava Indoor Stadium, also known as the Sree or Sri Kanteerava Indoor Stadium, is an indoor sporting arena located in Bangalore, India, near Cubbon Park, within the heart of city in the Central Administrative Area. The capacity of the arena is 4,000 people.[1] Sampangi Lake was changed to create this sports complex. The design uses an elliptical dome.[2]

The Stadium hosted the SABA Championship in 2015 and 2016. India's national basketball team won the gold medal on both occasions. Further, Team India has frequently used the facility for training sessions

Entrances[]

There are 8 entrances to the stadium, of which five are for public, one for the VIPs, one for stadium officials and one for players.

Structure[]

The stadium has an elliptical dome consisting of 120 folded plates (precast) of varying cross-section (average 2m) with the plate thickness of 40mm and series of inter-connected ribs. The lower end of the dome is supported on the elliptical ring beam at 8m level which in-turn is supported on 24 equally spaced arch columns. The top of the dome is supported on elliptical ring of 16m x 8m at 29m level. A small elliptical paraboloid in-situ dome of 4m height and having a series of interconnected stiffeners is resting on the top ring. The folded plate spans about 40m between the two rings. The seating galleries are precast while the other cubicles are in-situ.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ May 22, S. Kushala | TNN |; 2002; Ist, 23:01. "Do we need one more stadium ? | Bengaluru News - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 27 June 2020.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Kobielak, Sylwester (27 November 2016). "Oval concrete domes".

Coordinates: 12°58′08″N 77°35′29″E / 12.968762°N 77.591468°E / 12.968762; 77.591468


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