Under the arena were the halls for sports events, wrestling, boxing, as well as rooms for coaches, referees and doctors.
In order to bring the entire stadium infrastructure up to the minimum UEFA standards, funds from the city budget were allocated for the refurbishment including repairs to the metal roof over the west stand, a construction of more than three hundred and fifty tons and the replacement of plastic seats.
[2] In 2009-2010, following new UEFA requirements[2] and with a view to the planned Asian Winter Games in 2011, a major reconstruction of the Central Stadium was carried out at a cost of 3 billion Tenge, financed from the city budget.
[9] Modern running tracks, made of high quality material "Kanipur-M" of the newest Swiss coating Konica, were also installed.
In addition, the Central Stadium's sports equipment, furnishings and floodlights were also renewed; Photo finish and timing systems were installed.
It is a structure, oval in plan, divided into 4 inserts passages podium: the northern, western, southern and eastern.
All places of individual seats, mounted on metal parts, provide convenience and form the shape viewer.
[1] A memorial plaque to mountaineer and climber Anatoli Boukreev (1958-1997), who died during the ascent of the 12th eight-thousand-meter peak Anapurna, is installed on the east wall of the stadium.
The decision provided for the registration of a protection obligation and the development of restoration projects for monuments.
On November 10, 2010, a new state list of historical and cultural monuments of local importance for the city of Almaty was adopted.
With the collapse of the USSR it was transferred to the municipal state administration of the Almaty city akimat (CGP Central Stadium).
The arena provides time for deaf and hard of hearing athletes, as well as for children with disabilities from Special Olympics.