Kretinga Arena
Kretingos arena
Full nameKretingos sporto centras
AddressSavanorių g. 23A, 97111
Kretinga
Lithuania
Coordinates55°53′36″N 21°15′13″E / 55.8934°N 21.2537°E / 55.8934; 21.2537
OwnerKretinga District Municipality
Capacity822 (basketball)[1]
Record attendance1,211[1][2]
Construction
Broke ground1 December 2015
Opened26 October 2023
Construction cost€8.5 million
ArchitectSimper
General contractorLitCon (2015–20)
HSC Baltic (2021–23)
Tenants
Kretinga (NKL)
Website
kretingasc.lt

Kretinga Arena is a 822-seat indoor arena located in Kretinga, Lithuania. The venue is compactly located on the Kretinga stadium's land lot, to the right of the stadium. It is the home court to basketball team Kretinga.

History

Plans for a new indoor arena were confirmed in 2006 as part of the Lithuania's government approved strategy for the expansion of Lithuanian sport objects.[3] UAB Simper designed the building in 2013, and UAB LitCon signed up as the general contractor on 27 August 2015.[3]

The foundation stone was laid on 1 December 2015, with the project confirmed to cost €6.25 million, aiming for completion by the start of 2020.[3] The project was criticised by the LitCon's CEO Linas Piliponis for its drawled out financing timetable, a staple of the government budget's funded projects in Lithuania, with the statements that the company could built the arena in a two years period if the funding for the construction could be found and approved.[3]

Over the span of the next several years, the endeavor has consistently grappled with rumors regarding the contractor's financial instability, stemming from its endured reputational damage from various other public projects that were failed to be delivered on time, budget or both as well as cancellations of some contracts.[4] Ultimately, the situation led to the company filling for bankruptcy protection in June 2019. The contract was then terminated in March 2020, with 85% of the work completed.[4]

UAB HSC Baltic won the tender to complete the construction of the building in Spring 2021, albeit with a cost increase of €2.177 million.[5] BC Kretinga were expected to move in during the second part of the 2022–23 NKL season. Yet, negotiations on multiple identified defects ensued, leading to additional delays and subsequently pushing the restart of construction works to the year 2022.[6]

On 26 October 2023, the arena was inaugurated with the first basketball game between BC Kretinga and BC Žalgiris-2 of the NKL, which ended in a 77–98 loss by the hosts. Around 1,300 spectators filled up the arena,[1] officially reported as 1,211,[2] setting a hardly beatable record for the 822-seater venue.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Naujais Kretingos krepšinio namais besidžiaugiantis Mikaločius: "Mano siekis būti pirmiems pagal lankomumą"". Mūsų Kretinga (in Lithuanian). 4 November 2023. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
  2. 1 2 "Kauno r. Atletas / 2023-11-04 / Rungtynės". NKL (in Lithuanian). 4 November 2023. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Vitkauskienė, Vitalija (4 December 2015). "Paskelbė sporto komplekso Kretingoje statybos pradžią". Pajūrio naujienos (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 11 January 2024.
  4. 1 2 "Kretinga nutraukia 6,3 mln. Eur vertės sutartį su "LitCon"". Verslo žinios (in Lithuanian). 6 March 2020. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
  5. "Sporto ir sveikatingumo komplekse vykdomiems darbams įsibėgėti trukdo praeities klaidos". Kretingos rajono savivaldybė (in Lithuanian). 5 August 2021. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
  6. Puišienė, Audronė (31 December 2021). "2021-ieji Kretingai, rajonui ir jo žmonėms: ar pavyko įveikti iššūkius". Pajūrio naujienos (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 11 January 2024.
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