Motorpoint Arena - Nottingham, Nottinghamshire
Posted by: SMacB
N 52° 57.139 W 001° 08.338
30U E 625026 N 5868586
Motorpoint Arena Nottingham (originally the Nottingham Arena, formerly the Capital FM Arena Nottingham) is a multi-use indoor arena located within the National Ice Centre in the Lace Market district of Nottingham
Waymark Code: WMX76G
Location: East Midlands, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 12/06/2017
Views: 0
"Motorpoint Arena Nottingham (originally the Nottingham Arena, formerly the Capital FM Arena Nottingham) is a multi-use indoor arena located within the National Ice Centre in the Lace Market district of Nottingham, England. The National Ice Centre and Nottingham Arena were opened by Olympic gold medalist Jayne Torvill on 1 April 2000. Since its opening, the arena has hosted over a thousand concerts, comedy acts, family shows and sporting events. The arena is the UK’s first twin ice pad facility and centre of excellence for ice sports in the UK."
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"The National Ice Centre was constructed on the site of the former Nottingham Ice Stadium, which opened in 1939 and was showing its age. Plans to replace the stadium were first announced in September 1995. The estimated cost of replacement was £13 million, part of which was to come from National Lottery funds. The plans were unveiled in October 1996, by which time the British Olympic Association had got behind the proposal.
Several buildings were demolished to make way for the new ice centre; This included an Art Deco warehouse and "The Old Cricket Players" pub, which was initially planned to be spared. The former Ice Stadium closed in March 2000, and by May 2000 was described as "nearly demolished", with four skip loads of demolition rubble being removed from the site every day. This had been the former training ground for Olympic ice dancing champions Torvill and Dean (Jayne Torvill & Christopher Dean). The square in front of the new building was named 'Bolero Square' to honour their achievements.
During excavation for the new building in July 1998 a rare 1,100-year-old Saxon jug was found, which is on display at the Nottingham Castle Museum. A 19th-century graveyard was also found under the car park, from which the bodies were then exhumed.
The centre was officially opened on 1 April 2000 by Olympic Gold Medalist, Jayne Torvill; with the first public skating sessions taking place the same month. The second phase of the project – the family rink – was scheduled to be completed by May–June 2001, but opened early on 7 April 2001. The final cost of the project was £43million, 10% of which came from the lottery – one of the highest grants awarded.
HM The Queen visited the National Ice Centre and Nottingham Arena on 31 July 2002.
There are two ice pads.
The capacity of the main arena is 10,000.
The National Ice Centre is an Industry Green accredited venue."
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