Suliman Ad-Dharrath Arena
Sports venue in Benghazi, Libya
Location | Benghazi, Libya |
---|---|
Capacity | 2,000 |
Opened | 1967; 57 years ago (1967) |
Suliman Ad-Dharrath Arena is an indoor sporting arena located in Benghazi, Libya. It is used mainly for indoor sports such as volleyball and basketball. It has a seating capacity of 2,000 people and was opened in 1967. Currently, the capacity is 10,000.[1]
It was one of two host arenas for the 2009 African Basketball Championship.
32°6′15″N 20°4′24″E / 32.10417°N 20.07333°E / 32.10417; 20.07333
- v
- t
- e
Indoor arenas in Africa by capacity
- Hacène Harcha Arena (8,000)
- Miloud Hadefi Complex Omnisport Arena (7,000)
- La Coupole d'Alger Arena (5,500)
- Hamou Boutlélis Sports Palace (5,000)
- Pavilhão Multiusos de Luanda (12,720)
- Pavilhão da Cidadela (6,873)
- The Covered Hall (16,900)
- New Capital Sports Hall (7,000)
- Hassan Moustafa Sports Hall (5,200)
- Port Said Hall (5,000)
- Salle Mohammed V (12,000)
- Salle Moulay Abdellah (10,000)
- Salle Ibn Yassine (5,000)
- WeBuyCars Dome (20,000)
- ICC Durban Arena (10,000)
- SunBet Arena (8,500)
- Bellville Velodrome (7,800)
- Good Hope Centre (7,000)
- Ellis Park Arena (6,300)
- Salle Omnisport de Radès (17,000)
- El Menzah Sports Palace (5,500)
- Salle Bir Challouf (5,000)
- Mohamed-Mzali Sports Hall (5,000)
- Cameroon: Yaoundé Multipurpose Sports Complex (5,263)
- Congo: Palais des Sports Kintélé (10,134)
- Gabon: Palais des Sports de Libreville (6,000)
- Ghana: Borteyman Sports Complex (5,000)
- Kenya: Kasarani Indoor Arena (5,000)
- Libya: Suliman Ad-Dharrath Arena (10,000)
- Mozambique: Pavilhão do Maxaquene (5,000)
- Rwanda: BK Arena (10,000)
- Senegal: Dakar Arena (15,000)
- Kinshasa Arena (20,000)
- Lagos Arena (12,000)
- Edo Arena (6,000)
References
- ^ "The Largest Indoor Arenas In Africa". WorldAtlas. 2018-04-02. Retrieved 2024-02-25.
This article about a Libyan sports venue is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e