- Stadion Maksimir
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Maksimir Full name Stadion Maksimir Location Zagreb, Croatia Coordinates 45°49′7.89″N 16°1′5.08″E / 45.8188583°N 16.0180778°ECoordinates: 45°49′7.89″N 16°1′5.08″E / 45.8188583°N 16.0180778°E Opened 5 May 1912 Expanded 1997 Owner City of Zagreb Operator GNK Dinamo Zagreb Surface Grass Capacity Concerts: 60,000
Football: 35,825[1]Field dimensions 105 x 68 m Tenants HAŠK (1912–1945)
Dinamo Zagreb (1949–present)
Croatia national football team (1990–present)
Lokomotiva (2009–present)Maksimir Stadium (Croatian: Stadion Maksimir) is a stadium in the Croatian capital of Zagreb. It takes its name from the neighbourhood of Maksimir. It is primarily the home of Dinamo Zagreb, the top football team in the country.
The stadium was first opened May 5, 1912. Over its history it has gone through many facelifts, but starting in 1997 it received a major rebuilding that lifted its seating capacity to 35,825. Many of the Croatian national football team's games are played at Maksimir, which competes with Poljud stadium for the biggest matches. For 16 years the Croatian football team had a proud unbeaten record at this stadium in any competitive match, however on 10 September 2008 (two years after suffering a 2-0 defeat at the same venue) England became the first team to beat Croatia in Zagreb, winning 4-1, ending a thirty match undefeated streak.
The stadium has also been used as the venue for some big concerts, including U2, David Bowie, Bijelo Dugme, Marko Perković Thompson and Bon Jovi.
Contents
Renovations
The plans for a massive renovation process were made in 1998, with first phase starting that same year. The old northern stand was demoslihed and a new one arisen within a year. Renovations was to include lowering the lawn and making the “ring” round the pitch in the place of running track and thus gain 16,000 new seats with the annex to he south stand with the final addition of a modern roof structure. Maksimir was to have 60.000 comfortable sitting places and was to be an exclusively football stadium like many others in Europe. It has additionally been planned to built: new premises for Club’s Management, Elegant “Blue Lounge”, Big “Trophy room”, football school premises, changing room, coach staff room, sports hall with gym, out patient clinic, restaurant, luxury hotel (“A” category) with 46 beds for visiting teams special importance will be given to the building which will connect west stand to the north stand. By this, all conditions for hosting and organizing big European matches will be fulfilled (including UEFA offices, press club, press center, V.I.P. hospitality…). WIth that, the venue was to be one of the best equipped stadiums in Europe [1] but in the beginning of 2000's they were suspended. As of December 2007, the public was awaiting the presentation of new stadium, and in 2008 city government presented two potential stadiums, new Maksimir and Vulkan (Volcano) which is supposed to be built on the another location (Kajzerica) in Zagreb and old Maksimir should then be knocked down, the citizens were to choose which one they want on the referendum predicted to take place somewhere in the near future. However, the city government never made any progress with referendum or these plans and the stadium remaines to be a city shame for a decade now.
In the summer of 2011, a little, but much needed "facelifting" was made on the stadium. All seats were replaced, a new drainage system, under-soil heating and automatic watering were installed along with a new turf, the athletic track was covered with blue artificial grass and all brick surfaces were covered in blue cloth.
Events
- UEFA Euro 1976 - Final tournament held in Yugoslavia, with Maksimir hosting the Netherlands v Czechoslovakia semi-final match and the Netherlands v Yugoslavia third place match.
- 1987 Summer Universiade - Hosted by Zagreb, for which Maksimir was the central venue.
- Dinamo Zagreb–Red Star Belgrade riot - An infamous riot involving Dinamo Zagreb and Red Star Belgrade supporters which happened on 13 May 1990.
- Yugoslavia v Netherlands (1990) - Last Yugoslavia match hosted at Maksimir held on 3 June 1990.
- Croatia v United States (1990) - The first Croatia match in the modern era, held on 17 October 1990 at Maksimir.
- David Bowie - 1990. (Sound+Vision tour)
- Bijelo Dugme 22.6.2005 on reunion tour
- U2 9.-10.8.2009
- Bon Jovi performed here on June 8th, 2011.
External links
References
Zagreb History History of Zagreb · Gradec · Kaptol · Krvavi most · 1880 earthquake · 1995 rocket attacks · Zagreb crisis · MayorsDistricts Brezovica · Črnomerec · Donja Dubrava · Donji grad · Gornja Dubrava · Gornji grad-Medveščak · Maksimir · Novi Zagreb-istok · Novi Zagreb-zapad · Peščenica-Žitnjak · Podsljeme · Podsused-Vrapče · Sesvete · Stenjevec · Trešnjevka-jug · Trešnjevka-sjever · TrnjeBuildings and
landmarks1 Ilica Street · Ban Jelačić Square · Banski dvori · British Square · Cibona Tower · Dolac Market · Grič Cannon · Ilica Street · Jarun · Kallina House · Lotrščak Tower · Maksimir Park · Marshal Tito Square · Medvedgrad · Meštrović Pavilion · Mirogoj Cemetery · Nikola Šubić Zrinski Square · Nine Views · Old City Hall · St. Mark's Square · Tkalčićeva Street · ZagrepčankaChurches Culture Galleries and
museumsArchaeological Museum · Art Pavilion · Croatian Museum of Naïve Art · Glyptotheque · Klovićevi dvori · Mimara Museum · Modern Gallery · Museum of Broken Relationships · Museum of Contemporary Art · Strossmayer Gallery · Technical Museum · Zagreb City MuseumEducation Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts · University of Zagreb (Academies: Dramatic Art · Fine Arts · Music · Faculties: Economics and Business · Electrical Engineering and Computing · Geodesy · Humanities and Social Sciences · Medicine · Teacher Education)Sports venues Arena Zagreb · Dom sportova · Dražen Petrović Basketball Hall · Maksimir Stadium · Kranjčevićeva StadiumTransport Festivals GNK Dinamo Zagreb History Grounds Koturaška (1945–1948) · Maksimir (1948–present) · Kajzerica (proposed)Related clubs Related articles Categories 2011–12 Prva HNL venues Čavlek (Karlovac) · Cibalia (Vinkovci) · Drosina (Pula) · Gradski (Koprivnica) · Gradski vrt (Osijek) · Herjavec (Varaždin) · Kantrida (Rijeka) · Kranjčevićeva (Zagreb) · Maksimir (Zagreb) · Park mladeži (Split) · Poljud (Split) · Stanovi (Zadar) · Šubićevac (Šibenik) · ŠRC Zaprešić (Zaprešić)Categories:- Sports venues in Zagreb
- Football venues in Croatia
- GNK Dinamo Zagreb
- UEFA European Football Championship stadiums
- National stadiums
- Athletics venues in Croatia
- Buildings and structures completed in 1912
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