South London's O2 arena has broken records to become the world's most popular music arena for the second year in a row.
Official figures released by industry publication Pollstar show the Greenwich venue sold nearly two million tickets last year.
Pollstar says the 1,806, 447 total is the highest figure since it started monitoring annual ticket sales in 2000. The figure for the 20,000-seat arena inside the former Millennium Dome is attributable to sell-out shows by Kylie Minogue, the Eagles, Kanye West, Kings of Leon, Stevie Wonder, the Spice Girls and Sir Elton John.
The world's next most-visited arena last year was New York's Madison Square Gardens where there were more than 500,000 ticket sales than the O2.
But it was bad news for Wembley Arena which has struggled to compete since its east London rival opened for business in 2007. The 12,500-capacity venue - once London's most popular - was listed 38th in the world.
Gary Bongiovanni, editor-in-chief of Pollstar said: "This is certainly the highest year-end tickets sales we have had since our records began in 2000. The O2 has made a massive impact on the global concert business."
Arena chiefs hope that another flurry of big name acts this year including Britney Spears, Tina Turner, The Killers, Beyoncé, Pink, AC/DC, and Bob Dylan will help the venue break the two million mark.
Venue Ticket sales
1. O2 arena, London - 1,806, 447
2. Madison Square Gardens, New York - 1,161,035
3. Manchester Evening News Arena, Manchester - 1,157,892
4. Sportpaleis Antwerpen Merksem, Belgium - 889,137
5. Air Canada Centre, Toronto - 723,469
Source: Pollstar
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Comments
Granted, it holds a lot, but takes away the atmosphere for me.
The O2's strength is that it's about more than the main arena. Indigo2 has been a massive success for them, the cinema is superb VFM and they have loads of eateries and 'nightspots'. They use their spare capacity quite well too - the ski slope and the Africa Africa show back that up.
I park right at the end of Tunnel Avenue, then walk across the footbridge opposite Nando's and walk across, 10-15 minute walk.
I find big venues l soulless and irksome, so even though I could walk to the O2 I never did or remotely wanted to. Like DA9 suggests, bigger is not better.
RIP Astoria too btw. Sad they had to cancel tonight's farewell special. Due to lack of interest from the artists apparently
Leonard Cohen, for example, was quite extraordinary there. I much prefer smaller, more intimate places but somehow LC managed to shrink the venue so that it almost felt like you were in his sitting room...Enjoyed Zep there and felt even at £135 that it was value for money, but that was slightly different. Be interesting to see how Dylan fares there in April...