List of indoor arenas in Austria
The following is a list of indoor arenas in Austria with a capacity of at least 1,000 spectators, most of the arenas in this list are for multi use proposes and are used for popular sports such as individual sports like karate, judo, boxing as well as team sports like Ice Hockey, Curling, volleyball. Parts of the arenas also host many concerts and world tours.
Currently in use[]
Location | Arena | Date built | Capacity |
---|---|---|---|
Dornbirn | Messestadion | 2002 | 4,270 |
Feldkirch | Vorarlberghalle | 1977 | 5,200 |
Graz | Merkur Eisstadion | 1963 | 4,126 |
Schwarzl Freizeit Zentrum | 5,000 | ||
Stadthalle[1] | 2002 | 11,030 | |
Innsbruck | Olympiahalle[2] | 1963 | 12,000 |
Tiroler Wasserkraft Arena | 2005 | 3,000 | |
Kapfenberg | Sportzentrum Kapfenberg | 4,600 | |
Klagenfurt | Stadthalle | 1959 | 4,945 |
Linz | Keine Sorgen EisArena | 1986 | 4,863 |
TipsArena Linz | 1974 | 6,000 | |
Salzburg | Eisarena Salzburg | 1960 | 3,200 |
Salzburgarena | 2003 | 6,400 | |
Vienna | Albert Schultz Eishalle | 1995 | 7,022 |
Ferry-Dusika-Hallenstadion | 1976 | 7,700 | |
Wiener Stadthalle[3] | 1958 | 16,152 | |
Villach | Stadthalle | 1969 | 4,500 |
Wels | Bosch-Halle | 9,060 | |
Wiener Neustadt | Arena Nova | 1994 | 5,000 |
Under construction[]
This section is empty. You can help by . (March 2021) |
Proposed[]
Arena | Capacity | Opening | Location |
---|---|---|---|
20,000[4] | TBD | Vienna |
See also[]
References[]
- ^ Stadthalle Retrieved 05 March 2021
- ^ Olympiahalle website. (in English and German) Retrieved 05 March 2021
- ^ Stadhalle website Retrieved 05 March 2021
- ^ "Wien Holding-Arena: Wiener Architekten für Wiener Arena". Presseservice der Stadt Wien. December 15, 2020.
Categories:
- Indoor arenas in Austria
- Lists of indoor arenas
- Lists of buildings and structures in Austria