Misplaced Pages

Riocentro

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Riocentro Sports Complex) Exhibition and convention center located in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

22°58′45″S 43°24′48″W / 22.97917°S 43.41333°W / -22.97917; -43.41333 Riocentro is an exhibition and convention center located in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Built in 1977, it is the largest exhibition center in Latin America.

Notable events

1981 May Day attack

Main article: Riocentro attack

On April 30, 1981, during a May Day music concert, Riocentro was the target of a terrorist attack by hardliner members of the Brazilian military dictatorship (1964–1985). Sergeant Guilherme Pereira do Rosário and then-Captain Wilson Dias Machado, nowadays a Colonel, were responsible for detonating two bombs at the venue. Around 9 p.m., however, one of the bombs exploded in the lap of Sergeant Rosário, killing him and seriously wounding Machado. A second bomb exploded a few miles away at a powerhouse responsible for providing electrical energy to Riocentro; it was thrown over the fence and exploded on the ground, and the electric power supply was never interrupted that evening. The government immediately blamed left-wing radicals for the attack. This theory had no support at the time of the event and nowadays there is strong evidence that the attack was planned by the hardline sector of the government to convince the moderate sector that the left-wing urban guerrilla was still active and that a new wave of political repression was required. This episode marked the decline of the military regime in Brazil, which would officially end four years later.

Earth Summit

In 1992, Riocentro hosted the United Nations Earth Summit.

Sports events

In 2007, Riocentro hosted a variety of events for the Pan American Games in several pavilions. Capacity of the pavilions ranges from 2,000 people to 4,500 people. When Rio was bidding for the 2016 Summer Olympics and Paralympics which it won in October 2009, four of its six pavilions were proposed as venues. During these games, Pavilion 2 hosted the Olympic boxing competitions, Pavilion 3 hosted the Olympic and Paralympic table tennis competitions, Pavilion 4 hosted the badminton competitions, and Pavilion 6 hosted the Olympic weightlifting and Paralympic powerlifting events. During the 2014 FIFA World Cup, Riocentro was utilised as the headquarters of the International Broadcast Centre (IBC).

In November 2022, the arena will host the Challengers Stage and the Legends Stage of the IEM Rio Major 2022, the eighteenth Counter-Strike: Global Offensive (CS:GO) Major Championship.

References

  1. "Como deveria ser o ataque a bomba no Riocentro - Revista CartaCapital" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2015-06-04.
  2. "A Bomba do Riocentro e a Farsa dos Militares Brasileiros" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2015-06-04.
  3. "Relatório da CNV aponta que atentado do Riocentro foi realizado por militares para retardar a abertura política" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2015-06-04.

External links

Venues of the 2016 Summer Olympics (Rio de Janeiro)
Barra Cluster
Copacabana Cluster
Deodoro Cluster
Maracanã-Engenho de Dentro Cluster
Football stadia
Venues of the 2016 Summer Paralympics
Barra cluster
Copacabana cluster
Deodoro cluster
Maracanã cluster
Olympic venues in badminton
20th century
21st century
Olympic venues in boxing
20th century
21st century
Olympic venues in table tennis
20th century
21st century
Olympic venues in weightlifting
19th century
20th century
21st century
Pan American Games venues in handball
1987
Hoosier Dome
1999
Winnipeg Convention Centre
2003
Handball Hall
2007
Riocentro Complex (IBC/MPC)
2011
San Rafael Gymnasium
2015
Exhibition Centre
2019
Polideportivo 1
2023
Viña del Mar City Gym
Categories: