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Sud de France Arena

Coordinates: 43°34′24″N 3°57′06″E / 43.57342°N 3.95162°E / 43.57342; 3.95162
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(Redirected from Park&Suites Arena)
Sud de France Arena
Map
Former namesArena Montpellier (2010–2011)
Park&Suites Arena (2011–2016)
L'Arena Montpellier (2016–2017)
Sud de France Arena (2017–present)
LocationPérols, Hérault, France
Coordinates43°34′24″N 3°57′06″E / 43.57342°N 3.95162°E / 43.57342; 3.95162
OwnerOccitanie
Capacity14,000 (concerts)
10,700 (basketball)
9,000 (handball)
7,500 (tennis tournaments)
Construction
Broke groundOctober 2008
Opened8 September 2010
Construction cost53 million
ArchitectCabinet A+ Architecture
Tenants
Montpellier Handball (European matches)

Sud de France Arena ("South of France Arena", also known as the Arena Montpellier) is an indoor arena located in the Montpellier suburb of Pérols, Hérault, in the south of France, that opened in September 2010. It has a concert seating capacity of 14,000 spectators, with about 10,000 for sporting events.[1]

Notable events

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The stadium hosted the Violetta Live International Tour, recording the video clips of the concert that are now published. American pop singer Katy Perry also performed there during her Prismatic World Tour on 17 February 2015. It was host to the European matches of Montpellier Handball and the Open Sud de France tennis tournament. It also hosted the XXXI World Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships (2011) which served as a qualification process for the 2012 Summer Olympics. The arena hosted the 2015 European Artistic Gymnastics Championships on April 13–19.[2]

The venue hosted a group of the FIBA EuroBasket 2015, and some matches of the 2017 World Men's Handball Championship.

In 2021, the arena hosted the UCI Urban Cycling World Championships.

In March 2022, it hosted the World Figure Skating Championships.

In October 2023, the stadium held the finals of the TrackMania Esports Ascension tournament, which was hosted by French vlogger and YouTube personality Zerator, as well as Twitch streamer Etoiles.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Montpellier remplace Lyon". L'Equipe.fr. Archived from the original on July 29, 2010. Retrieved December 7, 2011.
  2. ^ "6th European Men's and Women's Championships. Montpellier (FRA) 2015 Apr 13-19". www.gymnasticsresults.com. Archived from the original on 2014-12-14.
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Media related to Arena of Montpellier at Wikimedia Commons