Le Kaplakrikavöllur est un stade à multi-usages basé à Hafnarfjörður en Islande. Il est principalement utilisé pour les rencontres de football.
C'est le club du FH Hafnarfjörður, qui y dispute ses rencontres à domicile lors du championnat de football islandais.
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Kaplakriki is a multi-purpose stadium in Hafnarfjörður, Iceland. It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home stadium of Fimleikafélag Hafnarfjarðar.
The stadium holds over 6,000 spectators and has offers 3,050 seats. The plan for the stadium development is to expand the seating capacity to over 4,000 seats taking the maximum capacity to over 7,000. Long-term plans though are to make the stadium an all-seater, full square stadium with around 6,000 seats and roofs over the stands.
Kaplakriki Stadium is a part of multi-sport complex which besides a state-of-the-art stadium, includes a multi functional sports arena which mainly is used for handball and as a concert venue. The handball arena holds over 3,000 seated spectators in seats and was one of the venues for the 1995 World Men's Handball Championship and has hosted several national games. A state-of-the-art track and field arena was opened in 2014 and will serve as an all season facility and an expansion to the outdoor track and field course located at Kaplakriki complex.
Kaplakriki is also a large training area which includes an indoor-football facility called Risinn although it is not as big as Fífan or Egilshöll, which are other indoor football facilities located in Kópavogur and Reykjavík.
In the 2016 league season, FH drew an average home attendance of 1,541, the highest in the league.
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The Icelandic Road and Coastal Administration is a government agency in Iceland which has legal ownership and responsibility over construction, management and maintenance of highways, minor roads and harbours. It is part of the Ministry of Infrastructure and was established in 1918.
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The Free Church in Hafnarfjörður is a church in the Free Lutheran congregation of Iceland, located in Hafnarfjörður. The church was founded on 22 April 1913. It's Iceland's third largest religious body, after the Reykjavík Free Church and the Church of Iceland.
Sr. Einar Eyjólfsson has been the church priest since 1984, accompanied by another priest, sr. Sigríður Kristín Helgadóttir, since 2000.
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The Hafnarfjörður Town Hall is located in the city centre of Hafnarfjörður. The building houses the Town Council, as well as Bæjarbíó—the oldest operating cinema in Iceland.
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Hafnarborg, The Hafnarfjördur Centre of Culture and Fine Art, is a public art museum located in Hafnarfjörður, Iceland. It was opened in May 1988 but the foundation for the institution was laid in 1983 when Dr. Sverrir Magnússon and his wife, Ingibjörg Sigurjónsdóttir donated their house along with a substantial collection of art and books to Hafnarfjörður on the seventy-fifth anniversary of the incorporation of the town. Hafnarborg exhibits works by leading Icelandic and international artists and the exhibition program displays both contemporary and established artists from the 20th century.
Hafnarborg is located at Strandgata 34 in the downtown of Hafnarfjörður, Iceland and it is easily accessible by bus number 1 from Iceland's capital city Reykjavik.