Minsk-Arena
| Minsk Arena in 12 March 2024 | |
| Location | Minsk, Belarus | 
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 53°56′11″N 27°28′58″E / 53.9365°N 27.4829°E | 
| Owner | Ministry of Sports and Tourism of the Republic of Belarus | 
| Operator | The Main Department of Sports and Tourism of the Minsk City Executive Committee | 
| Capacity | Ice hockey:15,086 (main arena) | 
| Acreage | 72,579 sq.m (main arena) | 
| Construction | |
| Broke ground | 2006 | 
| Built | 2006–2009 | 
| Opened | 30 January 2010 | 
| Construction cost | $ 350 million ($174,7 million main arena) | 
| Architect | V. Kutsko, V. Budaev, A. Nitievsky, A. Shabalin (Institute Belgosproect) | 
| General contractor | Minskpromstroy LLC | 
| Tenants | |
| Website | |
| www | |
Minsk Arena (Belarusian: Мінск-Арэна) is the main indoor arena in Minsk, Belarus. The Minsk-Arena complex includes the main multi-purpose arena (capable of hosting 15,000 spectators) with an open multi-level parking lot (with 1,080 parking spaces) alongside an interconnected 2,000-seat velodrome and a 3,000-seat speed skating rink.