Palace of Sporting Games
Uralochka, DIVS | |
Location | Yekaterinburg, Russia |
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Coordinates | 56°50′49″N 60°35′52″W / 56.84694°N 60.59778°W |
Owner | Sverdlovsk Oblast |
Capacity | 5000 seats |
Construction | |
Built | 5 June 2001 |
Opened | 11 June 2003 |
Construction cost | 14.5 million euros[1] (arena) |
Architect | Mikhail Motin, Evgeniy Kuranov, Stjepan Stipaničić |
The Palace of Sporting Games "Uralochka" (DIVS) (Russian: Дворец игровых видов спорта «Уралочка» (ДИВС)) is a multi-purpose arena on the shore of the Iset River in the city center of Yekaterinburg. It has a capacity of 5000 spectators and is the second largest sports arena in the city, with KRK Uralets being the largest. Volleyball and basketball clubs of men and women, as well as a futsal team play their home games at the arena. Occasionally, competitions in individual sports, rhythmic gymnastics, artistic gymnastics, or tennis take place. Concerts take place in the arena equally often.
History
For a long time, only one large sports arena existed in Yekaterinburg—the KRK Uraletz (then known as the Sport Palace of Trade Unions), built in 1972. It became overwhelmed with the city's numerous sport events and furthermore required a renovation. For this reason, governor Eduard Rossel of Sverdlovsk Oblast decided in March 2000 to build a new sports arena.[2] Construction officially began on 5 June 2001. The Austrian E. Fuhrmann Baugesellschaft was commissioned for the construction work, which was financed in full by private investors.[3] The metallurgy firm UGMK paid for a large portion of the construction costs. The foreseen cost of 17 million euros from 2002 would have been allowed to increase considerably, but the cost for the arena alone (block A) was estimated at 14.5 million euros. Today the arena is within the possession of the arena organization, of which Sverdlovsk Oblast is the owner.[4]
On 11 June 2003, the Palace was officially opened. On this day the opening match of the Yeltsin Cup volleyball tournament took place as the first game, at which the first Russian president Boris Jelzin and Viacheslav Fetisov, then the chairmen of the city's sport committee and later the sport minister, were present.
From the beginning, the planning committee had envisioned a management and training complex (block B) in the direct vicinity of the sports arena (block A). This building is directly connected to the arena by an elevated corridor on the second floor. It holds the arena management, the athlete housing "DIVS" with 32 rooms, the health, meeting, and training rooms (with three volleyball fields underneath), a room for press conferences, as well as a bistro. The multi-purpose building began operation in Juli 2006.
In winter of 2014, the roof of the arena was renovated from the outside and covered with orange awnings to match the colors of the women's basketball team UMMC Ekaterinburg.
Technical data
The sports arena (block A) is 29.1 meters tall, has an elliptical base with a width of 68 meters and a length of 84 meters, and has a combined area of approximately 20,800 square meters. 1720 square meters are dedicated to sports activities and 1004 square meters to the playing field itself. The ceiling height is 21 meters. The spectator count is given to be 5000. 4802 seats are situated in the arena, of which 1108 seats lie on movable platforms in the lower rows.
Location
The sports arena is located in the eastern part of the Zheleznodorozhny district at the address ul. Eremina 10 (ул. Ереминa 10) in the city center. It lies on the shore of the historic lake out of which the Iset River flows. A path directly connects the arena to the shorefront. The constructivist Dinamo Sport Complex lies next to the Palace.
The Palace of Sporting Games has good connection to the public transportation of Yekaterinburg. Dinamo is located directly outside of the entrance to the arena. A trolley stop on trolley line 4 lies only 300 meters away, and the next station of the Upravleniye Dorogi streetcar is 600 meters away.
Photos
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DIVS during the 2009 UEFA Futsal Cup
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View from inside: stands
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View from inside: futsal game
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Scoreboard
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View from the southeast
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DIVS and the Dinamo Sport Complex
External links
References
- ^ "Вопрос о финансировании строительства Дворца игровых видов спорта в Екатеринбурге перенесен на следующее заседание Свердловской областной Думы". UralBusinessConsulting. 12 November 2003. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
- ^ "Постановление Правительства Свердловской области от". ekb4.info. 1 January 2014. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
- ^ "Общая стоимость строительства Дворца игровых видов спорта в Екатеринбурге составляет $17 млн". UralBusinessConsulting. 20 March 2002. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
- ^ "Устав государственного автономного учреждения Свердловской области «Дворец игровых видов спорта»" (PDF). divsport.ru. 23 November 2011. Retrieved 29 August 2015.