Ericsson Globe

E814837

Ericsson Globe is a large, iconic spherical indoor arena in Stockholm, Sweden, known for hosting major concerts, sports events, and televised competitions.

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Statements (49)

Predicate Object
instanceOf concert hall
indoor arena
landmark
spherical building
architect Lars Vretblad NERFINISHED
Svante Berg NERFINISHED
architecturalStyle modern architecture
cityDistrictRole major event venue in southern Stockholm
constructionStartYear 1986
continent Europe
country Sweden
diameter 110 metres
formerName Globen NERFINISHED
Stockholm Globe Arena NERFINISHED
hasFeature SkyView gondola attraction
hasHosted Eurovision Song Contest 2000 NERFINISHED
Eurovision Song Contest 2016 NERFINISHED
Ice Hockey World Championships NERFINISHED
Melodifestivalen finals NERFINISHED
NHL games
hosts basketball games
concerts
handball matches
ice hockey games
mixed martial arts events
televised competitions
inaugurationDate 1989-02-19
innerHeight 85 metres
locatedIn Johanneshov NERFINISHED
Scandinavia
Stockholm NERFINISHED
Stockholm County
Stockholm Municipality NERFINISHED
namingRightsSponsor Ericsson NERFINISHED
notableFor being one of the largest hemispherical buildings in the world
officialName Avicii Arena NERFINISHED
openingYear 1989
ownedBy Stockholm Globe Arena Fastigheter NERFINISHED
partOf Globen City complex NERFINISHED
primaryUse concerts
ice hockey
indoor sports
seatingCapacityConcerts about 16,000
seatingCapacityIceHockey about 13,850
shape sphere
SkyViewDescription glass gondolas running on rails on the exterior of the sphere
SkyViewOpeningYear 2010
symbolizes the Sun in the Sweden Solar System scale model NERFINISHED
tenants Sweden national ice hockey team (selected games) NERFINISHED

Referenced by (3)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Melodifestivalen 2009 finalVenue Ericsson Globe
2013 IIHF World Championship venue Ericsson Globe