List of Tennis Stadiums By Capacity - Former Tennis Venues

Former Tennis Venues

This is the list of stadia that no longer host tennis events but have in the past appeared on either ATP or WTA tournaments.

Rank Stadium Capacity City Country Tournament hosted Source
1 Sportpaleis 18,500 Antwerp Belgium Proximus Diamond Games
2 West Side Tennis Club 14,000 New York City United States US Open (1923–1977); Forest Hills Tennis Classic
3 Hallenstadion 13,000 Zürich Switzerland Zurich Open
4= Telefónica Arena Madrid 12,000 Madrid Spain Madrid Masters (2002–2008); WTA Championships -
4= Netaji Indoor Stadium 12,000 Kolkata India Sunfeast Open
5 Indianapolis Tennis Center 10,000 Indianapolis, Indiana United States Indianapolis Tennis Championships
6 National Tennis Centre 10,000 Toronto Canada Canada Masters -
7 Athens Olympic Tennis Centre 8,600 Athens Greece 2004 Olympics
8 Kooyong Stadium 8,500 Melbourne Australia Australian Open; Kooyong Classic
9= Burswood Dome 8,000 Perth Australia Hopman Cup
9= The Home Depot Center (tennis) 8,000 Carson, California United States LA Women's Tennis Championships; East west bank classic
11 Stone Mountain Tennis Center 7,200 Atlanta, Georgia United States 1996 Olympics
12 Palais des Sports de Gerland 6,500 Lyon France Grand Prix de Tennis de Lyon
13 Fairmont Scottsdale Princess Tennis Club 6,300 Scottsdale, Arizona United States ATP Scottsdale Classic (1987–2005)
14 Memorial Drive Park 6,000 Adelaide Australia Next Generation Adelaide International
15 SDAT Tennis Stadium 5,800 Chennai India Chennai Open
16 Racquet Park at Amelia Island Plantation 5,390 Amelia Island, Florida United States Bausch & Lomb Championships
17 Victoria Park, Hong Kong 3,607 Causeway Bay Hong Kong Hong Kong Tennis Classic; Hong Kong Open
18 Sea Pines Racquet Club 1,800 Hilton Head, South Carolina United States Family Circle Cup (1973-2000)
19 Fitzwilliam Lawn Tennis Club 1,000 Dublin Ireland Shelbourne Irish Open

Read more about this topic:  List Of Tennis Stadiums By Capacity

Famous quotes containing the word tennis:

    The boneless quality of English conversation, which, so far as I have heard it, is all form and no content. Listening to Britons dining out is like watching people play first-class tennis with imaginary balls.
    Margaret Halsey (b. 1910)