Ginásio do Ibirapuera explained

Ginásio do Ibirapuera
Fullname:Ginásio Estadual Geraldo José de Almeida
Location:Rua Abílio Soares, 1300, Ibirapuera, São Paulo
Coordinates:-23.5777°N -46.656°W
Broke Ground:1954
Built:1954–1957
Opened:January 25, 1957
Owner:São Paulo State Government
Architect:Ícaro de Castro Mello
Capacity:10,200[1]
Record Attendance:over 20,000[2]

Ginásio do Ibirapuera, officially named Ginásio Estadual Geraldo José de Almeida[3] is an indoor sporting arena located in São Paulo, Brazil. The seating capacity of the arena is 11,000 people[3] and it was opened on 25 January 1957.[2] It is used mostly for volleyball matches.

Events

Named after famous sports broadcaster and sports commentator Geraldo José de Almeida,[2] in 2004, 2005 and 2006 Ginásio do Ibirapuera hosted the Salonpas Cup matches, and in 2006, the arena hosted the Basketball World Championship for Women. Other notable basketball events include the 1973 Intercontinental Cup,[4] the 1979 edition of the competition[5] [6] in which local E.C. Sírio won the title after a memorable win over Bosna Sarajevo,[5] and the 1984 edition of the same competition in which Banco Roma won the title.[7]

The venue has hosted many international concerts, such as A-ha, Santana, Van Halen, Metallica, Cyndi Lauper, Sade, Michael Bublé, Queen + Adam Lambert and more.

The venue will also host an event of Valorant's esports, the VCT LOCK//IN, featuring all 30 of the tour's partnered teams.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Reformado, Ginásio do Ibirapuera abre portas no final de abril.
  2. Web site: Ibirapuera Gymnasium . 2009-11-12 . 2017-06-15 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170615155718/http://www.sejel.sp.gov.br/constancio/documentos/ibirapuera_gymnasium.pdf . dead .
  3. Ginásio do Ibirapuera
  4. http://www.linguasport.com/baloncesto/internacional/clubes/intercontinental/IC_73.htm VI Intercontinental Cup (São Paulo 1973)
  5. http://www.sirio.org.br/clubesirio.asp História
  6. http://www.linguasport.com/baloncesto/internacional/clubes/intercontinental/IC_79.htm XI Intercontinental Cup (São Paulo 1979)
  7. http://www.linguasport.com/baloncesto/internacional/clubes/intercontinental/IC_84.htm XVI Intercontinental Cup (São Paulo 1984)