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Super Bock Arena

Coordinates: 41°08′48.76″N 8°37′33.56″W / 41.1468778°N 8.6259889°W / 41.1468778; -8.6259889
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Super Bock Arena
Pavilhão Rosa Mota
The renovated arena in December 2019
Map
Former namesPavilhão dos Desportos
LocationLordelo do Ouro e Massarelos, Porto, Portugal
Coordinates41°08′48.76″N 8°37′33.56″W / 41.1468778°N 8.6259889°W / 41.1468778; -8.6259889
OwnerMunicipality of Porto
Capacity8,500
SurfaceParquet
Construction
Broke ground1951–52
Opened1954
RenovatedCompleted 2019
ArchitectJosé Carlos Loureiro

The Super Bock Arena (Pavilhão Rosa Mota) is a cultural and sports arena in Porto, Portugal.

History

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The pavilion/arena in February 2009

The pavilion opened in 1954 on the site of Porto's Crystal Palace (Palácio de Cristal), demolished in 1951 to make room for the pavilion. It was previously known as Pavilhão dos Desportos. In 1991, it was renamed after Portuguese, European, World and Olympic marathon running champion Rosa Mota.

In 2014, after a public call for tenders, a consortium between Lucios and PEV Entertainment was responsible for the rehabilitation of the arena.[1] The initial cost of the rehabilitation was 8 million euros.[1]

In November 2018, Porto's Municipal Chamber announced that following a naming agreement with Super Bock, the company's name was to be added to the arena, in the course of the 20-year private concession of the space.[2]

The rehabilitation process was concluded in 2019. The arena now has the capacity to undertake events up to 8,000 people and is branded Super Bock Arena.[3]

Besides cultural and sports events, the arena can now also function as a congress centre.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Reis, Rodolfo Alexandre (2019-01-14). "Porto: Pavilhão Rosa Mota abre até junho todo renovado". O Jornal Económico (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 2019-10-28.
  2. ^ "Câmara do Porto quer acrescentar nome de marca de cerveja ao Pavilhão Rosa Mota - JN". www.jn.pt (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2019-10-28.
  3. ^ a b Super Bock Arena - Pavilhão Rosa Mota | Valências, retrieved 2019-10-28
[edit]
Preceded by
None
European Men's Handball Championship
Final Venue

1994
Succeeded by