Puneet Varma (Editor)

Pinki Hall

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Opened
  
21 October 1974

Capacity
  
5,000

Pinki Hall httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Full name
  
Kulturno sportski centar Pinki

Location
  
Zemun, Belgrade, Serbia

Owner
  
City of Belgrade (51%) ; NIS (49%)

Similar
  
Sports Hall Ranko Žeravica, Hall Aleksandar Nikolić, Tašmajdan Sports Centre, Despot Stefan Tower, Residence of Prince Miloš

Pinki Hall (Serbian Cyrillic: Хала Пинки) is an indoor multi-sports venue located in Belgrade's municipality of Zemun, Serbia. The venue has an indoor hall and an indoor swimming pool. Its initial full official name was Dom sportova, omladine i pionira Pinki (Pinki, The Hall of Sports, Youth, and Pioneers). The hall has a seating capacity of 2,300 for sports events and around 5,000 for concerts.

Opened on 21 October 1974, on the occasion of the 30th anniversary of Zemun being liberated from the Nazis and their puppet state Independent State of Croatia, the hall has hosted various basketball, handball, and volleyball teams. It now mostly serves for recreational use. It is the only sports venue in the city of Belgrade not financed by the city government, because Zemun's municipal government headed by the Serbian Radical Party (SRS) in 2000 transformed the venue's controlling entity into a publicly traded company and sold the controlling stake (49%) to Naftna industrija Srbije (NIS) oil company.

The venue is named after Boško Palkovljević Pinki, a prominent Partisan fighter during World War II in Yugoslavia and a People's Hero of Yugoslavia.

Concerts

  • 27 April 1975 - Bijelo Dugme (Kad bi bio bijelo dugme Tour)
  • 1975 - Demis Roussos
  • 22 March 1977 - Status Quo
  • 4 April 1977 - Shakti
  • 9 February 1979 - John McLaughlin, Larry Coryell, and Paco de Lucía
  • 4 November 1979 - John McLaughlin, Billy Cobham, Jack Bruce, and Stu Goldberg
  • 2 December 1979 - Gillan
  • 29 January 1980 - The Ruts
  • 21 March 1980 - Ginger Baker
  • 2 April 1980 - Wishbone Ash
  • 22 April 1980 - Lene Lovich
  • 31 December 1981 - Bijelo Dugme (Doživjeti stotu Tour)
  • 1 January 1982 - Bijelo Dugme
  • 2 January 1982 - Bijelo Dugme
  • 19 December 1982 - Dr. Feelgood
  • 27 January 1983 - Alvin Lee
  • 28 March 1983 - Pat Metheny Group
  • 1 December 1983 - Uriah Heep
  • 17 January 1985 - Rory Gallagher
  • References

    Pinki Hall Wikipedia