Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Cape Town Stadium

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stadium in Cape Town, South Africa

DHL Stadium (Cape Town Stadium)
The aerial view of the stadium
Map
Interactive map of DHL Stadium (Cape Town Stadium)
Full nameDHL Stadium
LocationFritz Sonnenberg Road,Green Point, Cape Town, South Africa
Coordinates33°54′12″S18°24′40″E / 33.90333°S 18.41111°E /-33.90333; 18.41111
OwnerCity of Cape Town
Capacity58,300
Field size125m x 68m[1]
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Broke ground26 March 2007; 18 years ago (2007-03-26)
Built2007–2009
Opened14 December 2009; 15 years ago (2009-12-14)
Construction costR 4.4 billion
(USD $ 600 million
£ 415 million)
ArchitectGMP Architects, Louis Karol Architects, Point Architects
General contractorMurray & Roberts/ WBHO
Tenants
Cape Town Spurs F.C. (2010–2021)
Cape Town City F.C. (2016–present)
WP Rugby Union (2021–present)
Stormers (2021–present)
South Africa national rugby union team (selected matches)

TheCape Town Stadium (Afrikaans:Kaapstad-stadion;Xhosa:Inkundla yezemidlalo yaseKapa;[2] known since 2021 as theDHL Stadium for sponsorship reasons) is anassociation football (soccer) andrugby unionstadium inCape Town,South Africa, that was built as part of the country's hosting of the2010 FIFA World Cup.[3]

During the planning stage, it was known as theGreen Point Stadium, which was the name of theolder stadium on an adjacent site, and this name was also used frequently during World Cup media coverage. It is the home ground ofWP Rugby and theStormers (since 2021), andPremiership clubCape Town City (since 2016). It has also hosted theSouth Africa Sevens rugby tournament since 2015 and hosted theRugby 7s World Cup in 2022.[4]

The stadium is located inGreen Point, betweenSignal Hill and theAtlantic Ocean, close to the Cape Town city center and to theVictoria & Alfred Waterfront, a popular tourist and shopping venue.[5]

The stadium had a seating capacity of 64,100 during the 2010 World Cup,[6] later reduced to 55,000.[7]

Cape Town Stadium is the largest stadium in Cape Town, and the fifth-largest in South Africa.[8]

Naming

[edit]
The stadium is in Green Point, on the Atlantic coast just west of the Cape Town city centre.
The stadium is in Green Point, on the Atlantic coast just west of the Cape Town city centre.
Green Point Stadium
Location of the stadium in the Cape Town metropolitan area

During construction, Cape Town Stadium was unofficially known as Green Point Stadium; the name ofan older stadium, then-situated adjacent to it, that was partially demolished and rebuilt into the Green Point Athletics Stadium.[citation needed]

During October 2009, the city asked for the public to propose names for the new stadium and the name Cape Town Stadium was chosen.[2]

With effect from June 2021, theCity of Cape Town as owner of the stadium, through a municipal entity,concluded a multi-year sponsorship agreement withDHL for ( Originally) period of four years, from 2021 to 2025.[9] It included renaming the stadium to the DHL Stadium which as of 2025 has since been renewed.[10]

In this regard, Peter-John Veldhuizen, chairperson of the Board of the Cape Town Stadium (RF) Soc Ltd said: "DHL’s contribution as our naming rights partner has certainly made a significant impact on the bottom line of the business".[11] As a result, in 2022–2022 the revenue target was exceeded by 30% and the grant funding from the City of Cape Town was reduced from R61m to R42m.[9]

Previous stadium

[edit]
The old stadium
The beginnings of the former Green Point Stadium during the Second Boer War
Aerial view of the oldGreen Point Stadium, which was partly demolished and rebuilt during 2007

The stadium is adjacent to the site of the original 18,000 seater stadiumGreen Point Stadium. It replaces a portion of the Metropolitan Golf Club site which has now been realigned.

The previous stadium, originally constructed in 1897 and which was partly demolished in 2007 and rebuilt in 2013 as the Green Point Athletics Stadium, was amulti-purpose stadium used for cycling, athletics, cricket and soccer. Later used mainly for soccer matches, it was the home ground ofSantos Football Club andAjax Cape Town at different points. It also hosted music concerts, including the November 200346664 Concert for the benefit of AIDS victims.[12] The section of the old stadium that remained was redeveloped into the Green Point Athletics Stadium, which opened in 2015 with a seating capacity of 4500.[13]

Design

[edit]
An aerial view of the stadium from just above its roof.
Cape Town stadium viewed fromSignal Hill

Construction of the Cape Town Stadium, located on theGreen Point Common, began in March 2007.

In 33 months, joint venture contractorsMurray & Roberts, now known asConcor and WBHO completed the project at a cost of R4.4billion – or approximately US$600million.

The project architects were an association between GMP Architects of Germany and local firms, Louis Karol Architects and the joint venture practice Point Architects comprising Comrie Wilkinson Architects and Urban Designers, Jakupa Architects and Urban Designers, Munnik Visser Architects and Paragon Architects. The lead urban designer for the 18hactare stadium precinct was Henri Comrie.

The structural engineers comprised a joint venture between BKS, Henry Fagan & Partners, KFD Wilkinson, Goba, Iliso and Arcus Gibb.[14]

Handing over

[edit]

Cape Town Stadium was officially handed over to theCity of Cape Town on schedule on 14 December 2009. At a ceremony in front of over 200 invited guests and the media representatives from around the world, Cape Town Executive Mayor Alderman Dan Plato, received the keys to the stadium officially confirming the opening of Cape Town Stadium.[15]

The pedestrian route from the central city to the stadium was designated as theFanwalk, highlighting local businesses and providing entertainment, while promoting crowd safety.[16][17]

After the World Cup

[edit]

A consortium consisting of South Africa's Sail Group and French-based Stade de France were awarded the service contract to operate the stadium and ensure that it remains a sustainable multi-purpose venue after the 2010 FIFA World Cup. The consortium, called Business Venture Investments 1317, was involved in the management of the stadium from January 2009 onwards. The city municipality paid the consortium to manage the stadium up to and during the World Cup, after which the consortium will lease the stadium from the city for a period of not less than 10 years and not more than 30 years.[18]

However, in December 2010 the Sail/Stade de France consortium cancelled the lease. Reports in the media at the time said that the consortium considered the agreement as non-viable. The City subsequently took over management of the stadium.[19]

Following the World Cup, temporary rows of seating on either side on the top tier were replaced by events suites and clubrooms, reducing the stadium's capacity to 58,300.[20] The stadium features corporate hospitality suites, medical, training, and conferencing and banqueting facilities. The consortium will operate the stadium as well as manage and maintain the defined areas of the surrounding urban park and sport precinct on the 85-hectare Greenpoint Common from stadium revenue.[21]

The Greenpoint Park was completed within a year of the World Cup ending as was promised to the people of Cape Town during the public consultation process preceding stadium construction. The park has since become one of Cape Town's most popular recreational facilities and has acted as a catalyst for significant improvements to surrounding buildings and spaces through spontaneous private sector investment.

Ajax Cape Town used the stadium as their home ground from the2010–11 season.[22] Due to the stadium's ongoing financial problems, the City of Cape Town had sought to acquireWestern Province rugby as an "anchor tenant". After four years of talks, Western Province announced in December 2014 that they had decided to remain atNewlands Stadium.[23] In March 2015, theSouth African Rugby Union announced that theSouth Africa Sevens tournament would be staged at Cape Town Stadium for four years, beginning in December 2015.[24]

In June 2016, it was announced that newPremiership clubCape Town City would also play at Cape Town Stadium.[25]

In late 2020,Western Province RFU announced that they were selling their longtime home ofNewlands Stadium to developers, who planned to demolish the ground and convert it to a mixed-use development. From 2021 onwards, franchise rugby teamStormers andCurrie Cup side WP have called Cape Town Stadium home, and the stadium has hosted international rugby tests played in Cape Town.

In 2023, after complaints about pitch quality intensified the previous season, the pitch was relaid with a hybrid turf, 50% synthetic and 50% grass.[26]

Cape Town Stadium (RF) SOC Ltd

[edit]

The Cape Town Stadium (RF) SOC Ltd, a municipal entity of theCity of Cape Town, was formed in 2018 to provide various operational services to the stadium.[11]

In 2021 the Entity entered into a sponsorships agreement withDHL, granting naming rights to the company. Since then the stadium has officially been known as the DHL Stadium.

Inaugural games

[edit]

The first game to be hosted at the new Cape Town Stadium was a Cape Town derby betweenAjax Cape Town andSantos on 23 January 2010 as part of the official inauguration of the stadium. Only 20,000 tickets were made available for the event and were sold out by Friday 15 January 2010. The Soccer Festival had entertainment from local bandFreshlyground and aVuvuzela orchestra performance during half time.

DateTime (SAST)Team 1Res.Team 2Attendance
23 January 201016:00South AfricaAjax Cape Town0–0
(5–6pen.)
South AfricaSantos20,000

The second of three 'dry runs' at the new Cape Town Stadium was another Cape Town derby. Local Cape Town rugby teams, TheVodacom Stormers and theBoland Inv. XV battled it out at the Cape Town Rugby Festival that took place on 6 February 2010. The Rugby Festival had entertainment from local bandFlat Stanley. Only 40,000 tickets were made available for the event. This was double the amount that attended the Soccer Festival.

DateTime (SAST)Team 1Res.Team 2Attendance
6 February 201016:15South AfricaStormers47–13South AfricaBoland Inv. XV40,000

Cape Town Stadium hosted its third test event on Monday 22 March, during which all 55,000 permanent seats were available for the first time. A total of 52,000 tickets were sold.

‘Cape Town For Jesus', a religious gathering addressed by South African evangelistAngus Buchan, was the first major non-sporting event hosted at the stadium, and gave the stadium operators another chance to test their readiness ahead of the 2010 FIFA World Cup.

DateTime (SAST)EventCapacityAttendance
22 March 201013:00Cape Town For Jesus55,00052,000

Cape Town Stadium hosted its fourth and final test event on Saturday 10 April. This was the first time that the stadium was utilised at night, for the International Under-20 Soccer Challenge between South Africa, Brazil, Nigeria and Ghana. About 40,000 attended the event that tested the stadium's readiness for the 2010 FIFA World Cup.

DateTime (SAST)Team 1Res.Team 2Attendance
10 April 201018:00GhanaGhana U-200–1BrazilBrazil U-2040,000
20:30South AfricaSouth Africa U-201–3NigeriaNigeria U-20

Sporting and events

[edit]

2010 FIFA World Cup

[edit]

In the2010 FIFA World Cup, Cape Town Stadium hosted five first round matches, one second round, one quarter-final, and one semi-final.[27] During the World Cup, all FIFA media referred to the stadium as 'Green Point Stadium'.

Matches

[edit]
DateTime (SAST)Team #1ResultTeam #2RoundAttendance
11 June 201020:30 Uruguay0–0 FranceGroup A64,100
14 June 201020:30 Italy1–1 ParaguayGroup F62,869
18 June 201020:30 England0–0 AlgeriaGroup C64,100
21 June 201013:30 Portugal7–0 North KoreaGroup G63,644
24 June 201020:30 Cameroon1–2 NetherlandsGroup E63,093
29 June 201020:30 Spain1–0 PortugalRound of 1662,955
3 July 201016:00 Argentina0–4 GermanyQuarter-finals64,100
6 July 201020:30 Uruguay2–3 NetherlandsSemi-finals62,479

International friendlies

[edit]

On 17 November 2010, the Cape Town Stadium hosted its firstinternational friendly. The match was betweenSouth Africa and theUSA, where they played for the Nelson Mandela Challenge Trophy.

DateTime (SAST)Team 1ResultTeam 2Attendance
17 November 201021:30 South Africa0–1 United States52,000
19 January 201117:00 Botswana1–2 Sweden2,000
21 July 201215:00South AfricaAjax Cape Town1–1EnglandManchester United53,000
8 January 201220.15 South Africa0–1 Norway
21 January 201316:00South AfricaJomo Cosmos0–4SwitzerlandGrasshopper Club Zürich100
26 January 201316:00South AfricaAjax Cape Town2–1200
23 March 201320:15 South Africa2–0 Central African Republic36,740

Rugby union

[edit]

The stadium hosts numerous rugby matches each year. Prior to 2021, the stadium hosted several Stormers matches when they couldn't play at their previous home ground in Newlands.Western Province Rugby and theStormers have used the stadium as their home ground for both the domesticCurrie Cup and internationalUnited Rugby Championship (URC) competitions. During their first season at their new home, the Stormers defeated their South African rivals, theBulls, to win the URC Final at the stadium. The Stormer's success in the URC qualified the team to compete in the European Rugby Championship during the 2022/23 season with several matches being hosted at the stadium, in addition to those for the Currie Cup and URC. The stadium also played host to the Stormers' URC playoff matches during the 2022/23 season after they won home field advantage, including theURC Final played on 27 May 2023.

The stadium has also hosted internationalrugby union matches played by South Africa'sSpringboks. In July 2021 the Springboks defeated theBritish & Irish Lions in a 3 match series that were hosted at the stadium. No fans were permitted to attend due toCOVID-19. In July 2022, the Springboks defeatedWales in what was South African lockEben Etzebeth's 100th test for the national team. And, in September 2024 TheSpringboks defeatedNew Zealand.

DateTime (SAST)Team #1ScoreTeam #2Attendance
3 February 201917.00South AfricaStormers33–28South AfricaBulls50,000
14 July 202118.00South AfricaSouth Africa A17–13British & Irish Lions0
17 July 202118.00South AfricaStormers3–49British & Irish Lions0
14 July 202118.00 South Africa17–22British & Irish Lions0
21 July 202118.0027–9British & Irish Lions0
7 August 202118.0019–16British & Irish Lions0
16 July 202217.0530–14 Wales56,000
7 September 202417.0018–12 New Zealand58,310
28 June 202517.0054–7Barbarians45,000
23 August 202517.0030–22 Australia56,350
29 August 2026- New Zealand

World Rugby Sevens Series

[edit]

See alsoWorld Rugby Sevens Series

The World Rugby Sevens Series hosts a tournament each year in Cape Town, traditionally in December. It was played annually from 2015 to 2019. However, no tournaments took place during 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the competition returned to Cape Town during the 2022–23 season.

DateEvent yearWinner
12–13 December 20152015 South Africa Sevens South Africa
10–11 December 20162016 South Africa Sevens England
9–10 December 20172017 South Africa Sevens New Zealand
8–9 December 20182018 South Africa Sevens Fiji
13–15 December 20192019 South Africa Sevens New Zealand
9-11 December 20222022 South Africa Sevens Samoa
8–10 December 20232023 South Africa Sevens
7-8 December 20242024 South Africa Sevens

2022 Rugby World Cup Sevens

[edit]

In September 2022, DHL Stadium played host to the Rugby World Cup Sevens. The men's tournament was won by Fiji, who defeated New Zealand in the Final. The women's competition was won by Australia over their cross-Tasmine rivals New Zealand.

Tennis

[edit]
Main article:Match for Africa

The Cape Town Stadium hosted the sixth edition ofRoger Federer's Matches for Africa, a series of charity tennis matches. It took place on 7 February 2020 and featuredRoger Federer and Rafael Nadal. Federer confirmed the date, location, and opponent during the 2019 edition ofWimbledon. Federer said he had pursued Nadal's participation for two years before a date was agreed upon.

South Africa is the birth country of Federer's mother and the focus of his charitable foundation. The doubles match consisted Roger Federer and American tycoonBill Gates versus Rafael Nadal and South African entertainerTrevor Noah. Federer and Gates won the match 6–4. In singles, Federer beat Nadal with the score 6–4, 3–6, 6–3. The event was attended by 51,954 people (the highest attendance ever recorded at a tennis match) and more than $3.5 million was raised in aid of children's education in Africa.[28]

Match in Africa 6 Doubles
1SwitzerlandRoger Federer
United StatesBill Gates
6
2SpainRafael Nadal
South AfricaTrevor Noah
3
Match in Africa 6 Singles
1SpainRafael Nadal463
2SwitzerlandRoger Federer636

Concerts

[edit]
icon
This sectionneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Cape Town Stadium" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(November 2025) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
YearDateArtistTour NameAttendance
201118 FebruaryU2U2 360° Tour72,532[29]
11 AprilNeil Diamond-
5 OctoberColdplayMylo Xyloto Tour46,670[30][31][32]
26 OctoberKings of LeonCome Around Sundown World Tour40,000+[33]
20127 NovemberLinkin ParkLiving Things World Tour55,000[34]
3 DecemberLady GagaThe Born This Way Ball Tour39,527
20135 FebruaryRed Hot Chili PeppersI'm With You World Tour-
7 MayBon JoviBecause We Can - The Tour35,407[35]
8 MayJustin BieberBelieve Tour65,000[36]
16 OctoberRihannaDiamonds World Tour39,616
201426 FebruaryEminemRapture Tour37,825[37][38]
10 DecemberFoo FightersSonic Highways World Tour36,926
201515 MarchMichael BubléTo Be Loved Tour22,060
1 AprilOne DirectionOn the Road Again Tour51,060
201618 FebruaryLionel Richie'All the Hits all Night Long’ Global Tour[39]
26 AprilMariah CareyThe Sweet Sweet Fantasy Tour35,000
201724 FebruaryUltra South Africa
17 MayJustin BieberPurpose World Tour39,706
25 NovemberThe Bellamy Brothers
20189 FebruaryUltra South Africa
11 AprilSantana
201927–28 MarchEd Sheeran÷ Tour96,915 (both nights)
2022OctoberJustin Bieber Cancelled
20231 FebruaryImagine DragonsMercury World Tour55,000
202431 January
Calabash South Africa50,000
202523 January51,000
20261 February

Popular culture

[edit]

Cape Town Stadium was featured in the filmSafe House (2012). The stadium also features in many local advertising and print media campaigns.[40] It was also featured as a motorsport venue in the video gameDirt 5.[41]

Incidents

[edit]

On 7 November 2012, shortly before the U.S. rock bandLinkin Park was set to perform at the sold-out stadium, gusts of wind caused advertising scaffolding outside the stadium to collapse onto a crowd of people injuring 19 and killing 1; of the 19 injured, 12 were taken to hospital for further treatment.[42]

Calls for demolition

[edit]

Prior to 2021, several individuals and groups called for the stadium to be demolished due to its under-utilization after the World Cup. Effective utilization and use of the stadium was a political issue in the city.[43][44][45] However, beginning in 2021, use of Cape Town Stadium increased significantly when it became the home ground of Western Province Rugby and the DHL Stormers. This move resulted in DHL sponsoring the naming rights to the stadium and significant renovations.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Stadium map". Archived fromthe original on 22 August 2021.
  2. ^abPollack, Martin (30 October 2009)."The city's 2010 FIFA World Cup stadium has a new name: Cape Town Stadium". City of Cape Town. Archived fromthe original on 27 July 2011. Retrieved21 May 2010.
  3. ^"Stadium Complete". Shine 2010. 17 December 2009. Archived fromthe original on 29 January 2011. Retrieved17 December 2009.
  4. ^"Rugby World Cup Sevens coming to Cape Town in 2022".SA Rugby. Retrieved1 January 2025.
  5. ^W, Mikhaila (27 February 2024)."DHL Stadium in Green Point".Cape Tourism. Retrieved12 February 2025.
  6. ^"Cape Town Stadium". FIFA. Archived fromthe original on 12 December 2010. Retrieved2 December 2011.
  7. ^"worldstadiums.com – Stadiums in South Africa". Archived fromthe original on 21 July 2019. Retrieved16 September 2014.
  8. ^"10 Biggest Stadiums In South Africa (2023) - South African Things". 2 May 2023. Retrieved1 January 2025.
  9. ^ab"Cape Town Stadium (CTS) (Municipal Entity) Business Plan 2023/24 to 2027/28 page 26".City of Cape Town. May 2023. Retrieved6 March 2024.
  10. ^"Cape Town Stadium welcomes name change to become DHL Stadium, following multi-year naming rights partnership with DHL".DHL. 29 September 2021. Retrieved6 March 2024.
  11. ^ab"Cape Town Stadium (RFf) Soc Limited integrated annual report 2021–2022"(PDF).City of Cape Town. January 2023. Retrieved6 March 2024.
  12. ^"The 46664 campaign".South African Broadcasting Corporation. 21 June 2011. Archived fromthe original on 18 April 2016. Retrieved4 April 2016.
  13. ^Anel Lewis (19 February 2015)."Green Point Athletics Stadium opens". Retrieved4 April 2016.
  14. ^"CT Stadium Construction Information". Archived fromthe original on 13 February 2010. Retrieved9 January 2010.
  15. ^"Cape Town Stadium Opening". City of Cape Town. Archived fromthe original on 16 February 2010. Retrieved9 January 2010.
  16. ^"Four. Monument, Ruin, and Redress in South African Heritage".Heritage, Culture, and Politics in the Postcolony. New York; Chichester; West Sussex: Columbia University Press. 2012. pp. 80–134.doi:10.7312/herw16018-005.
  17. ^"Cape Town Stadium is Hosting a Soccer Event on Friday 27 August".Western Cape Government. 18 August 2010. Retrieved3 July 2024.
  18. ^Warby, Vivian (1 December 2008)."Greenpoint stadium operator chosen". Retrieved11 April 2011.
  19. ^Johnson, Thomas (7 July 2016)."A World Cup White Elephant". Retrieved6 March 2024.
  20. ^"Green Point Stadium by GMP Architekten". 8 June 2010. Retrieved2 April 2016.
  21. ^"Greenpoint stadium operator chosen". SouthAfrica.info. 1 December 2008. Retrieved9 January 2010.
  22. ^"Chiefs to use Rand Stadium this season". KickOff Magazine. 30 June 2010. Retrieved8 July 2010.
  23. ^Lewis, Anel (19 December 2014)."WP says no to Cape Town Stadium".IOL Sport. Retrieved12 August 2015.
  24. ^"Green Point becomes new Sevens heaven".SuperSport. 20 March 2015. Retrieved12 August 2015.
  25. ^Said, Nick (29 June 2016)."PSL newcomers Cape Town City FC finally launched in the Mother City".Times Live. Retrieved30 June 2016.
  26. ^on, Standard published (28 September 2023)."Stormers pitch ready for action".SA Rugby magazine. Retrieved12 February 2025.
  27. ^"2010 Fifa World Cup: success stories". SouthAfrica.info. Retrieved26 May 2007.
  28. ^"Match in Africa a great success, breaks tennis attendance records".SABC News - Breaking news, special reports, world, business, sport coverage of all South African current events. Africa's news leader. 8 February 2020. Retrieved10 February 2020.
  29. ^"Boxscore Concert Grosses".Billboard. Lynne Segall. 12 March 2011. p. 11. Retrieved5 April 2016.
  30. ^"Coldplay rocks Cape Town". Retrieved21 June 2013.
  31. ^"Coldplay fans enjoy a sold-out concert at Cape Town Stadium". Retrieved21 June 2013.
  32. ^"Coldplay: News - The Parlotones interview". 8 May 2012. Archived fromthe original on 8 May 2012. Retrieved10 February 2023.
  33. ^"Kings of Leon play to forty thousand fans – Cape Town". Archived fromthe original on 6 May 2015. Retrieved21 June 2013.
  34. ^"Linkin Park: Living Things Tour – Cape Town Concert". Archived fromthe original on 15 November 2012. Retrieved20 June 2013.
  35. ^"Current Boxscore". Billboard. Retrieved5 June 2013.
  36. ^"Justin Bieber sends Cape Town into hysteria". Channel24. Retrieved12 May 2013.
  37. ^"Eminem's advice to SA men: 'You have to be f******g romantic, man!'". Archived fromthe original on 12 April 2015. Retrieved8 April 2015.
  38. ^"[Descriptive title reflecting the content of the source]".City of Cape Town. 21 June 2015. Archived fromthe original on 24 April 2014. Retrieved2015-06-21.
  39. ^"Lionel Richie seals SA tour with a promise". Retrieved3 April 2016.
  40. ^"Safe House: How one film put Cape Town's movie industry on the map".The Independent. 14 June 2012. Retrieved7 April 2016.
  41. ^"Cape Town stadium to feature in latest Dirt racing game".News24. 26 October 2020. Retrieved19 February 2024.
  42. ^"One Dead And Several Injured at Linkin Park Show in Cape Town - Music News @ Ultimate-Guitar.Com". Retrieved16 September 2014.
  43. ^"'Tear down Cape Town Stadium' | IOL".IOL. Retrieved18 April 2016.
  44. ^"Cape Town Stadium: icon or albatross | IOL".IOL. Retrieved18 April 2016.
  45. ^"Why Cape Town stadium should be demolished - OPINION | Politicsweb".www.politicsweb.co.za. Retrieved18 April 2016.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toCape Town Stadium.


SVNS venues
Current (2024–25)
Former
Seasons
Celtic League
Pro12
Pro14
United Rugby Championship
Teams
Active
Former
Defunct
Grounds
Grand Finals
Player movements
Current team seasons
2025–26
Natural environment
Bays
Beaches
Hills
Mountains
Islands
Headlands
Rivers and wetlands
Climate and weather
World heritage sites
Biodiversity
of Cape Town
Vegetation
types
Parks and
gardens
Nature reserves
Communities
Atlantic Seaboard
Blaauwberg
Cape Flats
(Klipfontein district)
Khayelitsha
Mitchells Plain
City Bowl
Helderberg
Northern Suburbs
Southern Suburbs
South Peninsula
Neighbourhoods
Built environment
Skyscrapers
Government
National government
Provincial government
City of Cape Town
Fortifications
Monuments and memorials
Lists of heritage sites
Historical buildings
Culture
Cuisine
Performance
art
Events and
festivals
Museums and
art galleries
Iziko Museums
Public art
Religion
Secular
architecture
Media
Companies based
in Cape Town
Hotels and resorts
Shopping areas,
malls and markets
Exhibition centres
Restaurants and cafés
Tourism
Air transport
Maritime transport
Road transport
Rail transport
Soccer
Rugby
Cricket
Other
Cape Town Tigers (basketball)
Sports events
Sports venues
Libraries
Universities
Colleges
Private
schools
Public schools
Alternative schools
Former schools
Art & music schools
Not yet allocated
Services
Hospitals
Lighthouses
Western Cape
Water Supply System
Electrical power generation
Emergency services
International
Geographic
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cape_Town_Stadium&oldid=1322041082"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp