Manchester Arena: Difference between revisions
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* 8 top floor suites known as 'The White house' (each seats between 6 and 15 guests—located in the white sports commentators boxes when not in use) |
* 8 top floor suites known as 'The White house' (each seats between 6 and 15 guests—located in the white sports commentators boxes when not in use) |
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* 4 party suites (seats up to 25 guests) |
* 4 party suites (seats up to 25 guests) |
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* The arena has its own 1,500 capacity car park |
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* The arena is the European flagship venue of SMG |
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* Like [[Madison Square Garden]] in [[New York City]], [[Philips Arena]] in Atlanta, and [[TD Banknorth Garden]] in [[Boston]]. |
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⚫ | * The |
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== Transport == |
== Transport == |
Revision as of 10:28, 20 April 2012
File:Manchester Arena logo.png | |
Former names | NYNEX Arena (1995–1998) Manchester Evening News Arena (1998–2011) |
---|---|
Location | Manchester city centre, Manchester, Greater Manchester, England |
Coordinates | 53°29′17″N 2°14′38″W / 53.48806°N 2.24389°W |
Owner | Capital & Regional and GE Real Estate UK |
Capacity | up to 21,000 |
Surface | Various |
Construction | |
Opened | 15 July 1995 |
Construction cost | £52 million (£126 million in 2024 pounds[1]) |
Website | |
www |
The Manchester Arena is an indoor arena situated in Manchester, England. The arena is situated on Hunts Bank and is connected to Manchester Victoria station. The arena opened in 1995 sponsored by NYNEX CableComms as the NYNEX Arena and was renamed the Manchester Evening News Arena in 1998. The Manchester Evening News ended its 13 year sponsorship at the end of 2011 and the arena was renamed the Manchester Arena in 2012.[2]
The Manchester arena is the largest indoor arena in the European Union with a capacity of 21,000, larger than the 20,000 O2 Arena in London, and is one of the world's busiest indoor arenas, hosting music and sporting events such as boxing and swimming.[3]
The arena was a key part of Manchester's bids to host the Olympic Games in 1996 and 2000 and was eventually used for the 2002 Commonwealth Games.
Arena design
The structure was designed by DLA Ellerbe Beckett, Ove Arup & Partners, and Austin-Smith:Lord and described as " a huge soulless sports and entertainment complex, grafted onto the back of Victoria Station" by Clare Hartwell. The arena is sited in air rights space over the station and was constructed without disrupting use of the station. The original plans included a glass tower which was not built. It has a multiplex cinema, a multi-purpose arena and multi-storey parking. [4]
A large truss measuring 105 metres spans the roof. Reinforced concrete is used to increase sound insulation. The upper parts of the building are clad in purple-grey with green glass.[5] The arena was opened on 15 July 1995.[6]
The arena was one of the first indoor venues in Europe to be built following the traditional American sports arena layout of 360 degree seating,[7] and is the only arena in the UK to have this feature (London's O2 Arena also has 360 degrees seating, but only on its lower tier, whereas the Manchester Arena features it on both tiers). Other European indoor venues built to the same concept include the Lanxess Arena in Cologne, Arena Zagreb in Zagreb, Spaladium Arena in Split, Belgrade Arena in Belgrade, O2 Arena in Prague, and O2 World Hamburg in Hamburg.
Background
The Manchester Arena was constructed as part of the city's unsuccessful bid for the 2000 Summer Olympics.[8] Construction cost £52 million of which £35.5m was provided by government grants and £2.5m from the European Regional Development Fund. Although built as an American style sports arena it has been more successful hosting large music events.[9]
On the opening night, 15,000 spectators watched Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean perform; the crowd was a record for an ice event.[10] Attendance records were set in 1997 when 17,425 people watched Manchester Storm play Sheffield Steelers, a record for an ice hockey match in Europe. When 14,151 people watched Manchester Giants play London Leopards, it set a British record for attendance at a basketball match.[10]
Venue | 2011 Ticket sales for concerts/shows |
---|---|
O2 Arena, London, UK | 1.9 million |
Manchester Arena, Manchester, UK | 1.2 million |
Sportpaleis, Antwerp, Belgium | 714,000 |
Rod Laver Arena, Melbourne, Australia | 706,000 |
The O2, Dublin, Dublin, Ireland | 670,000 |
Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy, Paris, France | 659,000 |
Staples Centre, Los Angeles, USA | 633,000 |
Madison Square Garden, New York, USA | 616,000 |
Air Canada Centre, Toronto, Canada | 582,000 |
LG Arena, Birmingham, UK | 561,000 |
The venue attracts over a million customers each year for concerts and family shows, making it one of the world's busiest indoor arenas, and was named "International Venue Of The Year" in 2002 in the 'Pollstar' awards, and was nominated in the same category in 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009. The arena was named "Busiest Arena Venue In The World", based on ticket sales for concerts in 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007 ahead of other indoor arenas including the Madison Square Garden and Wembley Arena. The arena was the 'World's Busiest Arena' from 2001 until 2007 based on ticket sales for concerts, attracting five and a half million customers. It was voted 'Europe's Favourite Arena' at the TIP Awards in 2008 by the touring companies that bring the shows to the venue.
In 2008, the arena was world's third busiest arena behind London's O2 Arena and New York's Madison Square Garden. In 2009, it was the world's second busiest arena behind London's O2 Arena and ahead of Antwerp's Sportpaleis and Madison Square Garden. Although second to London's O2 Arena the Manchester Arena had its busiest year with over 1,500,000 people attending concerts and family shows. The arena hosts over 250 events annually including comedy, live music and tours, sporting events, and occasionally musicals.[12]
Events
Music
The arena has hosted music concerts since opening in 1995 and is the arena's primary source of visitors.
Janet Jackson was scheduled to perform her All for You Tour on 5 December 2001, but the show was cancelled. Kylie Minogue performed a webcast of her KylieFever2002 tour on MSN for fans around the world.
The venue was used to record Westlife's Greatest Hits Tour DVD on 14 April 2003. Pink's performance, during her Try This Tour on 26 March 2004, was filmed and released on DVD as Pink: Live in Europe. McFly's Wonderland Tour was recorded there in 2005. Rihanna's Good Girl Gone Bad Tour was filmed on 6 December 2007 and released as the Good Girl Gone Bad Live DVD. The Spice Girls performed three shows during the Return of the Spice Girls Tour on 23/24/26 January 2008, the three last European shows of the tour. On 13–14 June 2008, Boyzone filmed their reunion tour, Back Again ... No Matter What DVD here. Morrissey filmed Who Put the M in Manchester on his 45th birthday on 22 May 2004.
The record for the fastest sell-out is held by Madonna when she performed her Sticky & Sweet Tour on July 7, 2009. All 13,457 tickets sold out in under a minute. Madonna was to perform two back-to-back shows but the July 8 show was cancelled.
On 15 July 2010, the arena celebrated its 15th birthday with a multi-artist gig, presented by Real Radio (North West).[13] An audience of nearly 10,000 was entertained by Scouting for Girls, Pixie Lott, The Script, Alexandra Burke, The Hoosiers, The Saturdays, Gabriella Cilmi, Taio Cruz, Craig David, Beverley Knight, Olly Murs, Amy McDonald, The Baseballs and Fyfe Dangerfield. Former steward, Peter Kay was a surprise guest which was hosted by Real Radio breakfast presenters Ditchy and Salty.
In November 2011, the arena hosted Children in Need Rocks Manchester as part of Children in Need 2011 and metal pioneers Deep Purple in The Songs That Built Rock Tour of the band.
In December 2011, The Saturdays performed here as a headlining act for the first ever time, as part of their All Fired Up Tour. The Manchester date was chosen to be filmed for a future DVD release.
Sports
The Manchester Arena has been the home of three sports teams: the Manchester Storm and Manchester Phoenix ice hockey teams, and the Manchester Giants basketball team with limited success, as it is no longer used by sports teams but is used for one-off sporting events such as boxing and football masters.
Many boxers have had bouts in the arena, such as Amir Khan, Jermaine Johnson, Ricky Hatton, Joe Calzaghe, Mike Tyson, and David Haye. Hatton, from Manchester, became a regular and favourite at the arena.
WWE has hosted multiple events at the arena. It first hosted WWF Mayhem in Manchester in 1998 attracting over 19,600 spectators (a European record for an indoor WWF/WWE event). The arena hosted No Mercy in 1999. On 26 October 2002 it hosted the SmackDown! UK-only pay-per-view WWE Rebellion, as it did in 2001. Also on 11 October 2004, it hosted a RAW taping, and was followed the next day by a taping of WWE SmackDown!. RAW and SmackDown! returned to the Manchester Arena on 13 and 14 November 2006 and returned for live tapings of RAW and Smackdown on 10 and 11 November 2008 respectively. Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA), made its first appearance at the arena in January 2009, January 2010, January 2011 and again in January 2012 as part of TNA Wrestlings Maximum Impact Tour.
The Manchester Arena hosted mixed martial arts events. UFC 70 on 21 April 2007, and UFC 105 on 14 November 2009 for which it set the European record attendance for the largest UFC event outside the USA with 16,000 spectators. The World Taekwondo Qualification Event for the Beijing Olympic Games was held at there on 28–30 September 2007 when 103 countries competed for 24 places at the Beijing Olympic Games in 2008. In April 2008, the arena hosted the FINA Short Course World Swimming Championships, the first time the event has been held in the UK. The arena was transformed with two 25 m swimming pools constructed in 18 days and seating provided for 17,250 spectators.[14]
The arena was used by Manchester United when the club won the Champions League Final in 1999. The 2008 UEFA Champions League Final was shown on a big screen in front of 7000 spectators.[citation needed]
Monster truck racing events have been staged but the floor space has to be extended and the front section of seating in the lower tier removed.[15]
A meeting of Premier League Darts from the PDC Professional Darts Corporation takes place once a year and has done since 2008.
In May 2011, the arena hosted a basketball contest between the Atlanta Dream (WNBA) and the Great Britain Women's Basketball team, billed as "WNBA Live", the first time a WNBA team had played in Europe.
In July 2012 the Manchester Arena will host international basketball when Great Britain play USA in the build up to the Olympics.
Technical facts
- Lower tier fixed seated capacity – 10,762
- Upper tier fixed seated capacity – 8,870
- Large theatre setup – 7,600
- Small theatre setup – 3,500
- Ice hockey and gymnastics – up to 17,643
- FINA Swimming championships 2008 – 17,250
- Basketball – up to 20,500
- Professional Wrestling – 14,000 to 18,500
- Boxing – up to 21,000
- Side stage – up to 11,150 (fully seated)
- Conventional end-stage concerts – 13,500–15,800 (fully seated)
- Conventional end-stage concerts – up to 19,350 (floor standing)[citation needed]
- In the round concerts – up to 20,400 (fully seated)
- In the round concerts – up to 21,000 (floor standing)
- 30 hospitality business suites (seats up to 12 guests)
- 8 top floor suites known as 'The White house' (each seats between 6 and 15 guests—located in the white sports commentators boxes when not in use)
- 4 party suites (seats up to 25 guests)
- The arena claimed to have the world's largest indoor video scoreboard when it opened in 1995. The videowall has been deactivated, but remains in situ mounted in the roof. It has been replaced with an LED Ribbonboard mounted on the video scoreboard's exterior.
Transport
Manchester Metrolink | Victoria |
National Rail |
The arena adjoins Manchester Victoria railway station where there is also a Metrolink tram stop. It has a large car park nearby and smaller car parks are located around the city centre.
References
- ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved May 7, 2024.
- ^ "MEN Media ends naming rights at Manchester Evening News Arena". Manchester Evening News. 13 September 2011. Retrieved 2011-09-27.
- ^ "Manchester Evening News arena". smg-europe.com. Retrieved on 28 March 2008.
- ^ Victoria (PDF), The Cube, retrieved 15 April 2012
- ^ Hartwell 2002, p. 237
- ^ Watson, Janine (25 July 1995). "Arena ready for Wets sell-out". Manchester Evening News.
- ^ Taylor, Paul (13 July 2010). "The Arena put Manchester on top of the world". Manchester Evening News. Retrieved 6 July 2011.
- ^ Parkinson-Bailey, John J. (25 May 2000). Manchester: An Architectural History (Hardcover ed.). Manchester University Press (. p. 250. ISBN 0-7190-5606-3. Retrieved 2 October 2009.
- ^ Taylor, Paul (13 July 2010). "The Arena put Manchester on top of the world". Manchester Evening News. Retrieved 2011-11-14.
- ^ a b Inglis 2004, p. 101
- ^ "Manchester Arena is second busiest in the world". Place North West. 25 January 2012. Retrieved 2012-04-12.
- ^ Will Pavia (5 January 2008). "From unwanted empty shell to the world's busiest venue". Manchester Evening News.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) Retrieved on 31 August 2008. - ^ "Venue profile: Finger on the pulse". Music Week. 10 July 2010.
- ^ "City arena becomes swimming venue". BBC Online. 18 March 2008.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) Retrieved on 31 August 2008. - ^ "Monster Jam". Manchester Evening News Arena. Retrieved 6 July 2011.
Bibliography
- Inglis, Simon (2004), Played in Manchester: The architectural heritage of a city at play, English Heritage and Manchester City Council, ISBN 1-873592-78-7
- Hartwell, Clare (2002), Manchester, Pevsner Architectural Guides, Yale University Press, ISBN 978 0 3 09666 8
{{citation}}
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value: length (help)