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Dælenenga idrettspark

Dælenenga idrettspark is a sports facility located at Grünerløkka in Oslo, Norway. It consists of an artificial turf football pitch, a club house and an indoor ice rinkGrünerhallen. The facilities are owned by the Municipality of Oslo and used and operated by Grüner IL, the local sports club.

Dælenenga
Grünerhallen in March 2010
Full nameDælenenga idrettspark
LocationGrünerløkka, Oslo, Norway
Coordinates59°55′35″N 10°45′52″E / 59.92639°N 10.76444°E / 59.92639; 10.76444Coordinates: 59°55′35″N 10°45′52″E / 59.92639°N 10.76444°E / 59.92639; 10.76444
OwnerMunicipality of Oslo
SurfaceArtificial turf (football)
Construction
Broke ground1915
Opened1916
Renovated1929, 1947, 1985, 1995, 1997
Tenants
Grüner IL (football and ice hockey)
Sportsklubben av 1909 (wrestling and boxing)
Fighter Kickboxingklubb (kickboxing)

The venue opened in 1916 and was originally used for football, athletics and speed skating. The club house was completed in 1928 and has since been used for martial arts. From 1929, a velodrome course was installed, which remained in use until 1940. During the 1930s, the venue was the main Oslo stadium for the Workers' Sports Federation (AIF). A speedway course was installed in 1947 and remained in use until 1968. The venue featured eight ice hockey matches and two bandy matches during the 1952 Winter Olympics. Artificial ice was laid in 1985 and the skating hall opened in 1995, two years before the artificial turf was laid.

History

Construction started in 1915.[1] The stadium opened in 1916 as a combined football and athletics venue with a capacity for 10,000 spectators.[2] The track was iced during winter and used for speed skating.[3] Dælenenga was one of two multi-sport venues serving eastern Oslo, along with Jordal Idrettspark.[4] The club house, used for wrestling and boxing,[4] opened in 1928.[5] The following year, the ice rink was decommissioned and a velodrome was instead installed, which remained in use until 1940.[2] During the Second World War, the club house was used as a school.[6]

 
Aerial view from 1951

In 1947, the velodrome was removed and the track converted for use for speedway.[2] For the 1952 Winter Olympics, the venue was upgraded with a new ice hockey clock, a new lighting system and new ice hockey boards.[7] The speedway course was dismounted in 1968.[2] During the 1980s, the stadium became a central location for drug dealing, but the traffic moved away during the 1990s.[8] In 1985, artificial ice was laid north of the football pitch, costing 2.1 million Norwegian krone (NOK). Of this, NOK 1.3 million was financed by Grüner IL through loans.[9] At the same time a new gravel pitch was laid on the football field.[5]

The artificial ice increased the popularity of playing ice hockey in the neighborhood. The club therefore started working on plans to build an indoor ice rink over the artificial rink.[10] Planning of the hall started in 1989,[9] and in 1990 a proposal for a steel structure was launched.[10] However, it was rejected by the municipality. The club therefore hired Einar Dahle Arkitekter to work on a new design, resulting in area planning regulations being passed in 1991.[9] Financing of the steel structure had been secured in loans, but these were stopped following a credit crunch.[10] In 1994, the municipality initiated a redevelopment program of the downtown residential areas, which included grants to build Grünerhallen. The hall was estimated to cost NOK 23.4 million and the contract was awarded to Mur 6 Tax. Construction started in March 1995 and the venue opened on 6 October 1995,[9] as the 30th indoor ice rink in Norway.[11] In 1996, the city council had to grant an additional NOK 4.6 million to cover cost overruns.[12]

Ahead of 1997, the municipal council granted NOK 3.2 million to lay artificial turf at Dælenenga. Construction started in May and the pitch was taken into use on 4 September 1997. The new turf was Belgian-manufactured, sand-filled Superfoot 32.[5] The upgrade also saw the first upgrades to the terraces in the stadium's history.[1] New artificial turf was laid in 2008.[13]

Facilities

 
The club house

Dælenenga idrettspark consists of a club house, an artificial turf football pitch and an indoor ice rink. The venue is owned by Oslo Municipality, but the day-to-day operation is undertaken by Grüner IL, the main tenant.[14] The park covers an area of 16.1 hectares (40 acres).[15] The football pitch has artificial turf and measures 100 by 64 meters (109 by 70 yd).[5] The club house has a floor area of 900 square meters (9,700 sq ft) and is built in brick. The building has suffered under lack of maintenance and has been subject to water damage, although the outer walls and foundation are in good condition. The club house has an impractical floor plan, and contains gyms for martial art and changing rooms for the pitch.[13]

Grünerhallen has a single 30-by-60-meter (98 by 197 ft) ice rink.[9] It has a capacity for 200 sitting and 400 standing spectators[11] and features six player and two referee change rooms. The hall's lighting produces 600 lux.[9] The building also features a weight lifting room, a cafeteria and club offices.[10] Dælenenga idrettspark is 1.5 kilometers (1 mi) from downtown Oslo and is located on Ruter bus route 30[16] and close to the light rail station Birkelunden on the Grünerløkka–Torshov Line.[17]

Events

During the late 1920s and 1930s, Dælenenga was dominated by the Workers' Sports Federation (AIF) and served as its main stadium in Oslo.[5] AIF's Grünerløkka chapter was established at Dælenenga and used it as its training ground.[18] Dælenenga was used for major AIF tournaments[19] and the largest tournament took place 5 July 1929, with 500 participants.[5] It also served as the terminus of many of AIF's and other labor movement parades.[19] Each May Day the stadium would be packed.[20] From the early 1930s, AIF moved its largest tournaments to Jordal.[21] The local AIF club was particularly good at boxing, and in 1937 gathered thousands of spectators to watch a boxing match at Dælenenga.[22]

From the 1920s to 1946, the Østkantstafetten relay race was held with start and finish at Dælenenga. The route ran through various streets in eastern Oslo and was a counter-measure to Holmenkollstafetten in the western part of town.[23] From 1929 Dælenenga became a center of velodrome cycling.[5] During the Second World War, Dælenengen was used for sports training in football and handball by the German Wehrmacht.[24] After the war ended, the clubs in the neighborhood went through a consolidation process. In 1952,[9] the clubs Spero, Strong and B-14 merged to create Grüner IL, which became the dominant club at the venue.[1][25] Speedway events took place between 1947 and 1968, with Dælenenga growing to become a prime national venue, especially during the 1950s. The most notable regular local drivers were Basse Hveem, Henry Andersen, Werner Lorentzen and Aage Hansen.[5]

As of 2012, Grüner Fotball remains the football venue's tenant. Their main football team plays in Third Division.[26] Grüner Hockey uses the hockey rink, with their main men's team playing in the First Division.[27] The club house is used by Sportsklubben av 1909, Grüner IL and Fighter Kickboxingklubb.[13]

Speed skating

The first speed skating competition took place on 24 January 1917,[5] and the stadium remained in use for speed skating until 1929.[3] AIF arranged their Norwegian championships in speed skating at Dælenenga in 1926 and 1929.[21] Finland's Clas Thunberg set two unofficial world records in 1,000 meters of 1:31.60 twice in 1921.[3]

Speed skating track records[3]
Distance Time Date Athlete Nationality
500 m 43.9 28 February 1929 Hugo Nygren Norway
1000 m 1:31.6 23 February 1921 Clas Thunberg Finland
1500 m 2:24.5 6 March 1921 Clas Thunberg Finland
5000 m 8:37.0 6 January 1918 Ole Mamen Norway
10000 m 18:34.7 26 January 1929 Hans Engnestangen Norway
Combined 202.512 26–27 January 1929 Hans Engnestangen Norway

1952 Winter Olympics

Dælenenga was one of five ice hockey rinks used during the 1952 Winter Olympics. Hosting 8 of 37 matches, it the second-most use venue after Jordal Amfi.[28] It was also the only hockey venue other than Jordal to be located in Oslo.[7]

Ice hockey matches during the 1952 Winter Olympics[29]
Date Winning team Score Losing team
15 February   Sweden 9–2   Finland
16 February   Czechoslovakia 6–0   Norway
17 February   Switzerland 6–3   Poland
18 February   Canada 11–0   Poland
21 February   Canada 11–2   Switzerland
22 February   United States 5–3   Poland
23 February   Canada 11–2   Norway
24 February   Switzerland 6–3   Germany

Bandy was arranged as a demonstration sport at the 1952 Winter Olympics. Two of the three matches were conducted at Dælenenga.[30]

Bandy matches during the 1952 Winter Olympics[31]
Date Winning team Score Losing team
20 February   Finland 3–2   Norway
21 February   Norway 2–1   Sweden

References

Bibliography
  • Bryhn, Rolf; Tvedt, Knut Are (1990). Kunnskapsforlagets idrettsleksikon (in Norwegian). Oslo: Kunnskapsforlaget. ISBN 8257304085.
  • Eriksen, Arvid; Greve, Jan (1995). Norske idrettsanlegg (in Norwegian). Oslo: Norwegian Ministry of Culture. ISBN 82-90773-06-4.
  • Fossen, Asbjørn (1998). Livet på Østkanten (in Norwegian). Memoria. ISBN 8299217377.
  • Fure, Odd-Bjørn (1996). Mellomkrigstid (in Norwegian). Oslo. ISBN 8200225348.
  • Organising Committee for the VI Winter Olympic Games (1952). (PDF). Oslo. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 June 2011. Retrieved 10 September 2010.
Notes
  1. ^ a b c Fossen (1998): 143
  2. ^ a b c d Bryhn (1990): 75
  3. ^ a b c d "Ring card of: Dælenenga IP Oslo". SpeedSkatingNews. from the original on 2 December 2013. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  4. ^ a b Fossen (1998): 123
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Nygaard, Brynjulf (3 September 1997). "I morgen åpner "nye" Dælenenga". Aftenposten Aften (in Norwegian). p. 32.
  6. ^ Fossen (1998): 18
  7. ^ a b Organising Committee for the VI Winter Olympic Games (1952): 32
  8. ^ Fossen (1998): 145
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Nygaard, Brynjulf (6 October 1995). "Grünerhallen står klar". Aftenposten Aften (in Norwegian). p. 60.
  10. ^ a b c d "Hjemmebanen". Grüner Hockey. from the original on 3 May 2012. Retrieved 18 May 2012.
  11. ^ a b Norwegian Ice Hockey Association. (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 7 February 2011.
  12. ^ Lundgaard, Hilde (14 October 1996). "Helsprekk på hallbudsjetter". Aftenposten Aften (in Norwegian). p. 3.
  13. ^ a b c (PDF) (in Norwegian). Municipality of Oslo. 15 April 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 30 May 2012.
  14. ^ "Dælenenga idrettspark". Oslo Municipality. from the original on 2 March 2016. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  15. ^ "Grøntregistrering" (XLS). Oslo Municipality. 14 May 2009. from the original on 2 March 2016. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  16. ^ "Grünerhallen skøytehall". Visit Oslo. from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  17. ^ "Kunstgressbaner i Oslo" (in Norwegian). Aktiv i Oslo. from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 31 May 2012.
  18. ^ Fossen (1998): 115
  19. ^ a b Fossen (1998): 113
  20. ^ Fure (1996): 37
  21. ^ a b Eriksen (1995): 101
  22. ^ Fossen (1998): 119
  23. ^ Fossen (1998): 124
  24. ^ Fossen (1998): 142
  25. ^ "Om Grüner AIL" (in Norwegian). Grüner IL. 23 January 2007. Archived from the original on 2012-05-17. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  26. ^ "3. div. Menn avd. 02 - Indre Østland Fotballkrets" (in Norwegian). Football Association of Norway. Archived from the original on 1 August 2012. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  27. ^ (in Norwegian). Norwegian Ice Hockey Association. Archived from the original on 15 May 2012. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  28. ^ Organising Committee for the VI Winter Olympic Games (1952): 31
  29. ^ Organising Committee for the VI Winter Olympic Games (1952): 248–249
  30. ^ Organising Committee for the VI Winter Olympic Games (1952): 216
  31. ^ Organising Committee for the VI Winter Olympic Games (1952): 256

External links

  • Nybyggerne på Dal-eng-enga Nybyggerne på Dal-eng-enga [Settlers at Dal-eng-enga]. 16 November 2020. Dagsavisen

dælenenga, idrettspark, sports, facility, located, grünerløkka, oslo, norway, consists, artificial, turf, football, pitch, club, house, indoor, rink, grünerhallen, facilities, owned, municipality, oslo, used, operated, grüner, local, sports, club, dælenengagrü. Daelenenga idrettspark is a sports facility located at Grunerlokka in Oslo Norway It consists of an artificial turf football pitch a club house and an indoor ice rink Grunerhallen The facilities are owned by the Municipality of Oslo and used and operated by Gruner IL the local sports club DaelenengaGrunerhallen in March 2010Full nameDaelenenga idrettsparkLocationGrunerlokka Oslo NorwayCoordinates59 55 35 N 10 45 52 E 59 92639 N 10 76444 E 59 92639 10 76444 Coordinates 59 55 35 N 10 45 52 E 59 92639 N 10 76444 E 59 92639 10 76444OwnerMunicipality of OsloSurfaceArtificial turf football ConstructionBroke ground1915Opened1916Renovated1929 1947 1985 1995 1997TenantsGruner IL football and ice hockey Sportsklubben av 1909 wrestling and boxing Fighter Kickboxingklubb kickboxing The venue opened in 1916 and was originally used for football athletics and speed skating The club house was completed in 1928 and has since been used for martial arts From 1929 a velodrome course was installed which remained in use until 1940 During the 1930s the venue was the main Oslo stadium for the Workers Sports Federation AIF A speedway course was installed in 1947 and remained in use until 1968 The venue featured eight ice hockey matches and two bandy matches during the 1952 Winter Olympics Artificial ice was laid in 1985 and the skating hall opened in 1995 two years before the artificial turf was laid Contents 1 History 2 Facilities 3 Events 3 1 Speed skating 3 2 1952 Winter Olympics 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditConstruction started in 1915 1 The stadium opened in 1916 as a combined football and athletics venue with a capacity for 10 000 spectators 2 The track was iced during winter and used for speed skating 3 Daelenenga was one of two multi sport venues serving eastern Oslo along with Jordal Idrettspark 4 The club house used for wrestling and boxing 4 opened in 1928 5 The following year the ice rink was decommissioned and a velodrome was instead installed which remained in use until 1940 2 During the Second World War the club house was used as a school 6 Aerial view from 1951 In 1947 the velodrome was removed and the track converted for use for speedway 2 For the 1952 Winter Olympics the venue was upgraded with a new ice hockey clock a new lighting system and new ice hockey boards 7 The speedway course was dismounted in 1968 2 During the 1980s the stadium became a central location for drug dealing but the traffic moved away during the 1990s 8 In 1985 artificial ice was laid north of the football pitch costing 2 1 million Norwegian krone NOK Of this NOK 1 3 million was financed by Gruner IL through loans 9 At the same time a new gravel pitch was laid on the football field 5 The artificial ice increased the popularity of playing ice hockey in the neighborhood The club therefore started working on plans to build an indoor ice rink over the artificial rink 10 Planning of the hall started in 1989 9 and in 1990 a proposal for a steel structure was launched 10 However it was rejected by the municipality The club therefore hired Einar Dahle Arkitekter to work on a new design resulting in area planning regulations being passed in 1991 9 Financing of the steel structure had been secured in loans but these were stopped following a credit crunch 10 In 1994 the municipality initiated a redevelopment program of the downtown residential areas which included grants to build Grunerhallen The hall was estimated to cost NOK 23 4 million and the contract was awarded to Mur 6 Tax Construction started in March 1995 and the venue opened on 6 October 1995 9 as the 30th indoor ice rink in Norway 11 In 1996 the city council had to grant an additional NOK 4 6 million to cover cost overruns 12 Ahead of 1997 the municipal council granted NOK 3 2 million to lay artificial turf at Daelenenga Construction started in May and the pitch was taken into use on 4 September 1997 The new turf was Belgian manufactured sand filled Superfoot 32 5 The upgrade also saw the first upgrades to the terraces in the stadium s history 1 New artificial turf was laid in 2008 13 Facilities Edit The club house Daelenenga idrettspark consists of a club house an artificial turf football pitch and an indoor ice rink The venue is owned by Oslo Municipality but the day to day operation is undertaken by Gruner IL the main tenant 14 The park covers an area of 16 1 hectares 40 acres 15 The football pitch has artificial turf and measures 100 by 64 meters 109 by 70 yd 5 The club house has a floor area of 900 square meters 9 700 sq ft and is built in brick The building has suffered under lack of maintenance and has been subject to water damage although the outer walls and foundation are in good condition The club house has an impractical floor plan and contains gyms for martial art and changing rooms for the pitch 13 Grunerhallen has a single 30 by 60 meter 98 by 197 ft ice rink 9 It has a capacity for 200 sitting and 400 standing spectators 11 and features six player and two referee change rooms The hall s lighting produces 600 lux 9 The building also features a weight lifting room a cafeteria and club offices 10 Daelenenga idrettspark is 1 5 kilometers 1 mi from downtown Oslo and is located on Ruter bus route 30 16 and close to the light rail station Birkelunden on the Grunerlokka Torshov Line 17 Events EditDuring the late 1920s and 1930s Daelenenga was dominated by the Workers Sports Federation AIF and served as its main stadium in Oslo 5 AIF s Grunerlokka chapter was established at Daelenenga and used it as its training ground 18 Daelenenga was used for major AIF tournaments 19 and the largest tournament took place 5 July 1929 with 500 participants 5 It also served as the terminus of many of AIF s and other labor movement parades 19 Each May Day the stadium would be packed 20 From the early 1930s AIF moved its largest tournaments to Jordal 21 The local AIF club was particularly good at boxing and in 1937 gathered thousands of spectators to watch a boxing match at Daelenenga 22 From the 1920s to 1946 the Ostkantstafetten relay race was held with start and finish at Daelenenga The route ran through various streets in eastern Oslo and was a counter measure to Holmenkollstafetten in the western part of town 23 From 1929 Daelenenga became a center of velodrome cycling 5 During the Second World War Daelenengen was used for sports training in football and handball by the German Wehrmacht 24 After the war ended the clubs in the neighborhood went through a consolidation process In 1952 9 the clubs Spero Strong and B 14 merged to create Gruner IL which became the dominant club at the venue 1 25 Speedway events took place between 1947 and 1968 with Daelenenga growing to become a prime national venue especially during the 1950s The most notable regular local drivers were Basse Hveem Henry Andersen Werner Lorentzen and Aage Hansen 5 As of 2012 Gruner Fotball remains the football venue s tenant Their main football team plays in Third Division 26 Gruner Hockey uses the hockey rink with their main men s team playing in the First Division 27 The club house is used by Sportsklubben av 1909 Gruner IL and Fighter Kickboxingklubb 13 Speed skating Edit The first speed skating competition took place on 24 January 1917 5 and the stadium remained in use for speed skating until 1929 3 AIF arranged their Norwegian championships in speed skating at Daelenenga in 1926 and 1929 21 Finland s Clas Thunberg set two unofficial world records in 1 000 meters of 1 31 60 twice in 1921 3 Speed skating track records 3 Distance Time Date Athlete Nationality500 m 43 9 28 February 1929 Hugo Nygren Norway1000 m 1 31 6 23 February 1921 Clas Thunberg Finland1500 m 2 24 5 6 March 1921 Clas Thunberg Finland5000 m 8 37 0 6 January 1918 Ole Mamen Norway10000 m 18 34 7 26 January 1929 Hans Engnestangen NorwayCombined 202 512 26 27 January 1929 Hans Engnestangen Norway1952 Winter Olympics Edit Main articles Ice hockey at the 1952 Winter Olympics and Bandy at the 1952 Winter Olympics Daelenenga was one of five ice hockey rinks used during the 1952 Winter Olympics Hosting 8 of 37 matches it the second most use venue after Jordal Amfi 28 It was also the only hockey venue other than Jordal to be located in Oslo 7 Ice hockey matches during the 1952 Winter Olympics 29 Date Winning team Score Losing team15 February Sweden 9 2 Finland16 February Czechoslovakia 6 0 Norway17 February Switzerland 6 3 Poland18 February Canada 11 0 Poland21 February Canada 11 2 Switzerland22 February United States 5 3 Poland23 February Canada 11 2 Norway24 February Switzerland 6 3 GermanyBandy was arranged as a demonstration sport at the 1952 Winter Olympics Two of the three matches were conducted at Daelenenga 30 Bandy matches during the 1952 Winter Olympics 31 Date Winning team Score Losing team20 February Finland 3 2 Norway21 February Norway 2 1 SwedenReferences Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Daelenenga BibliographyBryhn Rolf Tvedt Knut Are 1990 Kunnskapsforlagets idrettsleksikon in Norwegian Oslo Kunnskapsforlaget ISBN 8257304085 Eriksen Arvid Greve Jan 1995 Norske idrettsanlegg in Norwegian Oslo Norwegian Ministry of Culture ISBN 82 90773 06 4 Fossen Asbjorn 1998 Livet pa Ostkanten in Norwegian Memoria ISBN 8299217377 Fure Odd Bjorn 1996 Mellomkrigstid in Norwegian Oslo ISBN 8200225348 Organising Committee for the VI Winter Olympic Games 1952 Olympic Winter Games Oslo 1952 PDF Oslo Archived from the original PDF on 4 June 2011 Retrieved 10 September 2010 Notes a b c Fossen 1998 143 a b c d Bryhn 1990 75 a b c d Ring card of Daelenenga IP Oslo SpeedSkatingNews Archived from the original on 2 December 2013 Retrieved 17 May 2012 a b Fossen 1998 123 a b c d e f g h i Nygaard Brynjulf 3 September 1997 I morgen apner nye Daelenenga Aftenposten Aften in Norwegian p 32 Fossen 1998 18 a b Organising Committee for the VI Winter Olympic Games 1952 32 Fossen 1998 145 a b c d e f g Nygaard Brynjulf 6 October 1995 Grunerhallen star klar Aftenposten Aften in Norwegian p 60 a b c d Hjemmebanen Gruner Hockey Archived from the original on 3 May 2012 Retrieved 18 May 2012 a b Norwegian Ice Hockey Association Ishaller in Norwegian Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 7 February 2011 Lundgaard Hilde 14 October 1996 Helsprekk pa hallbudsjetter Aftenposten Aften in Norwegian p 3 a b c Idrettsanlegg pa Daelenenga PDF in Norwegian Municipality of Oslo 15 April 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 30 May 2012 Daelenenga idrettspark Oslo Municipality Archived from the original on 2 March 2016 Retrieved 17 May 2012 Grontregistrering XLS Oslo Municipality 14 May 2009 Archived from the original on 2 March 2016 Retrieved 17 May 2012 Grunerhallen skoytehall Visit Oslo Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 17 May 2012 Kunstgressbaner i Oslo in Norwegian Aktiv i Oslo Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 31 May 2012 Fossen 1998 115 a b Fossen 1998 113 Fure 1996 37 a b Eriksen 1995 101 Fossen 1998 119 Fossen 1998 124 Fossen 1998 142 Om Gruner AIL in Norwegian Gruner IL 23 January 2007 Archived from the original on 2012 05 17 Retrieved 17 May 2012 3 div Menn avd 02 Indre Ostland Fotballkrets in Norwegian Football Association of Norway Archived from the original on 1 August 2012 Retrieved 17 May 2012 Klubbene in Norwegian Norwegian Ice Hockey Association Archived from the original on 15 May 2012 Retrieved 17 May 2012 Organising Committee for the VI Winter Olympic Games 1952 31 Organising Committee for the VI Winter Olympic Games 1952 248 249 Organising Committee for the VI Winter Olympic Games 1952 216 Organising Committee for the VI Winter Olympic Games 1952 256External links EditNybyggerne pa Dal eng enga Nybyggerne pa Dal eng enga Settlers at Dal eng enga 16 November 2020 Dagsavisen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Daelenenga idrettspark amp oldid 1095009320, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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