Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 101. Not illustrated. Chapters: Football Venues in Slovakia, Indoor Arenas in Slovakia, Ski Areas and Resorts in Slovakia, Tennis Venues in Slovakia, Tehelne Pole, Krahule, Zuberec, trbske Pleso, Donovaly, Demanovska Dolina, diar, Jasna, Chopok, Stadium Pod Dub om, List of Football Stadiums in Slovakia, Vratna Dolina, tadion Antona Malatinskeho, Steel Arena, Stary Smokovec, Zava na Poruba, Snp Stadium, Tatranska Lomnica, Po ana, Sibamac Arena, Dac Stadion, tadion Pasienky, Tatran Stadion, tadion Petr alka, tadion Na Sihoti, Lokomotiva Stadium, tadion Mfk Ru omberok, tadion Pod Zoborom, Sk Eldus Mocenok Stadium, Stadion Fk Matador, V e portovy Areal, a a Stadium, Aqua Stadium, Koba Senec Stadion, Ntc Stadion, tadion Zimny, Stiavnicky Stadion, Michalovsky tadion, Na Zahradkach Stadium, tadion Fc Vion, Village Stadium, Chemlon Stadion, Lucenec Stadium, Zemplin Stadium. Excerpt: Tehelne pole - Most commonly the name refers to the football stadium which is the home field for Slovan Bratislava and the regular home for the Slovakia national team in this quarter. The stadium has a capacity of 30,085 spectators, and is 105 m long and 68 m wide. The stadium was built during the first Slovak Republic, when Nazi Germany occupied Petralka in 1938 and Bratislava lost almost all of its sporting facilities. The construction lasted from 1939 to 1944 and the stadium became home ground for Slovan Bratislava. The stadium was officially opened in September 1940 with 25,000 places, and the first international match was played on 27 October 1940, with Slovan Bratislava playing against Hertha Berlin, ending in 22 tie. The old stadium underwent reconstruction in 1961, which added second tribune, boosting its capacity to 45,000 and modernising by adding score table, artificial light and revamping the field. However, the stadium could hold up ...