Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Strahov Stadium

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Capacity
  
220,000 56,000 seated

Opened
  
1926

Surface
  
grass

Owner
  
Prague

Strahov Stadium

Location
  
Strahov, Prague, Czech Republic

Field size
  
9 football pitches (total 310.5 x 202.5 m)

Address
  
Strahov, 169 00 Prague 6, Czechia

Similar
  
Stadion Evžena Rošického, Generali Arena, Strahov Monastery, Petřín, Eden Arena

Strahov stadium prague czech republic


The Great Strahov Stadium (Czech: Velký strahovský stadion) is a stadium in the Strahov district of Prague, Czech Republic. It was built for displays of synchronized gymnastics on a massive scale, with a field three times as long as and three times as wide as than the standard Association football pitch.

Contents

When it was an active sports venue, it had a capacity of around 220,000 spectators, making it the largest stadium and the fourth largest sports venue ever built.

Today, it is no longer in use for competitive sports events; it is a training centre for Sparta Prague, and is used to host pop concerts. The stadium is sited on Petřín hill overlooking the old city. It can be accessed by taking the Petřín funicular up the hill through the gardens.

Great strahov stadium velk strahovsk stadion


Construction

Construction began based on plans by the architect Alois Dryák, on a wooden stadium in 1926, which was replaced by concrete grandstands in 1932. Further construction occurred in 1948 and 1975. The playing field, surrounded by seating on all sides, is 63,500 square metres.

The stadium currently serves Sparta Prague as a training centre with 8 football pitches (6 pitches of standard sizes and 2 futsal pitches).

Synchronized gymnastics

The original stadium dates from the First Republic between the World Wars and served as a venue for popular Sokol displays of massive synchronized gymnastics. The Sokol displays were renamed Spartakiáda during the communist era, referring to the power and strength of the slave uprising led by Spartacus..

Performances with several hundred gymnasts making various complex formations and exercising identically while accompanied by tunes from traditional folk music attracted the attention of many visitors. Some of the most popular shows were those of young well-trained recruits who wore only boxer shorts while on the display or women dancing in miniskirts. The groups of volunteer gymnasts (unlike the soldiers, who were ordered to practise and participate) were put together from keen local athletic association members who regularly trained for the show throughout the year prior to the event, which repeated every five years.

Motor racing also took place in the stadium in the mid-1960s.

American football

A few days after the end of World War II (a few months after the end of hostilities in Europe), two units of the United States Army played a friendly match of American football. On September 28, 1945, a crowd of 40,000 watched soldier-athletes of the 94th Infantry Division defeat a team from the XXII Corps, by a score of 6-0.

Concerts

Since 1990, the stadium has been used for concerts.

  • The Rolling Stones - Aug 18, 1990 & Aug 5, 1995 (attendance 100,000 & 127,000 respectively)
  • Guns N' Roses - May 20, 1992 (attendance 60,000)
  • Bon Jovi - Sept 4, 1993
  • Aerosmith - May 27, 1994 (attendance 30,000) -
  • Pink Floyd - Sept 7, 1994 - (official attendance 110,000, but eventually another estimated 10,000 people snuck in or pushed into the venue)
  • Bratři Nedvědové - June 21, 1996 (attendance 60,000)
  • U2 - Aug 14, 1997 - (attendance approx. 62 000)
  • AC/DC, with Rammstein - June 12, 2001 - (attendance 25,000)
  • Ozzfest - May 30, 2002 - (attendance 30,000)
  • The future of the stadium

    In the last decade several studies have looked at adaptive reuse and preservation of this unique structure. There are plans to convert the mammoth Strahov stadium complex into a commercial zone complete with hotels, restaurants and shops. Another suggestion is to convert the area into a "leisure mecca for the 21st century". There were plans to rebuild the area as an Olympic village if Prague won a future Olympic bid; bidding for 2016 was unsuccessful.

    References

    Strahov Stadium Wikipedia