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Arena Birmingham

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Arena Birmingham

Birmingham still calls it the NIA, whatever the sponsors say. Utilita Arena Birmingham on King Edwards Road, beside the canals at Brindleyplace in the city centre, opened on 4 October 1991 as the National Indoor Arena - the largest indoor arena in the UK at the time - with sprinter Linford Christie doing the honours. The NEC Group venue has since cycled through names - Barclaycard Arena from 2014, Arena Birmingham from 2017, Utilita from April 2020 - while remaining the second city's big room throughout. Built as a sporting venue, it drifted quickly and profitably into entertainment: the flexible bowl runs from about 2,400 in intimate configurations to 13,312 fully seated and 16,118 with a standing floor, and a 2013-14 redevelopment - reopened by Michael Buble - modernised the concourses, hospitality and the vast glazed entrance. More than 17 million visitors have passed through for concerts, comedy, family shows and conferences, with the unsigned-artists stage in the foyer a small signature touch before headline shows. Sport remains a parallel identity: the arena hosts the All England Open badminton championships and the Birmingham Indoor Grand Prix athletics meeting, and staged gymnastics at the 2022 Commonwealth Games. The canalside location puts Brindleyplace's restaurant quarter at the doors, Birmingham New Street and Snow Hill stations within a 15-minute walk, and two large car parks on site - while the NEC Group's sister venues, Resorts World Arena and the NEC itself, let the group route any size of show through the city. The building also carries broadcast history: Gladiators was taped here in both its 1990s original and 2020s revival, and the arena's athletics track configuration made it British indoor sport's living room for three decades. The B1 configuration - a curtained 6,825-seat mode - lets mid-size tours play the big building without the empty-seat optics, one reason the venue's calendar stays dense across genres and seasons.

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Type: Stadium / Arena

Address: King Edwards Road, Birmingham, United Kingdom, B1 2AA

Website: https://www.utilitaarenabham.co.uk

Capacity: 15800

Opening Date: 04/10/1991

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