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The arena was renamed Fraport Arena, after Frankfurt International Airport obtained its sponsorship naming rights in 2011. [1] The arena hosts the local annual indoor football tournament, with six teams from the region, such as Eintracht Frankfurt and Kickers Offenbach. The arena hosted the German Davis Cup Team in 2014, 2015, and
Rudolf Weber-Arena: 12,650: Oberhausen North Rhine-Westphalia: 1996 Wunderino Arena: 10,250: Kiel Schleswig-Holstein: THW Kiel: 1952 Tennisstadion Hamburg: 10,000 [1] Hamburg Hamburg: International German Open (1924−present), FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour 2019 Beach Volleyball World Championships: 1892 Festhalle Frankfurt: 9,850: Frankfurt ...
Home Deluxe Arena: 15,000 Paderborn North Rhine-Westphalia: SC Paderborn: 62 Audi Sportpark: 15,000 Ingolstadt Bavaria: FC Ingolstadt: 63 Hänsch-Arena: 13,241 Meppen Lower Saxony: SV Meppen: 64 BRITA-Arena: 12,566 Wiesbaden Hesse: Wehen Wiesbaden: 65 PSD Bank Arena (Stadion am Bornheimer Hang) 12,542 Frankfurt Hesse: FSV Frankfurt, Frankfurt ...
Eissporthalle Frankfurt; S. Süwag Energie ARENA This page was last edited on 28 February 2024, at 10:33 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
ALNO-Arena at Pfullendorf, previously known as Waldstadion an der Kasernenstraße; Deutsche Bank Park (formerly "Commerzbank Arena") at Frankfurt am Main, home of Eintracht Frankfurt, more known as Waldstadion; Städtisches Waldstadion at Aalen, home of VfR Aalen; Waldstadion Feucht at Feucht, home of 1. SC Feucht
The first computer images of the new arena were released at the same time, also showing a large cube with four video scoreboards above the centre circle, similar to the one in the Commerzbank-Arena in Frankfurt. [29] Starting in 2009, the Mercedes-Benz Arena has been redeveloped into a football-specific stadium.
Festhalle Frankfurt, known in English as Frankfurt Festival Arena, is a multi-purpose arena located in Frankfurt, Germany. The interior of the dome at its highest reaches a height of 40 meters. It provides an area of 5,646 square metres, offering by a variable grandstand system space for up to 8,500 people (together with the two tiers) seated ...
Merkur Spiel-Arena (stylized in all caps), previously known as the Esprit Arena (until 2 August 2018), the LTU Arena (until June 2009), and also called the Düsseldorf Arena (during the 2011 Eurovision Song Contest and the UEFA Euro 2024), is a retractable roof football stadium in Düsseldorf, Germany.