Bolt Arena Explained

Stadium Name:Bolt Arena
Fullname:Bolt Arena
Location:Töölö, Helsinki, Finland
Coordinates:60.1875°N 24.9225°W
Built:1999–2000
Opened:2000
Owner:City of Helsinki
Seating Capacity:10,770
Tenants:Helsingin Jalkapalloklubi (2000 - present)
Klubi 04
Dimensions:105 × 68 m

The Bolt Arena (named Telia 5G -areena until January 2020,[1] [2] named Sonera Stadium until April 2017,[3] and Finnair Stadium until August 2010;[4] also known as Töölön jalkapallostadion, "Töölö football stadium") is a football stadium in Helsinki, Finland. It is named after the labour hire company Bolt.Works, and is the home stadium of Veikkausliiga club HJK Helsinki.

History

The stadium was inaugurated in 2000. It has a capacity of 10,770 spectators. Originally the ground had a natural grass pitch, but it was soon replaced with an artificial one because the grass couldn't get enough sun light. Since then the stadium has seen numerous artificial playing surfaces that have been gradually replaced. The most recent artificial pitch was installed in April 2015.

The ground is located next to the Helsinki Olympic Stadium.

It is the home stadium of HJK. It hosted the 2003 FIFA U-17 World Championship as Töölö Stadium.

The stadium was named as one of the stadiums that host the 2009 UEFA Women's Championship. For that tournament, the artificial turf covering the field was temporarily replaced with grass.

In the 2016 domestic league season, tenants HJK Helsinki drew the highest average home attendance (5,101).[5]

On 15 November 2019, Finland national football team managed to qualify to the first major tournament, UEFA Euro 2020, in their history after defeating Liechtenstein 3–0 at this stadium.[6]

The specifications of the stadium

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Töölön jalkapallostadion on nyt Bolt Arena. January 29, 2020. HJK Helsinki.
  2. Web site: Töölö football stadium becomes Bolt Arena. January 29, 2020. HJK Helsinki.
  3. News: Sonera-stadionista tuli nyt Telia 5G -areena – Mitä mieltä olet uudesta nimestä?. Virtanen. Ari. 3 April 2017. Helsingin Sanomat. 7 April 2017.
  4. Web site: Töölön jalkapallostadion sai uuden nimen . Johannes Laitila . 10 August 2010 . Helsingin Sanomat . 10 August 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110716075053/http://www.hs.fi/urheilu/jalkapallo/artikkeli/T%C3%B6%C3%B6l%C3%B6n+jalkapallostadion+sai+uuden+nimen/1135259234769 . 16 July 2011 .
  5. Web site: EFS Attendances. www.european-football-statistics.co.uk. 12 April 2018.
  6. Web site: Finland 3–0 Liechtenstein. BBC. 15 November 2019.