Borac Hall
43°53′51″N 20°21′09″E / 43.897621°N 20.352492°E / 43.897621; 20.352492Capacity 3,000 Surface Parquetry Construction Opened 1969; 55 years ago (1969)[1] Renovated 2009[1] Tenants KK Borac (1969–present)
Borac Hall Near Morava (Serbian Cyrillic: Хала Борца крај Мораве), commonly known as Borac Hall (Serbian Cyrillic: Хала Борац), is an indoor arena in Čačak, Serbia. It has a capacity of 3,000 people. It is home arena of a basketball club Borac.[1]
Gallery
- View on Borac Hall from outside, May 2013
- View on basketball court, February 2019
- Indoors of Borac Hall, February 2019
See also
References
- ^ a b c "Dvorana". kkborac.rs (in Serbian). Retrieved 24 December 2016.
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg/30px-Commons-logo.svg.png)
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Borac Hall.
- v
- t
- e
- Atenica
- Baluga (Ljubićska)
- Baluga (Trnavska)
- Banjica
- Beljina
- Bečanj
- Brezovica
- Bresnica
- Vapa
- Vidova
- Viljuša
- Vranići
- Vrnčani
- Vujetinci
- Goričani
- Gornja Gorevnica
- Gornja Trepča
- Donja Gorevnica
- Donja Trepča
- Žaočani
- Zablaće
- Jančići
- Ježevica
- Jezdina
- Katrga
- Kačulice
- Konjevići
- Kukići
- Kulinovci
- Lipnica
- Loznica
- Ljubić
- Međuvršje
- Milićevci
- Miokovci
- Mojsinje
- Mrčajevci
- Mršinci
- Ovčar Banja
- Ostra
- Pakovraće
- Parmenac
- Petnica
- Preljina
- Premeća
- Pridvorica
- Prijevor
- Prislonica
- Rajac
- Rakova
- Riđage
- Rošci
- Slatina
- Sokolići
- Stančići
- Trbušani
- Trnava
![Coat of Arms of Čačak](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/14/Cacak_grb.png/80px-Cacak_grb.png)
- Čačak Stadium
- Borac Hall
This article about a Serbian sports venue is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e