Tampereen jäähalli

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Tampereen jäähalli
Hakametsä
Exterior view in September 2006
Exterior view in September 2006
Data
place FinlandFinland Tampere , Finland
Coordinates 61 ° 29 '44.7 "  N , 23 ° 49' 27.4"  E Coordinates: 61 ° 29 '44.7 "  N , 23 ° 49' 27.4"  E
owner City of Tampere
start of building January 8, 1964
opening January 1965
First game January 29, 1965
Renovations 1981, 1990, 2001-2002, 2009, 2014
surface Ice surface
concrete
parquet
costs 1.2 million euros
architect Jaakko Tähtinen
capacity 7,800 seats (including 6,635 seats)
Societies)

The Tampereen jäähalli (also Hakametsä or Hakametsän jäähalli after the district) is an ice rink in the Finnish city ​​of Tampere . It is mainly used for ice hockey and is the home arena for the Ilves and Tappara ice hockey clubs . It was built in 1965, making it the oldest ice rink in Finland. In the same year the ice hockey world championship took place there. The Hakametsä has space for 7,800 spectators, 6,635 of which are seated and 1,165 are standing.

history

The ice surface (2011)

The ice rink was built in 1965 to host the ice hockey world championship and was then home to Ilves, Tappara and Koo-Vee . Originally the stadium had a capacity of 10,200 spectators. Other major events in the hall were the world championships in 1982 , 1997 and 2003 as well as the 1992 women's world championships .

The artificial ice rink is operated between the end of July and May, and the hall also serves as a venue for various competitions, trade fairs, concerts and other large public events. Every year, a little more than half a million spectators visit the ice rink.

Koo-Vee plays its home games today in the neighboring Tampereen harjoitusjäähalli (Hakametsä 2), and the sports complex also has a third ice rink (Hakametsä 3).

Web links

Commons : Tampereen jäähalli  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Hakametsän jäähalli. In: ilves.com. Retrieved August 9, 2018 (Finnish).
  2. Tampereen jäähalli. In: tampere.fi. Retrieved August 9, 2018 (Finnish).