Stadium Name: | Red Bull Arena |
Built: | 2003 |
Opened: | 8 March 2003 |
Renovated: | Summer 2005 6 May 2006 – 25 July 2007 |
Owner: | SWS Stadion Salzburg Planungs- und Errichtungsgesellschaft m.b.H |
Surface: | Lawn |
Construction Cost: | €45 million |
Architect: | Schuster Architekten, Atelier Albert Wimmer |
Former Names: | EM-Stadion Wals-Siezenheim, Bullen-Arena |
Seating Capacity: | 30,188 (17,218 Bundesliga) (29,520 UEFA matches) (31,895 UEFA Euro 2008) |
Dimensions: | 105x |
Red Bull Arena (pronounced as /de/), known during the UEFA Euro 2008 as the EM-Stadion Wals-Siezenheim pronounced as /de/ and during UEFA club football events as Stadion Salzburg,[1] is a football stadium in Wals-Siezenheim, a municipality in the suburbs of Salzburg, Austria. It was officially opened in March 2003 and is the home ground of FC Red Bull Salzburg. Previously, the club played at Stadion Lehen.
In 2011 the stadium hosted a friendly tournament known as the of four clubs. It features four teams: FK Austria Wien, FC Rapid București, Maccabi Haifa F.C. and FC Shakhtar Donetsk. To which Shaktar was declared the champions.[2]
Its current seating capacity is 30,188.[3] The stadium's original capacity was 18,200, but it was heavily expanded to over 30,000 so as to accommodate the 2008 European Football Championships.
The "EM Stadion Wals-Siezenheim" was the only stadium in the Austrian Bundesliga which used artificial turf. Polytan's FIFA 2-Star Recommended 40mm surface Ligaturf with a 25mm elastic layer was installed in 2005, but since summer 2008 natural lawn has been used.
From the 2018-19 Austrian Football Bundesliga season onwards, the majority of the upper stand remains closed, therefore limiting capacity to 17,218. This was done in order to improve the atmosphere, which was often considered as “weak“ during Salzburg‘s national home games. This reduction in capacity only applies for Bundesliga matches.
Date | Result | Round | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
10 June 2008 | 0–2 | Group D | ||
14 June 2008 | 0–1 | |||
18 June 2008 | 1–2 |