South Tyrol Arena
The South Tyrol Arena (in Italian Arena Alto Adige; in German Südtirol Arena) is a biathlon stadium in the municipality of Rasen-Antholz, in South Tyrol (Italy).
Arena Alto Adige / Südtirol Arena | |
2009 World Cup | |
Address | Via Anterselva di Sopra/Obertalerstraße, 33 |
---|---|
Location | Rasen-Antholz |
Public transit | Shuttle A-B |
Type | stadium |
Genre(s) | sporting events |
Capacity | 3,000 |
Record attendance | 23,000 |
Surface | snow |
Scoreboard | yes |
Construction | |
Built | 1969 |
Opened | 1971 |
Renovated | 2006 |
Expanded | 2006 |
Construction cost | € 6.700.000 |
Website | |
www |
The facility will host the biathlon competitions of the 2026 Winter Olympics of Milan-Cortina.
History
The facility, which began construction in 1969 and opened in 1971, has regularly hosted a stage of the Biathlon World Cup, as well as six editions of the Biathlon World Championships (1975, 1976, 1983, 1995, 2007, and 2020) and two editions of the Biathlon Junior World Championships (1975 and 1983).[1]
The stadium was modernized from 2006: the grandstand for spectators was enlarged and a building was built for the competition judges. The total expenditure was 6.9 million euro.[2]
2007 World Championship were attended by 117,000 spectators, with peaks of 23,000 on Saturday 10 February.
Venue
The arena is located at the end of Antholz Valley (side valley of Puster Valley) at an altitude of 1600 m above sea level, near the Lake of Antholz. It is the highest biathlon venue of the World Cup.
Reference
Wikimedia Commons has media related to South Tyrol Arena. |
- "La cronaca di Anterselva". Biathlon-antholz.it. Archived from the original on 2013-06-26. Retrieved 2011-09-03.
- "Anterselva ha fatto centro". Alto Adige. 2007-09-19. p. 33.
External links
- (DE, EN, IT) "Arena Alto Adige - Comitato organizzatore Coppa del Mondo di biathlon". Archived from the original on 26 June 2013. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
- (DE, EN, IT) "Storia del biathlon nella Valle di Anterselva". Archived from the original on 26 June 2013. Retrieved 3 June 2011.