at night, 2020
Katowice, for most of it modern history, has been a
coal mining town and the heart of Poland's industrial region,
Silesia. Together with nearby
Spodek, the
Silesian Museum, and the
Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra building, the International Congress Centre is built on a
post-industrial area of an old
Katowice Coal Mine, which was operational until the late 1990s. The venue stands on an old
mining waste dump site classified as "2A". In 2011 the
City of Katowice started construction of the venue, with a total cost of 378 mln
PLN (with 182 mln PLN coming from the EU budget). The venue was designed by
JEMS Architekci and the contract for construction was awarded to the
Polimex–
Mostostal joint venture. After the contract with Polimex-Mostostal was voided by the city,
Warbud and the
Mercury Engineering consortium was awarded the construction contract. The venue is connected directly to
Spodek by an underground tunnel. Construction of the venue ended in March 2015, a year later than planned. On 12–15 March, ICC held its first event, the
Intel ESL Expo Katowice. == Capacity ==