Trondheim Spektrum
Trondheim Spektrum in September 2019
Former namesNidarøhallen (1961–2002)
LocationØya, Trondheim, Norway
Coordinates63°25′38.190″N 10°22′38.107″E / 63.42727500°N 10.37725194°E / 63.42727500; 10.37725194
OwnerTrondheim Spektrum AS
Capacity8,600 seats (handball)
12,000 (concerts)
SurfaceVersatile
Construction
Opened1963 (as Nidarøhallen)
4 October 2019
Renovated2017–19
Expanded
  • 1971
  • 1980
  • 1988
  • 2000
ArchitectPran & Torgersen (1963–71)
Lien & Risan (1988)
Veidekke (renovation)
Tenants
Byåsen HE (Eliteserien)

Trondheim Spektrum (formerly Nidarøhallen) is a multi-purpose indoor arena in Trondheim, Norway. It is located on the peninsula of Øya next to the Nidelven river. It is the home arena for women's handball team Byåsen HE. A new arena was completed in 2019 and replaced the largest multi-use hall in the same location. The eight former halls originally went by the name Nidarøhallen.

Next to the halls is the athletics facility Øya stadion and the Trondhjems Tennis Club (TTK) with four outdoor clay courts and indoor tennis hall.

History

Old building

Entrance to the arena in April 2009

The original halls were built in three stages. Halls A and B were designed by architects Pran & Torgersen and were opened in 1963. Further halls was added in 1971 (hall C) and 1980 (hall G), this was followed by stage 3 (halls D and E/H) in 1988 which was designed by Lien & Risan architectural office. The eighth (hall F) was added in 2000. The old Trondheim Spectrum had a floor area of 15,000 m2 spread over eight multi-use halls. The main hall had 3,400 seats and space for around 4,500 people standing.[1]

Trondheim Spektrum also had 1,000 square meters of meeting rooms in different sizes from 80 to 480 square meters. The facility had its own press center which consisted of two study rooms, three offices and a meeting room. A tennis club, with four outdoor courts,[2] and a catering company also had premises within the complex.

New modern building

Trondheim Spektrum in July 2023

From summer 2017, Trondheim Spektrum underwent a significant renovation and extension. In June 2017, Veidekke Entreprenør won the contract valued at NOK 317 million (excluding VAT) to build the new multi-purpose hall.[3] Construction work started in September 2017 and was completed in the autumn of 2019. The new venue has nine full-size handball courts and six children's mini courts. The main hall has 8,600 seats and concerts can be arranged with up to 12,000 spectators.[4][5]

In June 2019, Eventim Norway was announced as the official ticketing partner.[6] The venue opened on 4 October 2019 with a performance by John Mayer during the European leg of his 2019 concert tour, I Guess I Just Feel Like World Tour.[7]

Events

Besides sports and concerts, the halls are regularly used for courses, seminars, congresses and trade fairs;[8] for example, the fish farming fair Aqua Nor and the fishing fair Nor-Fishing.[9][10]

Sport

Trondheim Spektrum will be one of the arenas where matches will be played in the preliminary rounds of the European Handball Championship in 2020 for both the men and women tournaments. Previously, matches during the IHF World Women's Handball Championship have also been held here in both 1993 and 1999, and during the 2008 European Men's Handball Championship. It will host the 2025 World Men's Handball Championship with the country, Croatia and Denmark.

Other sporting events to be held here include the Møbelringen Cup (in 2005 and 2009) and the 2016 Northern European Gymnastics Championships.[11]

Music and concerts

On 15 February 2020, the final of Melodi Grand Prix 2020 took place. This was the first time that Trondheim hosted a Melodi Grand Prix final, and marked the first time since Melodi Grand Prix 1989 that the final was not arranged in Oslo.[12] The venue then hosted the final of Melodi Grand Prix 2023 and is scheduled to host the final of Melodi Grand Prix 2024.[13]

Venues

The Trondheim Spektrum building is a multi-hall facility, of which five are suited for sports.

Hall A

The one used for big events, including handball championship matches (including the 2020 European Men's Handball Championship and the 2023 World Women's Handball Championship), Kolstad Håndball's matches in the EHF Champions League, Melodi Grand Prix, and concerts.

Occasionally, the hall has also been used for less high-profile events where expectations for spectators have been much lower, including, but not limited to, the above-mentioned trade fairs, the Norwegian International Taekwon-Do Federation championships,[14] and late 2022 upper secondary school exams.[15]

The stand configurations available include two-tier U-shaped main stands, and a single-tier stand on one of the short ends that can be extended for big matches, and retracted for concerts and ice rink events.

The ice rink configuration is virtually never used; however it is scheduled to host Disney on Ice in February 2024,[16] and was the focus of Norway's bid for the 2027 IIHF World Championship before the bid was withdrawn.

Hall D

The primary home of Byåsen HE, with seating for 3,000. All four stands can be retracted for the use of various amateur and youth clubs.

The hall was also used for the 2023 World Cheese Awards.[17] It is used as the FanZone during handball championships.

The hall was used for the men's 2021 Gjensidige Cup handball 4-nations tournament,[18] as Hall A had already been booked for the ITF Taekwon-Do Norwegian championships well in advance.

As of December 2023, it is the only hall in Spektrum where futsal at amateur and youth level is permitted.[19]

Hall F

Has one sole grandstand with seating for 1,033. The stand can be retracted for the use of various amateur and youth clubs.

Hall G

Dedicated to tennis, with two indoor hardcourts. Seating is almost non-existent in its default configuration. It is associated with the four nearby outdoor clay courts.

Hall E

Used primarily by youth clubs. As the hall is located in the basement, has a low roof, and has various support poles, it is unsuited to host full-size fields for virtually any sport.

Transport

Bus

A Bus from AtB at the Bus Charging Station Nidarø, beside the main building.

To get to the Arena, Line 12 trafficates the bus stop Nidarø right beside one of the entrances. Other approaches may include taking Metrobus Line 3 or regular lines 11, 75, 21, 28 and 26 to Skansen a bit north of the facility, and walking over the north-south bridge connecting the two parts.

From the southern and eastern suburbs, AtB line 1 and 2, as well as VærnesEkspressen southbound (but not northbound), allow transit to Line 12 at Studentersamfundet or Nidaros Cathedral, or simply walking to Spektrum from Studentersamfundet.

For northbound long-distance regional buses with blue exteriors, the closest stop is Olav Kyrres Gate. The closest southbound with the same bus type is Dronningens gate.

Airport

Trondheim Airport is 37 km away. A much less common option is Ørland Airport 105km away.

Train

Trondheim Central Station is 1.7km away.[20] For regional trains (Trønderbanen), Skansen Station is approximately 550m away.

The closest tram station (Gråkallbanen) is also at Skansen, approximately 500m away.

Other

A west-east bridge allow pedestrian (and to some degree bicycle) access from downtown Trondheim (commonly known as Midtbyen), Leüthenhaven, and Kalvskinnet.

Express boats from Vanvikan, Brekstad, and further southwest from Kristiansund, arrive 1.9km away. The Norwegian Coastal Express arrive approximately 2.9km away.

See also

References

  1. "Total kapasitet".
  2. "Trondhjems Tennisklub - Info in English". www.gustavus.no.
  3. "Veidekke to build Nye Nidarøhallen - Company disclosures - Veidekke ASA, Investor pages". veidekke.com.
  4. "Trondheim - Preliminary Round - Men's EHF EURO 2020". men2020.ehf-euro.com.
  5. "Hvorfor gjør vi det? – Nye Nidarøhallen".
  6. "Trondheim Spektrum arena selects ticketing partner". The Stadium Business. 21 June 2019.
  7. "Kommer til Norge". Dagbladet.no. 11 March 2019.
  8. "EUR-Lex - E2019C0523(01) - EN - EUR-Lex". eur-lex.europa.eu.
  9. "Record numbers at Aqua Nor". thefishsite.com.
  10. "Stor økning i antall besøkende på Nor-Fishing". 19 August 2016.
  11. Ole Kristian Heien Storsve (22 October 2016). "Nord Europeisk Mesterskap er i gang - Gym og turn". Gymogturn.no. Retrieved 31 October 2016.
  12. Thobroe, Grete (12 November 2019). "Melodi Grand Prix-finalen arrangeres i Trondheim Spektrum i 2020". NRK.
  13. "Norway's Melodi Grand Prix is heading back to its roots!". Eurovision.tv. EBU. 7 November 2023. Retrieved 7 November 2023.
  14. "NM/LM I TRONDHEIM!" (in Norwegian Bokmål). Trondheim Taekwon-Do Klubb. 3 September 2021. Retrieved 7 December 2023.
  15. "Skriftlig privatisteksamen i Trondheim Spektrum" (PDF) (in Norwegian Bokmål). Trøndelag County. Retrieved 7 December 2023.
  16. "Disney On Ice presenterer Mickey and Friends 2024" (in Norwegian Bokmål). Retrieved 7 December 2023.
  17. "Oste-VM kommer til Trondheim 26.-28.oktober 2023". Matriket Nord. Retrieved 7 December 2023.
  18. "Kjøp billetter til Gjensidige Cup nå!" (in Norwegian Bokmål). Norwegian Handball Federation. 26 September 2022. Retrieved 4 January 2024.
  19. "Idrettshaller" (in Norwegian Bokmål). Trondheim Municipality. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
  20. "Information for Trondheim Spektrum in Norway". Trondheim Spektrum.
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