List of covered stadiums by capacity
The following is a list of covered sports stadiums, ordered by capacity; that is the maximum number of spectators the stadium can accommodate for a sports event. This is intended to include only stadiums that are used for sports traditionally held outdoors. It is split into two sublists:
- Stadiums designed for field sports, such as baseball and any of a wide variety of football codes.
- Tennis stadiums (a traditional outdoor sport, but with a much smaller playing area)
Only domed and retractable roof stadiums are included, i.e. stadiums that cover both spectators and playing field. The stadiums are divided into current stadiums, closed stadiums, and future stadiums (those currently under-construction and those planned for construction).
Indoor arenas should not be included on this list as there is a separate list for them.
Current stadiums
Field sports
# | Stadium | Capacity | City | Country | Domed or Retractable roof | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | AT&T Stadium | 80,000 | Arlington, Texas | United States | RR | Capacity expandable to 105,000. |
2 | Millennium Stadium | 74,500 | Cardiff | Wales | RR | |
3 | Georgia Dome | 74,288 | Atlanta, Georgia | United States | D | Set to be demolished in 2017 after the opening of Mercedes-Benz Stadium. |
4 | Mercedes-Benz Superdome | 73,208 | New Orleans, Louisiana | United States | D | Capacity expandable to 76,468 |
5 | NRG Stadium | 71,795 | Houston, Texas | United States | RR | |
6 | Piter Arena | 66,881 | St. Petersburg | Russia | RR, retractable playing surface | |
7 | U.S. Bank Stadium | 66,655 | Minneapolis, Minnesota | United States | D | Capacity expandable to 73,000 |
8 | Olympic Stadium | 66,308 | Montreal, Quebec | Canada | D | Originally opened without a roof. Roof was originally a retractable design, but due to operating issues the roof was later removed, briefly leaving the venue again roofless, before being replaced with a fixed-roof. |
9 | The Dome at America's Center | 66,000 | St. Louis, Missouri | United States | D | Capacity expandable to 70,000 |
10 | Alamodome | 65,000 | San Antonio, Texas | United States | D | Capacity expandable to 72,000 |
11 | Ford Field | 65,000 | Detroit, Michigan | United States | D | Capacity expandable to 70,000 |
12 | University of Phoenix Stadium | 63,400 | Glendale, Arizona | United States | RR; retractable playing surface | Seating capacity expandable to 72,200 (over 78,600 with standing room). |
13 | Lucas Oil Stadium | 62,421 | Indianapolis, Indiana | United States | RR | Capacity expandable to 70,000. |
14 | Stadion Narodowy | 58,145 | Warsaw | Poland | RR | |
15 | Arena Națională | 55,634 | Bucharest | Romania | RR | |
16 (tie) | National Stadium | 55,000 | Singapore | Singapore | RR | |
Tokyo Dome | Tokyo | Japan | D | |||
18 | Veltins-Arena | 54,740 | Gelsenkirchen | Germany | RR; retractable playing surface | Capacity 61,973 with standing rows |
19 | Esprit Arena | 54,600 | Düsseldorf | Germany | RR | |
20 | BC Place | 54,320 | Vancouver, British Columbia | Canada | RR | The stadium originally featured a fixed roof, which was later replaced with a retractable roof. |
21 | Rogers Centre | 54,000 | Toronto, Ontario | Canada | RR | |
22 | Amsterdam Arena | 53,502 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | RR | |
23 | Etihad Stadium | 53,359 | Melbourne | Australia | RR | |
24 | Commerzbank-Arena | 51,500 | Frankfurt | Germany | RR | The stadium originally was roofless, with a retractable roof later added to it. |
25 | Stade Pierre-Mauroy | 50,186 | Villeneuve d'Ascq | France | RR | |
26 | Friends Arena | 50,000 | Solna | Sweden | RR | |
27 | Carrier Dome | 49,250 | Syracuse, New York | United States | D | |
28 | Chase Field | 48,519 | Phoenix, Arizona | United States | RR | |
29 | Safeco Field | 47,574 | Seattle, Washington | United States | RR | |
30 | Toyota Stadium | 45,000 | Toyota | Japan | RR | |
31 | Arena da Baixada | 43,000 | Curitiba | Brazil | RR | The stadium originally was roofless, with a retractable roof later added to it. |
32 | Tropicana Field | 42,735 | St. Petersburg, Florida | United States | D | Sections of seating are closed and covered with tarps, functionally bringing the seating capacity down to 31,042. |
33 | Miller Park | 41,900 | Milwaukee, Wisconsin | United States | RR | |
34 | Minute Maid Park | 41,574 | Houston, Texas | United States | RR | |
35 | Sapporo Dome | 41,484 | Sapporo | Japan | D; retractable playing surface | Capacity expandable to 53,796 |
36 | Nagoya Dome | 40,500 | Nagoya | Japan | D | |
37 | Ōita Bank Dome | 40,000 | Ōita | Japan | RR | |
38 | Fukuoka Dome | 38,561 | Fukuoka | Japan | RR | |
39 | Parken Stadium | 38,065 | Copenhagen | Denmark | RR | |
40 | Marlins Park | 36,742 | Miami, Florida | United States | RR | Capacity is 37,442 with standing room. |
41 | Saitama Super Arena | 36,500 | Saitama | Japan | D | Stadium-arena hybrid. A movable seating structure allows it to house field sports and be configured as an arena. |
42 | Kyocera Dome | 36,477 | Osaka | Japan | D | |
42 | Ordos Stadium | 35,107 | Ordos | China | RR | |
44 | Seibu Dome | 33,921 | Tokorozawa | Japan | RR | |
45 | Nantong Stadium | 32,244 | Nantong | China | RR | |
46 | Forsyth Barr Stadium at University Plaza | 30,748 | Dunedin | New Zealand | D | Expandable seating capacity |
47 | Kobe City Misaki Park Stadium | 30,132 | Kobe | Japan | RR | The stadium originally was roofless, with a retractable roof later added to it. |
48 (tie) | Astana Arena | 30,000 | Astana | Kazakhstan | RR | |
Tele2 Arena | Stockholm | Sweden | RR | Capacity is 33,000 with standing room. | ||
50 | GelreDome | 25,000 | Arnhem | Netherlands | RR; retractable playing surface | |
51 | Fargodome | 19,000 | Fargo, North Dakota | United States | D | |
52 | Gocheok Sky Dome | 16,813 | Seoul | South Korea | D | |
53 | UNI-Dome | 16,324 | Cedar Falls, Iowa | United States | D | |
54 | Kibbie Dome | 16,000 | Moscow, Idaho | United States | D | |
55 (tie) | Odate Jukai Dome | 15,000 | Odate | Japan | D | |
Telenor Arena | 15,000 | Bærum | Norway | D | ||
57 | Alerus Center | 13,500 | Grand Forks, North Dakota | United States | D | |
58 (tie) | Holt Arena | 12,000 | Pocatello, Idaho | United States | D | |
The Ford Center at The Star | Frisco, Texas | United States | D | Used for high school football by the Frisco Independent School District and serves as the Dallas Cowboys' practice facility.[1][2][3] | ||
60 | Walkup Skydome | 10,000 | Flagstaff, Arizona | United States | D | Capacity expandable to 11,230. |
61 (tie) | DakotaDome | 10,000 | Vermillion, South Dakota | United States | D | |
Tacoma Dome | Tacoma, Washington | United States | D | |||
63 | ETSU/Mountain States Health Alliance Athletic Center | 8,539 | Johnson City, Tennessee | United States | D | . |
64 | Superior Dome | 8,000 | Marquette, Michigan | United States | D | |
65 | Round Valley Ensphere | 5,500 | Eagar, Arizona | United States | D | |
66 | Ultimate Soccer Arenas | 5,000 | Pontiac, Michigan | United States | D |
Tennis/ other
# | Stadium | Capacity | City | Country | Domed or Retractable roof | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Arthur Ashe Stadium | 23,771 | New York City, New York | United States | RR | Retractable-roofed tennis arena. Originally open-air. |
2 (tie) | Centre Court | 15,000 | London | England | RR | Originally an open-air stadium |
National Tennis Center Center Court | Beijing | China | RR | |||
Plaza de Toros La Macarena | Medellín | Colombia | RR | Retractable-roofed bullfighting arena. Originally open-air. | ||
Qizhong Forest Sports City Arena | Shanghai | China | RR | |||
3 | Rod Laver Arena | 14,820 | Melbourne | Australia | RR | Multi-purpose arena with retractable roof, part of the National Tennis Centre at Melbourne Park (part of the Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Precinct) |
4 | Perth Arena | 13,910 | Perth | Australia | RR | |
5 | Tennisstadion am Rothenbaum | 13,200 | Hamburg | Germany | RR | |
6 | Estadio Manolo Santana | 12,442 | Madrid | Spain | RR | |
7 | Gerry Weber Stadion | 12,300 | Halle (Westfalen) | Germany | RR | |
8 | Plaza de Toros de La Ribera | 11,046 | Logroño | Spain | RR | Retractable-roofed bullring. |
9 | Iradier Arena | 10,714 | Vitoria-Gasteiz | Spain | RR | Retractable-roofed arena |
10 | Hisense Arena | 10,500 | Melbourne | Australia | RR | Multi-purpose arena with retractable roof, part of the National Tennis Centre |
11 | Ariake Coliseum | 10,000 | Koto, Tokyo | Japan | RR | |
12 | Margaret Court Arena | 7,500 | Melbourne | Australia | RR [4][5] | Multi-purpose arena with retractable roof, part of the National Tennis Centre |
13 | Campo Pequeno bullring | 6,869 | Lisbon | Portugal | RR | Retractable-roofed bullfighting stadium. Originally was open-air. |
14 | Pat Rafter Arena | 5,500 | Tennyson, Queensland | Australia | D | Expandable to 7,000 |
15 | Arènes de Metz | 5,300 | Metz | France | D | |
16 | Kungliga tennishallen | 5,000 | Stockholm | Sweden | D | |
17 | Caja Mágica Court 1 | 3,500 | Madrid | Spain | RR | |
18 | Caja Mágica Court 2 | 2,500 | Madrid | Spain | RR | |
19 | Aqua Wing Arena | 2,000 | Nagano | Japan | RR | Retractable-roofed aquatics stadium |
Closed and demolished stadiums
Field Sports
(All of these were domed)
Defunct and Demolished Stadiums
# | Stadium | Capacity | City | Country | Closed | Demolished | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Silverdome | 82,000 | Pontiac, Michigan | United States | 2013 | TBD | Still standing (defunct and roofless) |
2 | Kingdome | 66,000 | Seattle, Washington | United States | 2000 | March 26, 2000 | |
3 | Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome | 64,111 | Minneapolis, Minnesota | United States | 2013 | January 18, 2014 | |
4 | NRG Astrodome | 62,439 | Houston, Texas | United States | 2004 | N/A | Still standing (defunct) |
5 | RCA Dome | 57,981 | Indianapolis, Indiana | United States | 2008 | December 20, 2008 |
Formerly Covered Stadiums
# | Stadium | Capacity (previous to removal of roof) | City | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Fisht Olympic Stadium | 40,000 | Sochi | Russia | Roof was designed for the 2014 Winter Olympics opening and closing ceremonies and the 2014 Winter Paralympics opening and closing ceremonies as a temporary structure, and it is being removed as part of a renovation in preparation for the 2018 World Cup.[6][7][8] |
Tennis/ other
# | Stadium | Capacity | City | Country | Domed or Retractable roof | Closed | Demolished | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Civic Arena | 17,537 | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | United States | RR | 2010 | 2011-2012 | Held tennis events, but primarily served as a NHL arena. Originally built for use by the Pittsburgh Civic Light Opera. Was first RR sports venue in the world. Even though it was RR venue, cost led it to be only partially retracted after 1995, and permanently closed after 2001.[9][10][11][12] |
Future Stadiums
Under-Construction
Field Sports
# | Stadium | Capacity | City | Country | Domed or Retractable roof | Planned opening | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Lusail Iconic Stadium | 86,250 | Lusail | Qatar | RR | 2022 | To be downsized to a 20,000-seat venue following the 2022 FIFA World Cup |
2 | Los Angeles Stadium at Hollywood Park | 80,000 | Inglewood, California | United States | RR | 2020 | expandable to 100,000 |
3 | Mercedes-Benz Stadium | 71,000 | Atlanta, Georgia | United States | RR | 2017 | Expandable to 75,000 |
4 | Kai Tak Stadium | 50,000 | Kowloon | Hong Kong | RR | 2020 | |
5 | Taipei Dome | 40,000 | Taipei | Taiwan | D | ||
6 | U Arena | 32,000 | Nanterre | France | D | 2017 | Stadium-arena hybrid. A movable seating structure allows it to house field sports and be configured as an arena. |
Tennis/ other
# | Stadium | Capacity | City | Country | Domed or Retractable roof | Scheduled opening | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | All Net Resort and Arena | 22,800 | Las Vegas | United States | RR | 2019 | Multi-purpose arena with a retractable roof |
2 | Estadio Mary Terán de Weiss | 15,500 | Buenos Aires | Argentina | RR | Existing stadiums with the addition of a retractable roof. | |
3 | New Louis Armstrong Stadium | 15,000 | New York City, New York | United States | RR | 2018 |
Planned
Field Sports
# | Stadium | Capacity | City | Country | Domed or Retractable roof | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Las Vegas Stadium | 65,000 | Las Vegas | United States | D | Expandable to 72,000 |
2 (tie) | CalgaryNEXT stadium | 50,000 | Calgary | Canada | D | Capacity to be between 30,000 and 50,000 |
The JSU Domed Venue | Jackson, Mississippi | United States | D | [13] | ||
3 | AC Milan Emirates Stadium | 48,000 | Milan | Italy | RR | Planned opening in 2018[14] |
4 | New Rangers Ballpark | 44,000 | Arlington, Texas | United States | RR | Capacity between 42,000 and 44,000 |
5 | NSU Domed Stadium | 39,000 | Norfolk, Virginia | United States | D | Planned opening in 2017 will used for Football, Basketball & Track and Field. It is to be built on the campus of Norfolk State University |
6 | Rays Ballpark | 35,000 | Tampa Bay Area, Florida | United States | RR | Plans currently on hold |
Tennis
# | Stadium | Capacity | City | Country | Domed or Retractable roof | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Court Philippe Chatrier | 14,840 | Paris | France | RR | Existing stadium with the addition of a retractable roof planned for completion by 2019 |
2 | Stade Roland Garros 4th stadium | 14,600 | Paris | France | RR | Planned for completion by 2019 |
3 | No. 1 Court | 11,430 | London | England | RR | Existing stadium with the addition of a retractable roof planned for completion by 2019 |
4 | Canada Stadium | 9,000 | Ramat HaSharon | Israel | RR | |
5 | ASB Centre | 3,200 | Auckland | New Zealand | RR | Existing stadium with the planned addition of a retractable roof |
See also
References
- ↑ Smith, Corbett (May 20, 2015). "A sneak peek on construction at the Cowboys’ Star Event Center, also the first domed high school venue in Texas". highschoolsportsblog.dallasnews.com. Dallas Morning News. Retrieved June 25, 2015.
- ↑ "Dallas Cowboys’ New Frisco World Headquarters and Multi-Use Event Center to Be Called The Ford Center at The Star". www.dallascowboys.com. Dallas Cowboys. September 11, 2015. Retrieved October 22, 2015.
- ↑ Smith, Corbett (May 20, 2015). "A sneak peek on construction at the Cowboys’ Star Event Center, also the first domed high school venue in Texas". http://highschoolsportsblog.dallasnews.com. Dallas News. Retrieved October 22, 2015. External link in
|website=
(help) - ↑ Rollo, Joe (January 9, 2014). "Margaret Court Arena revamp misses chance of greatnes". www.smh.com.au. Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved January 13, 2014.
- ↑ "Australian Open could be played entirely indoors, as Margaret Court Arena gets retractable roof". www.abc.net.au. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. January 3, 2014. Retrieved January 13, 2014.
- ↑ Rosenfield, Karissa (February 7, 2014). "The Stadiums of Sochi". www.archdaily.com. Arch Daily. Retrieved September 2, 2014.
- ↑ Sweet, Rod. "FIFA "happy" with Russia’s World Cup preparations – for the moment". www.globalconreview.com.
- ↑ "http://www.themoscowtimes.com/mobile/business/article/russia-to-spend-50-million-taking-roof-off-sochi-olympic-stadium/514657.html". www.themoscowtimes.com. Moscow Times. Retrieved January 23, 2015. External link in
|title=
(help) - ↑ http://www.post-gazette.com/local/city/2010/05/25/Mellon-Arena-roof-may-open-for-final-show/stories/201005250282
- ↑ Eberson, Sharon (May 30, 2010). "Arena timeline -- Highlights of 50 years of entertainment - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
- ↑ https://web.archive.org/web/20011124133823/http://mellonarena.com/info/history.asp
- ↑ http://pabook.libraries.psu.edu/palitmap/MellonArena.html
- ↑ "The JSU Domed Venue". www.jsuma.edu. Jackson State University. Retrieved August 20, 2014.
- ↑ "AC Milan unveils plans to open new 48,000-seat stadium with retractable roof in 2018". The Republic. Columbus, IN. Associated Press. February 4, 2015. Retrieved February 18, 2015.
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