Millennium Dome

original name of a large dome-shaped building in South East London, England

The Millennium Dome is a large dome-shaped building in Greenwich in South East London, UK (now known as The O2). It was built between 1997 and 2000 to celebrate the beginning of the third millennium. The name was officially changed to The O2 when Telefónica O2 Europe plc bought the naming rights from the devehutz Entertainment Group.

The Millennium Dome looking over the River Thames
The Millennium Dome in daylight

From 31 December 1999 until 31 December 2000 the Dome and some surrounding buildings were the home of the Millennium Exhibition which was meant to show the best of Britain to the world. The most successful part of the Exhibition was the stage show that was held two or three times each day in the middle of the dome. The show had dozens of dancers and acrobats, music by Peter Gabriel, and a tower that rose out of the dome's floor.

The rest of the Exhibition was not as successful as the Dome's owners had hoped. About 6 and a half million people visited the Exhibition, which was only half the number its owners hoped for.

The dome was sold to US Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG) and reopened in July 2007 as the O2, an entertainment complex including a 22,000-seat concert and sports venue, cinema, music club and exhibition spaces. Among the first artists to perform there were Bon Jovi and Prince. The Rolling Stones performed there in August 2007, Led Zeppelin played a reunion show there in December 2007, and the Spice Girls took residence in the arena from December 2007 to January 2008.

In 2012, as part of the Summer Olympics in London, the building was renamed the "North Greenwich Arena" and was used to host gymnastics and basketball.[1]

A walkway across the top of the dome's structure has been opened, allowing visitors to cross the roof at a height of 60m.[2] The O2 Roofwalk tourist attraction is now partially powered by solar energy.[3]

The large hole ripped into the O2 arena, showing the extent of the damage.

In 2022, a large hole was ripped in the O2 arena caused by Storm Eunice. 1,000 people were evacuated but nobody was injured.

References

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  1. "North Greenwich Arena". BBC Sport.
  2. "The O2 Roofwalk given the green light". AEG. 29 Jul 2011. Archived from the original on 11 September 2011. Retrieved 16 Nov 2011.
  3. "Rayotec Reaching New Heights at the O2 Arena Roofwalk! - Rayotec". Archived from the original on 2013-01-27. Retrieved 2013-07-15.