Puneet Varma (Editor)

Palace of Sports

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Palace of Sports

Nazareth ice palace of sports minsk belarus 2011


Palace of Sports or Sports Palace (Russian: Дворец спорта) is the name of comprehensive indoors sports venues introduced in the Soviet Union (compare with Palace of Culture) and still used in a number of post-Soviet states. Many of them had standard architectural design. Some of them were renamed, e.g., into Palace of Concerts and Sports.

Contents

The term is also used in other countries. For example, in Hispanophone countries, the term is Palacio de los Deportes.

World cup of mma wmmaf m lviv ukraine palace of sports


Russia

  • Luzhniki Palace of Sports (built in 1956), Moscow, Russia
  • Dynamo Sports Palace (1980), Moscow, Russia
  • Soviet Wings Sport Palace (1980), Moscow, Russia
  • CSCA Palace of Sports (1980), Moscow, Russia
  • Sokolniki Sports Palace (1973), Moscow, Russia
  • Podmoskovie Sports Palace (1928)
  • Yubileyny Sports Palace (1967), St. Petersburg, Russia
  • Kuznetskie Metallurgi Sports Palace, Novokuznetsk, Russia.
  • Romazan Ice Sports Palace (1992), Magnitogorsk, Russia.
  • Universal Sports Palace Molot (late 1980s), Perm, Russia
  • Volgar Sports Palace, Togliatti, Russia
  • Yunost Sport Palace, Chelyabinsk, Russia.
  • Other

  • Palace of Sports (Kiev) (built in 1960), Kiev, Ukraine
  • Tbilisi Sports Palace (built in 1961), Tbilisi, Georgia
  • Vilnius Palace of Concerts and Sports (1971), Vilnius, Lithuania was included in the "Registry of Cultural Values" in 2006.
  • Sports Palace Aukštaitija, Panevėžys, Lithuania
  • Royal Bafokeng Sports Palace, Rustenburg, South Africa
  • Sports Palace, Belgrade
  • Berlin Sportpalast (Berlin Sports Palace), mostly known for its Nazi rallies
  • Minsk Sports Palace, Minsk, Belarus
  • Kazakhstan Sports Palace, Astana, Kazakhstan
  • Boris Alexandrov Sports Palace, Oskemen, Kazakhstan
  • Baluan Sholak Sports Palace, Almaty, Kazakhstan
  • Palacio de los Deportes

  • Palacio de los Deportes, Mexico City, Mexico
  • Palacio de los Deportes (Heredia), Heredia, Costa Rica
  • Palacio de los Deportes Virgilio Travieso Soto, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
  • Palacio de los Deportes del Cibao, Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic
  • Palacio de Recreación y Deportes, Mayagüez, Puerto Rico
  • Palacio de los Deportes de Torrevieja, Torrevieja, Spain.
  • Palacio de los Deportes de La Rioja, Logroño, Spain
  • Palacio de Deportes

  • Palacio de Deportes de Gijón
  • Palacio de Deportes de Santander
  • Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid
  • Palacio de Deportes de Murcia
  • Palacio de Deportes de Granada
  • Palacio de Deportes de San Pablo
  • Palacio de Deportes Mediterráneo, Almería, Spain
  • Palais des Sports

  • Palais des Sports de Beaulieu
  • Palais des Sports de Fetes
  • Palais des Sports de Gerland
  • Palais des Sports de Pau
  • Palais des Sports de Toulouse
  • Palais des Sports (Grenoble)
  • Palais des Sports Jean Weille
  • Palais des Sports (Paris) in Porte de Versailles (XVe arrondissement)
  • Palais des Sports (Sherbrooke)
  • Palais des Sports (Val d'Or)
  • Palais des Sports (Alexandrio Melathron)
  • Palazzo dello Sport

  • Palazzo dello Sport (disambiguation), for Italian venues
  • References

    Palace of Sports Wikipedia