AIS Arena

AIS Arena
The Palace

Canberra Capitals at the AIS Arena
Full name AIS Arena
Former names National Indoor Sports Centre
Location Bruce, Canberra, ACT
Coordinates 35°14′52″S 149°6′4″E / 35.24778°S 149.10111°E / -35.24778; 149.10111Coordinates: 35°14′52″S 149°6′4″E / 35.24778°S 149.10111°E / -35.24778; 149.10111
Owner Australian Institute of Sport
Operator Australian Institute of Sport
Capacity Basketball / Netball: 5,200
Concerts (full): 4,264
Concerts (end mode): 3,450[1]
Field size 45.15m x 21.60m (full seating)
Surface Customisable
Construction
Broke ground 1980
Built 1980
Opened 26 January 1981
Architect Philip Cox & Partners
Tenants
Canberra Cannons (NBL) (1981–2003)
AIS Canberra Darters (CBT) (2003–2008)
University of Canberra Capitals (WNBL) (1984–present)
Australian Institute of Sport, (WNBL) (1983–2012)
Canberra Roller Derby League

AIS Arena is a multi-purpose arena in Canberra, Australia. Its capacity is 5,200 and it was built in 1980. The arena was opened by the Prime Minister of Australia, Malcolm Fraser, on 26 January 1981 and was originally named the National Indoor Sports Centre and was the inaugural home of the Australian Institute of Sport.

History

The Arena was designed by Philip Cox & Partners. Architectural features include a 1200 tonne suspended concrete panel roof supported by 12 steel masts and 36 mainstay cables. The roof has a span of 100.4 metres. The stadium is partly set into the ground to reduce its scale and to establish a visual connection between the landscape and the mast and cable structure of the roof. The AIS Arena is able to seat up to 5,200 people.

Sport

The AIS Arena is home to the Canberra Capitals and Australian Institute of Sport (AIS) who play in the Women's National Basketball League (WNBL). While the AIS won one WNBL championship the Capitals have been far more successful and have won a record seven WNBL championships.

The AIS Arena was also home to defunct National Basketball League team the Canberra Cannons. The Cannons would win three championships while in Canberra yet they never got to celebrate a home grand final win as their three NBL titles (1983, 1984 and 1988) were all won in Melbourne. While the Cannons were playing at the arena it was known as "The Palace", in part due to the AIS Arena being by far the largest (from 1981-1983 the next largest was the 3,000 capacity Apollo Stadium in Adelaide), and the most modern venue used in the NBL during the leagues early years. The arena would be superseded as the largest NBL venue in 1984 when the Coburg Giants (later North Melbourne Giants) moved into the 7,200 capacity Glass House.

The Cannons would play at the AIS Arena from 1981–2003 before the team moved to Newcastle to become the Hunter Pirates. Among those who played for the Cannons during their time in Canberra include Olympians Phil Smyth, Mark Dalton and Ray Borner, former Denver Nuggets NBA guard Darnell Mee, as well as Willie Simmons, Joe Hurst, James Crawford, Tad Dufelmeier, Herb Mceachin, Robert Rose, and C. J. Bruton.

As the AIS Arena is in the nation's capital, it also plays semi-regular host to the Australian Boomers and Australian Opals men's and women's senior basketball teams, as well as the Australian Netball Diamonds.

The arena is also the home of the Canberra Roller Derby League

Concerts

The arena doesn't only host sporting events and can be configured in different ways. It can be used for trade shows, gala dinners, exhibitions or even as a cocktail venue with room for up to 2,500 guests. The arena is also used for major indoor concerts in Canberra with musical acts such as P!nk, Alice Cooper Lady Gaga, Delta Goodrem and Kelly Clarkson performing there. The AIS Arena has a capacity for 4,264 during concerts.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-12-10. Retrieved 2010-12-22.

External links

Media related to AIS Arena at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.