Stadion Gdańsk
Stadium in Gdańsk, Poland / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Stadion Gdańsk (English: Gdańsk Stadium), known for sponsorship reasons as the Polsat Plus Arena Gdańsk since May 2021,[2] is a football stadium in Gdańsk, Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland. It is used mostly for football matches and is the home stadium of Lechia Gdańsk, which competes in the I Liga. The stadium is located at the 1 Pokoleń Lechii Gdańsk Street (English: Generations of Lechia Gdańsk) in the northern part of the city (Letnica district).[3] The total capacity is 41,620 spectators, all seated and roofed. The stadium is the second largest arena in Ekstraklasa and the third largest in the country (after the Stadion Narodowy and the Stadion Śląski).[4]
Polsat Plus Arena Gdańsk | |
Full name | Stadion Gdańsk |
---|---|
Former names | Baltic Arena (during construction) PGE Arena Gdańsk (2010–2015) Arena Gdańsk (UEFA Euro 2012) Stadion w Gdańsku Letnicy (2015) Stadion Energa Gdańsk (2015–2020) Stadion w Gdańsku Letnicy (2020–2021) Polsat Plus Arena Gdańsk (2021–present) |
Location | ul. Pokoleń Lechii Gdańsk 1, 80-560 Gdańsk, Poland |
Coordinates | 54°23′24″N 18°38′25″E |
Owner | City of Gdańsk |
Operator | Arena Gdańsk Operator Sp. z o.o. |
Capacity | 41,620 |
Record attendance | 40,794 (Justin Timberlake - The 20/20 Experience World Tour, 19 August 2014) |
Field size | 105 × 68 metres |
Surface | Field (Grass) |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 2008 |
Built | 2008–2011 |
Opened | 14 August 2011 |
Construction cost | PLN zł 863 million[1] EUR € 204 million |
Architect | RKW Rhode Kellermann Wawrowsky |
Project manager | Krzysztof Czarnecki |
Structural engineer | Bollinger+Grohmann |
Tenants | |
Lechia Gdańsk (2011–present) Poland national football team (selected matches)
| |
Website | |
polsatplusarenagdansk.pl |
Construction of the stadium started in 2008 and was completed mid-2011.[5] The opening match was between Lechia Gdańsk and Cracovia and ended with 1–1 draw.[6] Its first international match was between Poland and Germany, took place on 6 September 2011 and ended 2–2. The match was relocated from Warsaw since the Stadion Narodowy was not ready. It has been used by Lechia Gdańsk since 'the White-and-Green' relocated there from the Gdańsk Sports Center Stadium.
The stadium was also one of the designated venues for the finals of UEFA Euro 2012. It hosted four matches during the tournament; three matches in Group C and one quarter-final match were played there.[7] It was originally scheduled to host the 2020 UEFA Europa League Final,[8] however following the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe the final was postponed and later rescheduled to August at the RheinEnergieStadion in Germany behind closed doors; Gdańsk hosted the 2021 final instead.[9] Villarreal won the match, defeating Manchester United 11–10 on the penalty shootout after the game ended 1-1.