Bežigrad Stadium
Full name | Bežigrad Central Stadium |
---|---|
Location | Bežigrad, Ljubljana, Slovenia |
Coordinates | 46°4′8.84″N 14°30′30.60″E / 46.0691222°N 14.5085000°E |
Owner |
Joc Pečečnik, City Municipality of Ljubljana |
Capacity | 8,211 |
Record attendance | 25,000 |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Built | 1935 |
Closed | 2008 |
Architect | Jože Plečnik |
Tenants | |
NK Olimpija Ljubljana (1945–2004) NK Bežigrad (2005–2007) Slovenia national football team (1995–2004) |
Bežigrad Stadium (Slovene: bežigrajski stadion, stadion Bežigrad, stadion za Bežigradom), also known as Bežigrad Central Stadium (Slovene: Centralni stadion Bežigrad), is a multi-purpose stadium in Ljubljana, Slovenia. It was closed since 2008 until January 2013. Joc Pečečnik, a Slovenian multimillionaire, plans to renovate it.[1]
The Bežigrad stadium was built in 1928 for the Czechoslovak Roman Catholic youth sport association Orel. It was designed by architect Jože Plečnik. It takes its name from the district of Bežigrad in Ljubljana.
Bežigrad Stadium was used, predominantly, for football matches, and was the home of the football club NK Olimpija Ljubljana (established in 1945), until the club's dissolution in 2004. The newly established club, NK Bežigrad, played at the stadium between 2005 and 2007.
National team matches
Date | Competition | Country | Result | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|
11 October 1995 | UEFA Euro 1996 Q | Ukraine | 3–2 | 4,000 |
15 November 1995 | UEFA Euro 1996 Q | Croatia | 1–2 | 10,000 |
21 May 1995 | Friendly | United Arab Emirates | 2–2 | 2,500 |
1 September 1996 | 1998 FIFA World Cup Q | Denmark | 0–3 | 6,000 |
10 November 1996 | 1998 FIFA World Cup Q | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 1–2 | 4,000 |
6 September 1997 | 1998 FIFA World Cup Q | Greece | 0–3 | 5,000 |
11 October 1997 | 1998 FIFA World Cup Q | Croatia | 1–3 | 6,000 |
10 October 1998 | UEFA Euro 2000 Q | Norway | 1–2 | 8,500 |
18 August 1999 | UEFA Euro 2000 Q | Albania | 2–0 | 8,000 |
4 September 1999 | UEFA Euro 2000 Q | Georgia | 2–1 | 7,000 |
12 November 1999 | UEFA Euro 2000 Q | Ukraine | 2–1 | 9,000 |
3 June 2000 | Friendly | Saudi Arabia | 2–0 | 9,000 |
11 October 2000 | 2002 FIFA World Cup Q | Switzerland | 2–2 | 9,000 |
28 March 2001 | 2002 FIFA World Cup Q | Yugoslavia | 1–1 | 10,000 |
2 June 2010 | 2002 FIFA World Cup Q | Luxembourg | 2–0 | 5,000 |
15 August 2001 | Friendly | Romania | 2–2 | 6,000 |
1 September 2001 | 2002 FIFA World Cup Q | Russia | 2–1 | 9,000 |
6 October 2001 | 2002 FIFA World Cup Q | Faroe Islands | 3–0 | 9,500 |
10 November 2001 | 2002 FIFA World Cup Q | Romania | 2–1 | 9,000 |
17 April 2002 | Friendly | Tunisia | 1–0 | 5,500 |
17 May 2002 | Friendly | Ghana | 2–0 | 7,000 |
7 September 2002 | UEFA Euro 2004 Q | Malta | 3–0 | 7,000 |
2 April 2003 | UEFA Euro 2004 Q | Cyprus | 4–1 | 5,000 |
6 September 2003 | UEFA Euro 2004 Q | Israel | 3–1 | 8,000 |
10 September 2003 | UEFA Euro 2004 Q | France | 0–2 | 9,000 |
19 November 2003 | UEFA Euro 2004 Q | Croatia | 0–1 | 8,500 |
18 August 2004 | Friendly | Serbia and Montenegro | 1–1 | 6,000 |
Music events
Joe Cocker, Metallica, Iron Maiden, Depeche Mode, Placebo, Siddharta, The Kelly Family, Red Summer Party, and other.
See also
References
- ↑ "Plečnika prerašča plevel, z velodromom se grejejo Romi" [Plečnik Overgrown by Weeds, Velodrome Used by Romas to Warm Themselves]. Slovenske novice (in Slovenian). 6 May 2012.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bežigrad Stadium. |
- Stadion za Bežigradom on Football Stadiums of Slovenia