Jump to content

Quần Ngựa Sports Palace

Coordinates: 21°02′25.5″N 105°48′53″E / 21.040417°N 105.81472°E / 21.040417; 105.81472
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Quần Ngựa Sports Place
Cung thể thao Quần Ngựa
Map
Full nameCung thể thao tổng hợp Quần Ngựa
Address30 Văn Cao Street
LocationBa Đình, Hanoi, Vietnam
Coordinates21°02′25.5″N 105°48′53″E / 21.040417°N 105.81472°E / 21.040417; 105.81472
OwnerHanoi Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism
OperatorBa Đình District People's Committee
TypePalace of sports, Entertainment, Game show, Venues, Concerts Music & Liveshow
Capacity5,500
Field size24 m × 48 m (79 ft × 157 ft)
Construction
Opened24 April 2003 (2003-04-24)
Construction cost100 billion VND
(211 billion in 2020 VND)
(9.13 million in 2020 USD)
ArchitectChế Đình Hoàng
BuilderHanoi Civil Construction Investment, JSC

Quần Ngựa Sports Palace (Vietnamese: Cung thể thao tổng hợp Quần Ngựa or simply Cung thể thao Quần Ngựa) is a palace of sports situated in Ba Đình District, Hanoi, Vietnam.

History

[edit]

The venue was built on the site that used to be an equestrianism center of Hanoi during the French occupation period in late 19th and early 20th century. Its current name "Quần Ngựa" (horse riding court) derived from the site's equestrian origin.[1] It opened in 2003 in time for the 22nd Southeast Asian Games.

Design

[edit]

The venue itself covers a floor space of 6,900 m2 (74,000 sq ft) on a 51,780 m2 (557,400 sq ft) plot that makes up the sports complex. The sports palace consists of 10 departmental rooms, 2 meeting rooms, and 2 halls while the complex also includes practice halls, housing for athletes, transformation station and security department.[2]

Quần Ngựa Sports Palace has a 24 m × 48 m (79 ft × 157 ft) competition field surrounded by 4 spectators' stands with a total capacity of 5,500 seats.

Usage

[edit]
Quần Ngựa Sports Palace during 2021 Southeast Asian Games

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Tiểu Hàn. "Mục sở thị trường đua ngựa ở Hà Nội từ hơn 100 năm trước". Báo Đầu Tư (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  2. ^ "Decision 4808/QĐ-UBND of Hanoi People's Committee". LuatVietnam. Retrieved 25 July 2020.