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Palasport Mario Radi

Basketball venues in ItalyBuildings and structures in CremonaIndoor arenas in ItalyItalian sports venue stubsSports venues in Lombardy
Volleyball venues in Italy
PalaRadi (Vanoli Cremona Granarolo Bologna)
PalaRadi (Vanoli Cremona Granarolo Bologna)

The PalaRadi (officially Palasport Mario Radi, formerly known as Palasport Ca' de Somenzi) is an indoor arena located in Cremona, Italy. The capacity of the arena is 3,519 people and it opened in 1980. It is the home of Vanoli Cremona of the Lega Basket Serie A and Pomì Casalmaggiore of the Women's volleyball Serie A1. The venue capacity was first increased in the eighties to 2,918 spectators, and then to 3,519 after a second renovation in 2009, in which the arena was also renamed after Mario Radi.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Palasport Mario Radi (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Palasport Mario Radi
Piazza Ennio Zelioli Lanzini, Cremona

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 45.1511 ° E 10.0341 °
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Address

Cremona Fiere

Piazza Ennio Zelioli Lanzini
26100 Cremona
Lombardy, Italy
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PalaRadi (Vanoli Cremona Granarolo Bologna)
PalaRadi (Vanoli Cremona Granarolo Bologna)
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Nearby Places

San Facio, Cremona
San Facio, Cremona

San Facio, also commonly called the Chiesa del Foppone, is a late Baroque architecture, Roman Catholic, now deconsecrated church in Cremona, region of Lombardy, Italy. The church was completed in 1781, to officiate the burials in the surrounding ossuary of those dying in the adjacent hospital (Ospedale Maggiore e Ospedale Vecchio) of Cremona. It was called Foppone because of it operational similarity to the Nuovi Sepolcri (1695) in Milan. The surrounding large cemetery crypts in the portico formed part of an 18th-century urge to provide, systematize, and formalize the burials for the indigent. From the courtyard, the architecture seems dour except for the domes of the church. The interior of the church in Greek Cross layout, is decorated by Giovanni Manfredini with Grotteschi, an ornamentation then utilized in cemetery churches due to their prevalence in Roman catacombs. A guide from 1820 cites the first altar on the right of the entrance has a Caravaggesque canvas depicting Christ healing the blind man, by Pietro Martire Neri or Negri. The main altarpiece is a Deposition from the Cross with the Virgin Mother, the Magdalen, and Joseph d' Arimathea (1569) by Vincenzo Campi. The altar on the left, has a Virgin and Child with San Facio with a Basket of Bread dispensing food to the poor and maimed (1593) by Andrea Mainardi (called il Chiaveghino). The site was closed for burials in the 1970s and administration transferred to the Commune.