Enea Arena

Indoor arena in Szczecin, Poland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Enea Arena, also known as Arena Szczecin, is a multi-purpose indoor arena in the Zawadzkiego-Klonowica neighbourhood of Szczecin, Poland, opened in 2014. It has 5,055 permanent seats and a capacity of up to 7,055, with standing places, for concerts. It is home to Wilki Morskie Szczecin of the Polish Basketball League.

Former logo of the arena.
Former namesAzoty Arena (2014–2017)
Netto Arena (2018–2026)
Addressul. Władysława Szafera 3/5/7, 71-245 Szczecin
LocationSzczecin, Poland
Coordinates53.4576°N 14.4949°E / 53.4576; 14.4949
Quick facts Former names, Address ...
Enea Arena
Arena Szczecin
Enea Arena in 2021
Interactive map of Enea Arena
Former namesAzoty Arena (2014–2017)
Netto Arena (2018–2026)
Addressul. Władysława Szafera 3/5/7, 71-245 Szczecin
LocationSzczecin, Poland
Coordinates53.4576°N 14.4949°E / 53.4576; 14.4949
OperatorArena Szczecin Operator sp. z o.o.
Capacity5,055 (all seated)
7,055 (with standing)
Construction
Built2011–2014
Opened1 August 2014
Tenants
Wilki Morskie Szczecin (men's basketball)
Pogoń Szczecin (men's handball)
KPS Chemik Police (volleyball)
Website
netto.arenaszczecin.eu
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The venue regularly hosts a wide range of sporting events, including athletics, badminton, basketball, fencing, gymnastics, handball, martial arts, table tennis and tennis. It is also suitable for theatre and cinema performances, as well as concerts, exhibitions and conferences.[1]

History

Construction commenced in 2011. The arena was opened on 1 August 2014, with an official opening ceremony held on 25 July 2014.[2]

In 2015, Grupa Azoty acquired naming rights for the hall, which was then renamed to Azoty Arena.[3] In 2018, it was renamed to Netto Arena following a sponsorship deal with Netto.[4] On January 12, 2026, the arena was renamed to the Enea Arena following a new sponsorship deal with Enea SA.[5]

Events

The arena hosted the Eska Music Awards between 2014 [pl] and 2017 [pl], as well as pool B of the 2017 Men's European Volleyball Championship.[6] A record audience of 8 thousand people was achieved in March 2015 during a performance of the musical Metro.[7]

See also

References

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