38°15′42″N21°44′45″E / 38.26167°N 21.74583°E /38.26167; 21.74583
"Agyia" | |
![]() Interactive map of Kostas Davourlis Stadium | |
| Former names | Panachaiki Stadium |
|---|---|
| Location | Agyia,Patras, Greece |
| Coordinates | 38°15′42″N21°44′45″E / 38.26167°N 21.74583°E /38.26167; 21.74583 |
| Owner | Panachaiki GE |
| Operator | Panachaiki GE |
| Capacity | 11,321 |
| Surface | Grass |
| Construction | |
| Broke ground | 1935 |
| Opened | June 6, 1939 |
| Renovated | 2000 |
| Tenants | |
| Panachaiki | |
Kostas Davourlis Stadium is astadium inPatras,Greece. It is the home ofPanachaiki. Work on the grounds started in 1935. Originally calledStadium of Panachaiki, it has been officially renamedKostas Davourlis in 1992 after the great football player who died the same year.[1]
It was inaugurated on June 6, 1939. Kostas Davourlis Stadium originally had one stand (south). It acquired its present horseshoe-like shape in 1974. The stadium is in a much better condition today than a few years ago. The placement of plastic seats and the construction of the roof (north stand) in 1997; the refurbishment of facilities below the stands (VIP club, cafeteria, club shop) and the installation of floodlights in 2000 have done much to upgrade it.[2]
The capacity of the stadium has changed frequently, peaking at 22,000 after a 1974 expansion. Since then there have been a number of reductions due to modernisations. Record attendance is 21.350 in a football match betweenOlympiacos andPanathinaikos in 1982.
Adjacent the Kostas Davourlis Stadium is Panachaiki's arena for indoor sports, built in 1984.
The stadium can become much better, as there are still many problems. Access to the stadium and the lack of parking spaces are probably the most important of these. There is talk that a large car park will be constructed on the western side of the stadium, but this will only go through if the necessary funds are secured.[3]