- AWD-Arena
-
AWD-Arena Former names Niedersachsenstadion (until 2002),
FIFA World Cup Stadium Hannover (during 2006 FIFA World Cup)Location Hanover, Germany Opened September 26, 1954 Surface Grass Construction cost € 82.8 million (for redevelopment) Architect Schulitz & Partner Architects Capacity 49,000
(43,000 for international matches)Tenants Hannover 96 The AWD-Arena (In the logo AWDarena, known as Niedersachsenstadion until 2002) is a football stadium in the district Calenberger Neustadt in Hanover, Lower Saxony, Germany, and competition venue of the German Bundesliga football club Hannover 96.
The original 86,000-seat stadium was completed in 1954 and has since been rebuilt several times for various major football events. Today it has 49,000 covered seats. During the World Cup 2006 the stadium was named FIFA World Cup Stadium, Hanover.
In 2002, Hannover 96 leased the name right at the Lower Saxony Stadium for five years to the Financial Services AWD. In 2007 the contract was extended for another five years to June 2012.
Contents
History
The stadium was originally known as Niedersachsenstadion (Eng: Lower Saxony Stadium), built between 1952–1954, with an original capacity of 86,000. Huge amounts of debris from the houses in Hannover destroyed during World War II were used as the foundations of the stadium, with a total construction cost of 4 million Deutschmark. The stadium officially opened on September 26, 1954.
Hannover 96 moved permanently to the stadium from the Eilenriedestadion in 1959. Other local clubs, such as Arminia Hannover, OSV Hannover, TSV Havelse and Sportfreunde Ricklingen have also played matches there. In addition, the stadium has hosted numerous international matches, 4 (old) league championship games (1955,57,58,61), 2 DFB Supercup finals (1991–92) and 8 DFB Cup finals (1962,63,65,70,72,75,77,79).
Aside from football, the stadium was also the scene of several German athletics championships, the German Turnfest (a sports festival), field handball finals, concerts, rugby & American football.
Since the performances of The Rolling Stones in 1981 & Queen in 1982, the stadium has developed into the leading open air concert venue in Northern Germany. Tina Turner also played here a couple of times, 1990,1996 and 2000. After the stadium underwent extensive revelopment in 2003/04, the open air tradition was revived again with a concert again by The Rolling Stones in the new arena.
Since 2002, it has carried the name of sponsor AWD.
International football tournaments
1974 FIFA World Cup
The stadium was one of the nine venues chosen for (West) Germany's first hosting of the World Cup. This event saw the number of seats increase to 38,000, which entailed a decrease in the overall capacity to 60,400. In addition, the upper rank of the west grandstand was completely roofed. These alterations cost 26million DM. Newly modified, the arena featured in both the first and second group phase.
The following games were played at the stadium during the World Cup of 1974:
Date Time Team 1 Result Team 2 Round Attendance 1974-06-15 16:00 Uruguay 0-2 Netherlands Group 3 53,000 1974-06-19 19:30 Uruguay 1-1 Bulgaria Group 3 12,000 1974-06-26 19:30 Brazil 1-0 East Germany Group A (2nd round) 58,463 1974-06-23 16:00 Argentina 1-2 Brazil Group A (2nd round) 38,000 1988 European Championship
When Germany hosted its second international tournament, the stadium was again chosen as a venue. By now, due to the conversion of 8,000 terrace spots into single seating, the capacity stood at 55,000. It hosted two group matches:
Date Time Team Result Team Round Attendance 1988-06-11 15:30 Denmark 2-3 Spain Group A 60,366 1988-06-15 20:15 Republic of Ireland 1-1 USSR Group B 38,308 2006 FIFA World Cup
The stadium was one of the venues for the 2006 FIFA World Cup. However, due to FIFA sponsorship contracts, the arena had to officially be called FIFA World Cup Stadium Hanover (FIFA WM Stadion Hannover) during the World Cup. The stadium also had to convert its standing areas into seating, thus reducing the capacity for the tournament to 43,000, before being converted back after the games.
The following games were played at the stadium during the World Cup of 2006:
Date Time Team Result Team Round Attendance 2006-06-11 21:00 Italy 2-0 Ghana Group E 43,000 2006-06-16 21:00 Mexico 0-0 Angola Group D 43,000 2006-06-20 16:00 Costa Rica 1-2 Poland Group A 43,000 2006-06-23 21:00 Switzerland 2-0 South Korea Group G 43,000 2006-06-27 21:00 Spain 1-3 France Round of 16 43,000 Modern redevelopment
Although the stadium has seen many changes through the years, none were as extensive and impacting as the redevelopment of 2003/04 by Schulitz & Partner Architects, which cost 65 million euros.
There had been much controversy within the club's fanbase over suggestions of building a new football arena for many years before. Eventually this led to the decision to preserve and comprehensively redevelop the existing stadium in 1997/98. When Germany was somewhat unexpectedly awarded the hosting of the 2006 FIFA World Cup, the major stadium work was finally put into action.
During 2003/04, major parts of the stadium were rebuilt and thus the maximum capacity was reduced to 49,951 (of which around 8,000 are standing spaces). Before 2003, the stadium had had high floodlight masts (referred to by locals as 'toothbrushes'), track and field facilities inclusive and about 60% was open plan. The redevelopments transformed it completely into a football arena and removed approximately 70% of the previous building. The roof and about 25% of the area at the outer edges of the west grandstand were demolished like the north, south and east grandstand.
Instead of the previous scoreboards, the arena gained two modern video boards and replaced the old floodlight masts with 160 modern single headlights, which were integrated into the roof structure, supplying a light density of 1500 lux.
The pitch, under which a high performance drainage system and a cabin ground heating system was installed, was moved closer to the spectators than ever. With the removal of the track and field facilities, the pitch was moved directly to the west grandstand and the remaining grandstands were then built around it. This necessitated the stands behind the goals be designed in such a way that the upward gradient becomes larger gradually from west to east, creating a rather peculiar asymmetry, as the original west grandstand possessed such small angles of inclination and the new east grandstand was as constructed as steeply as possible.
The new inner roof was constructed using ETFE (ethylene tetrafluoroethylene) to allow sunlight through and thus allow the grass the grow naturally, whilst also protecting all spectators from bad weather [1]. This care for the pitch helps avoid the constant need to re-lay it as in many other roofed stadiums and was designed by Hanke Loköter who helped construction the Allianz Arena as well.
The new business and corporate packages of the AWD-Arena are just like the press area in the east grandstand. There are approximately 1,250 business seats, 29 VIP boxes for 10-12 people and 96 press places.
Work on the stadium finished ahead of schedule in December 2004. The first football match held following the redevelopment was on January 23, 2005, where Hannover 96 lost 0-3 to Bayer Leverkusen in the Bundesliga.
In June 2008, it hosted the 2008 Hannover Sevens, the European Sevens championship in rugby union.
On November 15, 2009, the stadium was filled to capacity as the funeral site for 32 year old Hannover 96 goalkeeper Robert Enke, who took his own life on November 10, 2009.
The stadium is one of few actual stadiums to be named on FIFA 12 when it was released of 28th Sept 2011
External links
- Official website
- Fan photos from the old Niedersachsenstadion
- Footballmatch Collection of German stadiums
Hannover 96 Bundesliga venues (2011–12) Allianz Arena · AWD-Arena · BayArena · Borussia-Park · Coface Arena · Dreisamstadion · Frankenstadion · Fritz-Walter-Stadion · Mercedes-Benz Arena · Olympiastadion · RheinEnergieStadion · Rhein-Neckar-Arena · SGL arena · Veltins-Arena · Volksparkstadion · Volkswagen Arena · Weserstadion · Westfalenstadion1974 FIFA World Cup Stadiums Olympiastadion (West Berlin) · Westfalenstadion (Dortmund) · Rheinstadion (Düsseldorf) · Waldstadion (Frankfurt) · Parkstadion (Gelsenkirchen) · Volksparkstadion (Hamburg) · Niedersachsenstadion (Hanover) · Olympiastadion (Munich) · Neckarstadion (Stuttgart)2006 FIFA World Cup Stadiums FIFA WM-Stadion Dortmund (Dortmund) · FIFA WM-Stadion Frankfurt (Frankfurt) · FIFA WM-Stadion Gelsenkirchen (Gelsenkirchen) · FIFA WM-Stadion Hamburg (Hamburg) · FIFA WM-Stadion Hannover (Hanover) · FIFA WM-Stadion Köln (Cologne) · FIFA WM-Stadion München (Munich) · Frankenstadion (Nuremberg) · Fritz-Walter-Stadion (Kaiserslautern) · Gottlieb-Daimler-Stadion (Stuttgart) · Olympiastadion (Berlin) · Zentralstadion (Leipzig)Regionalliga Nord venues (2010–11) Amateurstadion · AWD-Arena · Bluechip-Arena · Edmund-Plambeck-Stadion · Eintracht-Stadion · Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark · Holstein-Stadion · Jadestadion · Lohmühle · MDCC-Arena · Red Bull Arena · Sportplatz Vinnenweg · Stadion an der Gellertstraße · Stadion der Freundschaft · Stadion im Bildungszentrum · VfL-Stadion · Vogtlandstadion · Wilhelm-Langrehr-StadionCoordinates: 52°21′36.24″N 9°43′52.31″E / 52.3600667°N 9.7311972°E
Categories:- 2006 FIFA World Cup stadiums
- 1974 FIFA World Cup stadiums
- FIFA Confederations Cup stadiums
- UEFA European Football Championship stadiums
- Football venues in Germany
- Rugby union stadiums in Germany
- Buildings and structures in Lower Saxony
- Hannover 96
- Rugby union in Hanover
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.