Location | 5 Botanic Street, Tolyatti, Samara region, 445036, Russia |
---|---|
Elevation | 25 m (82 ft) |
Parking | Underground parking: 174 cars Outdoor parking: 450 cars 10 buses 18 parking spaces for people with disabilities. |
Owner | Ministry of Sports of the Russia |
Operator | GAU Samara region Arena |
Capacity | ice hockey: 6,122 |
Field size | 60×26 m |
Acreage | 34.107,9 sq.m |
Surface | Ice |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 2008 |
Built |
|
Opened | 9 August 2013 |
Renovated | 2023 |
Construction cost | ₽ 2 967 826 000 (€ 70 128 214 in 2013) |
Architect | Volgatransstroy Group [1] |
General contractor | JSC Avtozavodstroy |
Tenants | |
Lada Togliatti (KHL) | |
Website | |
tlt-arena |
The Lada Arena is a 6,122-seat multi-purpose arena in Tolyatti, Russia. It opened in 2013, and replaced Volgar Sports Palace as the home of KHL ice hockey team, HC Lada Togliatti. [2] [3] The sponsor of the arena is the car manufacturer AvtoVAZ, that is based within the city.
The Ice Palace is an arena in Saint Petersburg, Russia. It was built for the 2000 IIHF World Championship and opened in 2000. It holds 12,300 people.
HC Lada Togliatti is a Russian professional ice hockey team based in Tolyatti, Russia. They play in the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL).
Volgar Sports Palace is an indoor sporting arena located in Tolyatti, Russia. The capacity of the arena is 2,900. It was the home arena of the HC Lada Togliatti ice hockey until being replaced by Lada Arena. Two other examples of this rare Soviet Modernism design style is the Hala Olivia in Gdansk Poland, and the Vilnius Palace of Concerts and Sports in Vilnius, Lithuania.
Ice Palace Salavat Yulaev is an indoor sporting arena located in Ufa, Russia. The capacity of the arena is 4,043. It was the home arena of the Salavat Yulaev Ufa ice hockey team. It was replaced by Ufa Arena in 2007.
Ice Sports Palace Sibir is an indoor sporting arena located in Novosibirsk, Russia. The capacity of the arena is 7,400. It was the home arena of the HC Sibir Novosibirsk ice hockey team.
Megasport Sport Palace, formerly Khodynka Arena or Ice Sport Palace, is a multi-purpose indoor arena that is located in Moscow, Russia. The arena is situated in the Khodynka Field and has a maximum seating capacity of 13,926 people. Opened in 2006, the arena is primarily used to host basketball and ice hockey games.
Soviet Wings Universal Sport Palace is an indoor sporting arena located in Moscow, Russia. The capacity of the arena is 5,670, it was opened on December 2, 1980. It is the home arena of the MHC Krylya Sovetov ice hockey team.
Yunost Sport Palace is an indoor sporting arena located in Chelyabinsk, Russia. The capacity of the arena is 3,500. It was built in 1967 and served as the home arena for the ice hockey team Traktor Chelyabinsk until 2009, at which time the team moved to the newly constructed Traktor Sport Palace.
The Iceberg Skating Palace is a 12,000-seat multi-purpose arena at Sochi Olympic Park in Sochi, Russia. The venue hosted the figure skating and short track speed skating events at the 2014 Winter Olympics. It cost $43.9 million, including the temporary works for the Olympics. 15,000 tonnes of steel were used. The environment was taken into consideration in its construction.
The Balashikha Arena is a 6,000-seat multi-purpose arena in Balashikha, Russia. Opened in 2007, it replaced Vityaz Ice Palace as the home of HC MVD, a Kontinental Hockey League ice hockey team.
The Culture and Entertainment Complex Nagorny, abbreviated as CEC Nagorny or KRK Nagorny, is an indoor sports and entertainment arena in the Sovetsky district of Nizhny Novgorod, Russia. It was previously called the Nizhny Novgorod Sports Palace of Trade Unions and the Nagorny Sports Palace. First opened in 1965, the arena was extensively renovated and expanded in 2007. The name "Nagorny" means 'upland' and refers to the arena's location in Upper City geographic area of Nizhny Novgorod.
Druzhba Arena was an indoor arena in Donetsk, Ukraine. It was built to develop hockey in the region. It was destroyed in May 2014 during the War in Donbas.
CSKA Ice Palace was an indoor arena located in Moscow, Russia. The arena's seating capacity was 5,600. The arena was located next to Khodynka Field, and was a part of the CSKA Sports Complex. It was primarily used to host ice hockey games and figure skating competitions.
The Podmoskovie Ice Palace is an indoor arena in Voskresensk, Moscow Oblast. It is the home arena of Khimik Voskresensk of the Supreme Hockey League (VHL) and 7.62 of the Zhenskaya Hockey League (ZhHL).
The Baluan Sholak Sports Palace or Bolyan Sholak Sports Palace is a Palace of Sports in Almaty, the former capital of Kazakhstan. It was built in 1967 and extensively renovated in 2009–2011. It is named after Baluan Sholak, a celebrated Kazakh composer, singer, poet, dombra player, dzhigit and wrestler.
Boris Alexandrov Sports Palace is an ice hockey indoor arena in Oskemen, Kazakhstan. The sports palace was renamed after Soviet and Kazakhstani ice hockey player Boris Alexandrov in 2010. It is the home arena of the Kazzinc-Torpedo hockey club.
CSKA Arena, formerly known as VTB Ice Palace and Legends Park, is an indoor multi-sport venue that is located in Moscow, Russia. Its main sponsor is VTB Bank.
Central Square is an area of Tolyatti. It is located in the Central District, directly south-southeast of Central Park, near the core of the cultural and political life of the city. It is often called the City Garden by the populace rather than Central Square.
The Humo Arena, also known as Ice Dome Tashkent or Humo Ice Dome, is a multifunctional indoor arena located in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. Humo Arena is the biggest hockey arena in Central Asia with a capacity of 12,500 and the second after the Belarusian Minsk Arena in the CIS.
Rostov-on-Don Palace of Sports in a multi-purpose indoor arena in Rostov-on-Don, Russia. It is the home of the women's handball club Rostov-Don, one of the top teams of the Russian championship that also regularly plays in the Women's EHF Champions League. Beside handball it also hosts other indoor sports including ice hockey, as well as concerts and other events.