Augsburg Arena Explained

Stadium Name:WWK Arena
Logo Image:WWK ARENA Logo.svg
Location:Augsburg, Germany
Coordinates:48.3231°N 10.8861°W
Opened:26 July 2009
Owner:FC Augsburg
Surface:grass
Construction Cost:€45 million
Architect:Bernhard & Kögl
Former Names:Augsburg Arena (2006–2009)
Impuls Arena (2009–2011)
SGL Arena (2011–2015)
Tenants:FC Augsburg (2009–present)
Germany national football team (selected matches)
Capacity:30,660[1] (league matches),
28,367 (international matches)

Augsburg Arena, currently known commercially as the WWK Arena (pronounced as /de/; officially stylised as WWK ARENA, also "Schwabenstadion"), is a football stadium in Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany. It is used mostly for football matches and hosts the home matches of FC Augsburg.

The stadium has a capacity of 30,660 with 19,060 seats and standing room for 11,034. A second phase of construction could expand capacity to 49,000 in the future.[2] It replaced the club's previous home stadium, Rosenaustadion. FC Augsburg played their first match in the new stadium in 2009

During the time of designing and constructing the stadium, it was called "Augsburg Arena" pronounced as /de/. It was opened as "Impuls Arena" (pronounced as /de/, officially stylised as impuls arena), and was renamed "SGL Arena" (pronounced as /de/, officially stylised as SGL arena) after SGL Carbon acquired the naming rights for the structure in May 2011. The contract had a term of seven years and began on 1 July 2011.[3] On 1 July 2015 the stadium naming rights were acquired by WWK, an insurance company, changing the official name of the stadium to "WWK ARENA".[4]

Augsburg was one of the official host cities of the 2010 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup and the subsequent 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup. The Impuls arena was the location of several matches during the group stage and the quarterfinals. During the FIFA-competitions it was renamed "FIFA Women's World Cup Stadium Augsburg". The stadium has hosted one Germany national team game and was nicknamed the "Anfield of the B17 highway" following FCA's 2016 Europa League Last 32 First Leg clash with Liverpool.

WWK Arena is the first climate-neutral football stadium in the world. The carbon neutrality was achieved by six ecological heat pumps (40 m deep), which produce the desired temperature via heat exchangers. A bio natural gas boiler also supplies the necessary energy during peak load times at a game.[5] [6] In 2017, a new stadium facade will be made for the WWK Arena.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: World Stadiums - Stadiums in Germany. Worldstadiums.com. 14 January 2018. 1 September 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200901080143/http://www.worldstadiums.com/europe/countries/germany.shtml. dead.
  2. Web site: BAM to build football stadium in Augsburg. PropertyEU. 17 August 2015.
  3. Web site: impuls arena wird zur SGL Arena. Official website. FC Augsburg. 18 May 2011. de. 22 April 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160422193743/http://www.fcaugsburg.de/cms/website.php?sid=0be85c25bd9970418e299bb446aa9b6f&id=%2Findex%2Faktuell%2Fnews%2Fdata16645.htm. dead.
  4. Web site: FCA spielt künftig in der WWK ARENA. Official website. FC Augsburg. 7 July 2015. de.
  5. http://www.gemeindezeitung.de/archiv/EFB10/impuls%20arena_.pdf Lechwerke AG: Präsentation zur Klimaneutralität der impuls arena
  6. http://www.unendlich-viel-energie.de/bundesliga-winterpause-die-erneuerbaren-energien-bleiben-am-ball Agentur für Erneuerbare Energie: Bundesliga-Winterpause: Die Erneuerbaren Energien bleiben am Ball.
  7. Web site: Germany: WWK Arena finally getting its facades – StadiumDB.com. Stadiumdb.com. 14 January 2018.