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polideportivo+fernando+martín Latitude and Longitude:

40°16′57″N 3°48′2″W / 40.28250°N 3.80056°W / 40.28250; -3.80056
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Polideportivo Fernando Martín
Location Fuenlabrada, Spain
Coordinates 40°16′57″N 3°48′2″W / 40.28250°N 3.80056°W / 40.28250; -3.80056
Public transit at Fuenlabrada Central
Owner Fuenlabrada City Hall
Capacity5,700
SurfaceParquet Floor
Opened1991
Tenants
Baloncesto Fuenlabrada (1991–)
KK Partizan (1991–1992)

Pabellón Polideportivo Municipal Fernando Martin is an arena in Fuenlabrada, Madrid Province, Spain. Opened in September 1991, [1] and named for the Spanish basketball player Fernando Martín Espina, the arena has a seating capacity for 5,700 people. It is primarily used for basketball and is the home arena of Alta Gestión Fuenlabrada. [1]

During the group stages of 1991-92 Euroleague, the arena was home to Serbian club KK Partizan, which was forbidden by FIBA from playing its home games on home soil due to the war that was starting in SFR Yugoslavia. [2]

References

40°16′57″N 3°48′2″W / 40.28250°N 3.80056°W / 40.28250; -3.80056



polideportivo+fernando+martín Latitude and Longitude:

40°16′57″N 3°48′2″W / 40.28250°N 3.80056°W / 40.28250; -3.80056
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Polideportivo Fernando Martín
Location Fuenlabrada, Spain
Coordinates 40°16′57″N 3°48′2″W / 40.28250°N 3.80056°W / 40.28250; -3.80056
Public transit at Fuenlabrada Central
Owner Fuenlabrada City Hall
Capacity5,700
SurfaceParquet Floor
Opened1991
Tenants
Baloncesto Fuenlabrada (1991–)
KK Partizan (1991–1992)

Pabellón Polideportivo Municipal Fernando Martin is an arena in Fuenlabrada, Madrid Province, Spain. Opened in September 1991, [1] and named for the Spanish basketball player Fernando Martín Espina, the arena has a seating capacity for 5,700 people. It is primarily used for basketball and is the home arena of Alta Gestión Fuenlabrada. [1]

During the group stages of 1991-92 Euroleague, the arena was home to Serbian club KK Partizan, which was forbidden by FIBA from playing its home games on home soil due to the war that was starting in SFR Yugoslavia. [2]

References

40°16′57″N 3°48′2″W / 40.28250°N 3.80056°W / 40.28250; -3.80056



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