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Tivoli Hall

1965 establishments in Slovenia20th-century architecture in SloveniaBasketball venues in SloveniaHDD Olimpija LjubljanaHandball venues in Slovenia
Indoor arenas in SloveniaIndoor ice hockey venues in SloveniaKK OlimpijaSports venues completed in 1965Sports venues in LjubljanaTivoli City ParkUse mdy dates from September 2013Volleyball venues in SloveniaŠiška District
Tivoli Hall panorama
Tivoli Hall panorama

Tivoli Hall (Slovene: Hala Tivoli) is a complex of two multi-purpose indoor sports arenas in the Tivoli City Park in Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia. The complex was opened in 1965. The larger, ice hockey arena has a seating capacity of 7,000 people and is the home of HK Olimpija ice hockey club. During the EuroBasket 2013, the capacity was adjusted to 5,600.The smaller basketball hall has a capacity for 4,500 spectators and is the secondary home venue of the basketball team KK Cedevita Olimpija.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Tivoli Hall (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Tivoli Hall
Celovška cesta, Ljubljana Rožna dolina

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Wikipedia: Tivoli HallContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 46.059722222222 ° E 14.495 °
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Address

Hala Tivoli

Celovška cesta 25
1132 Ljubljana, Rožna dolina
Slovenia
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Tivoli Hall panorama
Tivoli Hall panorama
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Nearby Places

Sts. Cyril and Methodius Church (Ljubljana)
Sts. Cyril and Methodius Church (Ljubljana)

Sts. Cyril and Methodius Church (Serbian: Храм светих Кирила и Методија/Hram svetih Kirila i Metodija, Slovene: Cerkev sv. Cirila in Metoda), commonly known as the Orthodox Church (Slovene: Pravoslavna cerkev, Serbian: Pravoslavna crkva), is an Eastern Orthodox church building located in Trubar Park (Slovene: Trubarjev park), between Bleiweis Street (Bleiweisova cesta) and Prešeren Street (Prešernova cesta), north of the Museum of Modern Art and west of the National Gallery of Slovenia. It belongs to the Metropolitanate of Zagreb and Ljubljana of the Serbian Orthodox Church. Built in Serbo-Byzantine Revival, the church has five domes with golden crosses at their top. It was built from 1932 to 1936 by Ivan Bricelj based on plans by the architect Momir Korunović. The frescoes in the interior were painted by the Serbian painters Dragomir Jašović, Miša Mladenović, and Danica Mladenovič from 1986 until 1997. The iconostasis is work of a prominent woodcarver workshop from Debar (Macedonia) and has been decorated with icons by the Slovene painter Mirko Šubic, who created them in 1940.The foundation was blessed by Serbian Patriarch Varnava in 1932. The church was blessed on 23 October 2005 by the Serbian Patriarch Pavle in the presence of President Janez Drnovšek and Ljubljana's Roman Catholic metropolite Alojz Uran. This is also the date of official opening of the church. At the blessing they installed the relics of Saint Athanasius, which were brought from the Vatican by Tomáš Špidlík and symbolised the integration of one Christian unity (Orthodox and Catholic). In 2009, the church was visited by Serbian President Boris Tadić. Since 10 April 2010, the church has the status of a cultural monument of local significance.