Westfalenhallen
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Westfalenhalle 1
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Location | Dortmund, Germany |
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Owner | Westfalenhallen Dortmund GmbH |
Operator | Westfalenhallen Dortmund GmbH |
Capacity | 16,500 |
Construction | |
Opened | 1925 |
Expanded | 1952 |
Website | |
www |
Westfalenhallen (English: Halls of Westphalia) are three multi-purpose venues located in Dortmund, Germany. The original building was opened in 1925, but was destroyed during World War II. New halls were built, the Große Westfalenhalle opened in 1952. The capacity of the arena is 16,500. The Kleine Westfalenhalle served also for balls, exhibitions and concerts, such as the Dortmunder Philharmoniker, until the Opernhaus Dortmund was opened in 1966.
The Bundesliga was founded at the Westfalenhallen in 1962.
Events
The venue played host to the 1964, 1980 and 2004 World Figure Skating Championships, as well as the 1955, 1983 and 1993 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championships tournaments.
In 1981, the venue was one of only four locations worldwide of the legendary The Wall Tour, by Pink Floyd, along with Los Angeles, Uniondale (New York) and London.
In 1983, the venue hosted the Rock Pop Festival, featuring Iron Maiden (headliner band), Scorpions, Ozzy Osbourne, Def Leppard, Quiet Riot, Judas Priest, Krokus and The Michael Schenker Group - one of the largest heavy metal lineups of all time, featuring these bands at the peak of their careers.
In 1988, Prince broadcast a performance from his Lovesexy World Tour live via satellite across Europe, later releasing it on home video.
Iron Maiden recorded Death on the Road, a live CD/DVD, at the venue on November 24, 2003.
Madonna played one concert in the arena at her Blond Ambition World Tour in 1990.
Floor areas of the 8 halls
Hall | Floor area |
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Westfalenhalle 1 |
4.700 m²
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Westfalenhalle 2 |
1.800 m²
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Westfalenhalle 2N |
970 m²
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Westfalenhalle 2U |
1.000 m²
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Westfalenhalle 3A |
1.730 m²
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Westfalenhalle 3B |
10.600 m²
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Westfalenhalle 4 |
8.300 m²
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Westfalenhalle 5 |
5.100 m²
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Westfalenhalle 6 |
7.200 m²
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Westfalenhalle 7 |
6.000 m²
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Westfalenhalle 8 |
5.500 m²
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Public transport
Westfalenhallen is officially a terminus station of the Dortmund Stadtbahn (urban rail) line U45 and U46, part of the Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Ruhr (VRR). Practically, it is not a terminus station: The trains of the line U46 continue as U45 to the central station, while the U45 trains usually continue as U46 to Brunnenstraße. In case of football matches of Borussia Dortmund or other events at Signal Iduna Park, the trains serve the terminus station Stadion.
Preceding station | Rhine-Ruhr Stadtbahn | Following station | ||
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toward Dortmund Hbf
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U45 | Terminus | ||
Terminus | U46 |
toward Brunnenstraße
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Westfalenhalle Dortmund. |
- Westfalenhallen.de (English)
Preceded by
none
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European Indoor Games Venue 1966 |
Succeeded by Sportovni hala Prague |
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- Articles needing translation from foreign-language Wikipedias
- Commons category link is locally defined
- Indoor arenas in Germany
- Visitor attractions in North Rhine-Westphalia
- Buildings and structures in Dortmund
- Indoor ice hockey venues in Germany
- Convention centres in Germany
- Ruhr Industrial Heritage Trail
- Indoor track and field venues
- Sports venues in North Rhine-Westphalia
- Velodromes in Germany
- German sports venue stubs
- North Rhine-Westphalia building and structure stubs