Sapporo Dome Explained

Stadium Name:Daiwa House PREMIST DOME
Nickname:Hiroba
Location:Hitsujigaoka 1, Toyohira-ku, Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan
Opened:June 3, 2001
Owner:Sapporo City
Operator:Daiwa House Industry Co., Ltd.
Publictransit:Sapporo Municipal Subway


Tōhō Line at Fukuzumi

Architect:Hiroshi Hara
Seating Capacity:42,065 (football)[1]
42,270 (baseball)[2] [3]
Dimensions:Left Field – 100 m (328.1 ft)
Center Field – 122 m (400.3 ft)
Right Field – 100 m (328.1 ft)
Backstop – 25 m (82 ft)
Height of Outfield Fence – 5.75 m (18.9 ft)

is a stadium located in Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan, and is primarily used for association football. It is the home field of the association football club Hokkaido Consadole Sapporo, and was also home to the baseball team Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters through the 2022 Nippon Professional Baseball season. It was a football venue for the 2020 Summer Olympics,[4] was the venue for the opening ceremony of the 2017 Asian Winter Games, and was used for two matches of the 2019 Rugby World Cup.[5] The stadium also hosted matches during the 2002 FIFA World Cup.

On 19 July 2024, it was announced that the stadium, formerly known as Sapporo Dome, would be renamed Daiwa House PREMIST DOME from 1 August 2024 to 31 July 2028, due to a four-year naming rights contract with Daiwa House, a homebuilding company.[6] [7]

History

Sapporo Dome opened in 2001 with 41,580 seats. The stadium hosted three games during the 2002 FIFA World Cup, Germany vs Saudi Arabia, Argentina vs England and Italy vs Ecuador; all three matches were in the first round.

The Dome hosted the opening ceremonies of the 2007 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships on February 22 and hosted the closing ceremonies of the championships on March 4. It also made history as being the first venue where both indoor and nighttime skiing events took place for the first time on a world championship or Winter Olympic Games level with competitions in the cross-country skiing sprints (men's and women's individual, and men's and women's team) and the cross-country portion of the 7.5 km sprint event in the Nordic combined. In order to generate snow, the stadium used its turf conversion hovering system to facilitate the snow making process for the skiing competitions.[8] The opening ceremony featured Maki Ohguro, a local artist from Sapporo, Japanese drum demonstrations and other performances paying tributes to local customs and traditions. For the championships, seating capacity was reduced to 30,000.

The Dome was used as a super special stage in Rally Japan in both 2008 and 2010.

In late 2009, renovations with the possibility of increasing the capacity up to 53,796 were finished. These renovations also included space for more food outlets, an extra video screen, two extra changing rooms (to accommodate preseason matches in the NFL International Series, which have up to 75 players per team) and further media area as part of new office buildings attached to the stadium. As part of these renovations, the surface area of the arena itself was decreased to allow for more seating.

Beginning in 2023, the dome's surface is expected to remain soccer-only, as the Fighters will move into their own new stadium in nearby Kitahiroshima.

Retractable surface

The Dome switches between two entirely different surfaces: Baseball games are played on an underlying artificial turf field, while association football games are held on a grass pitch that slides into and out of the stadium as needed.

Conversion from baseball to football begins with the storage of the baseball field's artificial turf. Once finished, a set of lower bowl bleachers rotate from an angled position for baseball to a parallel position. A set of main bowl seats on one end of the dome then retracts, and the football pitch is slid into the stadium. The lower bowl is then rotated 90 degrees. Conversion from football to baseball occurs in reverse. Due to the retraction of seats, the Stadium has a capacity of 40,476 for baseball games.

Other stadiums that feature sliding pitches include the GelreDome in the Netherlands, Veltins-Arena in Germany, State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, United States, and Allegiant Stadium in Paradise, Nevada, United States, along with the split pitch of London's Tottenham Hotspur Stadium and Madrid's Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, ; however, unlike these facilities (with the exception of Allegiant Stadium), the Sapporo Dome has a fixed roof.

Details

Access

Major sports matches

2002 FIFA World Cup

DateTeam 1ResultTeam 2Round (A, B, C, D...)Attendance
1 June 20028–0Group E32,218
3 June 20022–0Group G31,081
7 June 20020–1Group F35,927

2019 Rugby World Cup

DateTime (JST)Team #1ResultTeam #2RoundAttendance
21 September 201913:4539–21Pool D36,482
22 September 201919:1535–3Pool C35,923

Football at the 2020 Olympic Games

Men's Tournament
DateTime (JST)Team 1ResultTeam 2RoundAttendance
22 July 202116.300–0Group C0
22 July 202119.300–2Group C0
25 July 202116.300–1Group C0
25 July 202119.000–1Group C0
Women's Tournament
DateTime (JST)Team 1ResultTeam 2RoundAttendance
21 July 202116.302–0Group E0
21 July 202119.301–1Group E0
24 July 202116.300–1Group E0
24 July 202119.000–1Group E0

See also

Other domed stadiums in Japan:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: FIFA Women's World Cup 2023: Bid Evaluation Report . FIFA . 7 June 2023 . 177–178 . 10 June 2020.
  2. Web site: ヤフオクドーム大規模改修で最大収容4万人超え 4球場が大台に/デイリースポーツ online.
  3. Web site: Sapporo Dome. sapporo-dome.co.jp. 13 November 2011.
  4. Web site: Venue Plan. Tokyo 2020 Bid Committee. 11 September 2013. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130727040849/http://tokyo2020.jp/en/plan/venue/index.html. 27 July 2013.
  5. Web site: Matches. World Rugby. 17 September 2019. 11 June 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200611060844/https://www.rugbyworldcup.com/matches. dead.
  6. 19 July 2024. 「札幌ドーム」のネーミングライツ契約締結 「札幌ドーム」の愛称が「大和ハウス プレミストドーム」に決定. Sapporo Dome. 19 July 2024. ja.
  7. 1 August 2024. 北海道コンサドーレ札幌 ホームスタジアム名称変更について. Japan Professional Football League. 1 August 2024. ja.
  8. FIS Newsflash Edition 112. January 31, 2007.
  9. Book: Takai . Hiroaki . Planning outline and analysis of actual energy operational performance from completion to present in Japanese and foreign large domes and stadiums — Tokyo Dome, Fukuoka Dome, Odate Dome, Sapporo Dome, Kaohsiung Stadium . 2014. 454 . World Sustainable Building . 978-84-697-1815-5 .