Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Barclaycard Arena (Hamburg)

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Public transit
  
Stellingen

Capacity
  
16,000

Phone
  
+49 40 80602080

Construction cost
  
€ 83 million

Opened
  
8 November 2002

Barclaycard Arena (Hamburg)

Former names
  
Color Line Arena (2002–10) O2 World Hamburg (2010–15)

Location
  
Sylvesterallee 10 22525 Hamburg Germany

Broke ground
  
13 June 2001 (2001-06-13)

Address
  
Sylvesterallee 10, 22525 Hamburg, Germany

Owner
  
Anschutz Entertainment Group

Profiles

The Barclaycard Arena (originally known as the Color Line Arena and formerly known as O2 World Hamburg) is a multipurpose arena in Hamburg, Germany. It opened in 2002 and can hold up to 16,000 people (13,800 or 12,947 for sporting events). It is located at Altona Volkspark, adjacent to the football stadium Volksparkstadion and the new Volksbank Arena in Hamburg's western Bahrenfeld district.

Contents

The arena is primarily used for pop/rock concerts and was the home of handball club HSV Hamburg and ice hockey side Hamburg Freezers until both teams folded in 2016. The Barclaycard Arena is among the most modern venues in Europe.

History

The arena opened in November 2002, is 150 meters long and 110 metres wide and has an elevation of 33 metres. Construction costs totaled approximately 83 million Euro (ca. US$121.5mn). The construction of the stadium was funded by the Finnish entrepreneur Harry Harkimo and the city of Hamburg, who sold Harkimo the land for a symbolic price of one Mark and also financed infrastructure improvements with 12 million Marks (about 6.1 million euros) as a preparatory measure. In October 2007 the arena was sold to Anschutz Entertainment Group for an estimated 75 million Euros.

Naming rights

The arena was initially named after Norwegian ferry operator Color Line as the "Color Line Arena". In 2010 the sponsor changed to Spanish telecommunications company Telefónica, naming the arena as "O2 World Hamburg". O2 sponsorship ceased in 2015, changing the arena name yet again, this time into "Barclaycard Arena".

References

Barclaycard Arena (Hamburg) Wikipedia