Organiser:
SV BVG 49
Categories:
G15, G18, L, M, U15, U17, U19 | More information
Facilities:
Sportforum Berlin Hohenschönhausen is Europe’s biggest sports and training centre. This centre is located in northeast Berlin and covers an area of 55 hectares. It’s home to 30 clubs that make good use of the many first class sport facilities such as sports halls, ice rink, cycling track and athletics facilities. It is also the biggest Olympia Stützpunkt in Germany. More than 100 German Olympic, world and European champions so far prepared themselves for their victories at Sportforum Berlin Hohenschönhausen. The Berlin Handball Cup takes place in 3 sports halls at the Sportforum Berlin Hohenschönhausen and 5 halls at different locations. The largest hall (the former Dynamo Halle) has seats for 3.000 spectators and a cafeteria. Matches will also be played in a 4th hall at about 1 kilometre from here. This sports hall is the home of tournament organizer SV BVG 49. It has 800 seats and a sports café.
Trophies:
Each participants receives a medal.
Other information:
Location:
Berlin, Germany
When visiting Berlin with its many attractions, you can be sure to be short of time. The tournament organisers realize that and have therefore put together a programme that leaves enough time to experience at least some of what this ‘world city’ has to offer. The tournament kicks off on Friday with a team leaders reception in the foyer of the Dynamo Halle. Saturday will be a busy day. After the opening ceremony on Saturday morning, the first group matches will be played. In the evening, participants are free to enjoy the lively city of Berlin or for the younger ones: enjoy their own music party in the Dynamo Hall. However, on Sunday they’re expected back in the sporthalls. The finals will take place in the impressive Dynamo Halle, followed by the prize giving ceremony. On Sunday evening all competitors are welcome to join in at the farewell evening at the Sportsforum.
| Day |
Part of day |
Description |
| Friday |
Afternoon |
Arrival Berlin at the Sportforum |
| Friday |
Evening |
Team leaders reception and information.
Participants; free programme to visit Berlin:
suggestion: the Fernsehturm at Alexanderplatz. |
| Saturday |
Morning |
Opening ceremony. |
| Saturday |
Day |
Tournament - Preliminary rounds |
| Saturday |
Evening |
Adults: Free programme to visit Berlin: suggestion: Potsdamer Platz.
Youth: Music party in the Dynamo Hall. |
| Sunday |
Day |
Tournament - qualification matches, finals and price giving ceremony |
| Sunday |
Evening |
Farewell evening at the Sportforum |
| Monday |
Morning |
Departure. |
As well as participation at the tournament, Euro-Sportring also arranges the accommodation for the participants. Participants can usually choose between school accommodation, group accommodation (youth accommodation and bungalows) and hotels. The accommodation we offer has been selected with care and must comply to a number of conditions such as are they within easy reach of the sports park, do they provide value for money, are they suitalbe for sports groups, are they safe and are the management fliexible. For more information about the available accommodation please see the pdf pricelist which can be found on this website.
Berlin (3.5 million inhabitants) is the capital of Germany and, since not so long ago, the government centre. The history of Berlin is inseparably tied to the Second World War and its aftermath. In the second half of the 20th Century, Berlin was dominated by the wall which cut it in half and divided East Berlin from West Berlin for almost thirty years. Since the fall of the wall in 1989, Berlin is busily becoming one of the hippest cities in Europe. For historical things to see, such as the Reichstag and Brandenburger Tor, memorials of a recent past, such the Gedächtniskirche and Checkpoint Charlie, and the new Berlin, such as the recently opened Holocaust monument and the Sony Centre, Berlin is ‘the place to be!
’You can also shop to your heart’s content in Berlin. Start at Kurfürstendamm, where all the famous stores have a branch, but where you can also find luxurious small boutiques. On the corner of Tauentzienstrasse, there is KaDeWe (Kaufhaus des Westens), the largest store in Europe. Niketown is also on Tauentzienstrasse: 3500 m2 full of the latest sport fashion. There are many places to go out to in Berlin: in the summer there are numerous terraces around Kurfürstendamm and Unter den Linden. Other well-known places for going out are the areas of Kreuzberg and Prenzlauer Berg in the east of the city.
A few places worth seeing:
* Kurfürstendamm - Before reunification, this was the centre of West Berlin. Berliners call it the ‘Kudamm’. Here you will find many shops, restaurants and galleries.
* Gedächtniskirche - At the end of Kudamm, there is the ruin of Kaiser Wilhelm I-Gedächtniskirche. The church was built at the end of the 19th Century in remembrance of Keizer Wilhelm I and it was seriously damaged during the Second World War. Only the tower remains and this is badly damaged. The tower was left un-repaired as a warning of the consequences of war.
* Potsdamerplatz with the DaimlerChrysler Quartier – Before the Second World War, Potsdamerplatz was a busy entertainment district. Not much was left after the war and the wall was built diagonally over the square. Buildings rapidly went up after the fall of the wall: places to go out, restaurants, a enormous covered shopping centre, mega-cinemas and offices, such as the architecturally impressive Sony Centre.
* Checkpoint Charlie – Checkpoint Charlie was a checkpoint at the Berlin wall. The post was closed after the fall of the wall. Later, a copy of the watchhouse was built. The ‘Haus am Checkpoint Charlie’ is a museum with images and objects that tell about the history of the wall and of the many escape attempts from East to West.
* Brandenburger Tor – was built at the end of 18th Century and has since qualified as a symbol of Berlin. Close by is the Reichstag that was repaired after the war. Since 1999, the German parliament has assembled here.
* Fernsehturm – The 365-metre-high television tower on Alexanderplatz is a landmark in former East Berlin. The 207-metre-high rotating Tele-café offers a beautiful view over the city.
* Tiergarten – A large park in the centre of the city. An oasis of peace, except in the weekends in the summer when thousands of real Berliners come here and barbecue.