Harman Patil (Editor)

Old Stadion (Amsterdam)

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Full name
  
Nederlandsch Sportpark

Location
  
Amsterdam, Netherlands

Surface
  
Grass

Demolished
  
1929

Architect
  
Harry Elte

Former names
  
Harry Elte Stadium

Capacity
  
29,000 seats

Built
  
1913-14

Renovated
  
1928

Old Stadion (Amsterdam) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Sportpark Irislaan, De Luiten, Gemeentelijk Sportpark Bornsestraat, Nieuw Monnikenhuize, De Baandert

The Oude Stadion (Old Stadium), officially known as Het Nederlandsch Sportpark (The Dutch Sports Park), and colloquially known as the Stadion (until 1928), was a multi-purpose sports stadium located in Amsterdam in the Netherlands. The stadium was built after the design by Harry Elte, with which he had won the contest for a national stadium in 1912.

The stadium was completed in 1914. For some time it was the only stadium with brick tribunes in the country. Prior to the construction of the Olympic Stadium used for the 1928 Summer Olympics, it was the primary stadium used for the city until the 1928 Games. This was to the fact that the stadium could not handle track running and track cycling events though it could accommodate football games, seating 29,000.

The addition of running lanes and a cycling track would have reduced the capacity to 17,000. Despite this, the old stadium did host some of the field hockey and football events for the 1928 Games.

The stadium was demolished in 1929 to make way for the projected housing, part of Hendrik Petrus Berlage's Plan Zuid. The area is still known as Stadionbuurt, after the Old Stadium.

References

Old Stadion (Amsterdam) Wikipedia