Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Dan Păltinișanu Stadium (1963)

Coordinates:45°44′25.65″N21°14′39.1″E / 45.7404583°N 21.244194°E /45.7404583; 21.244194
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromStadionul Dan Păltinișanu)
Romanian stadium, 1963 to 2022
This article is about the stadium that was opened in 1963. For the future stadium, seeCity of Timișoara Stadium.

Dan Păltinișanu Stadium
The Great Oval (Marele Oval)
The stadium in 2009
Map
Interactive map of Dan Păltinișanu Stadium
Former names1 May (1963–1990)
Politehnica (1990–1992)
Silviu Bindea (1992–1995)
Address7 FC Ripensia Alley
Timișoara
Romania
Coordinates45°44′25.65″N21°14′39.1″E / 45.7404583°N 21.244194°E /45.7404583; 21.244194
Public transitBus line E2
Trolleybus line 16
Tram line 9
OwnerTimiș County Council
Capacity32,972
Record attendance65,000(Lepa Brena concert, 1984)
Field size105 m × 68 m (344 ft × 223 ft)
SurfaceGrass
ScoreboardYes
Construction
Broke ground25 July 1960
Built1960–1963
Opened1 May 1963
Renovated1985, 2002, 2008
Closed25 February 2022
DemolishedFebruary 2025
Tenants
FC Politehnica Timișoara/SSU Politehnica Timișoara (1963–2012, 2014–2022)
ACS Poli Timișoara (2012–2020)
SCM Rugby Timișoara (2014–2022)

TheDan Păltinișanu Stadium (Romanian:Stadionul Dan Păltinișanu), named after footballerDan Păltinișanu, was amulti-purpose stadium inTimișoara,Romania. Before getting demolished in 2025 it had aseating capacity of 32,972, the second-largest in Romania.[1] Operated until 2022, the stadium was used mostly forfootball matches by the local team,FC Politehnica Timișoara/SSU Politehnica Timișoara. It also hosted a few matches of thefootball national team. Anew successor with 32,000 seats is being worked on to replace it on the site.[2]

History

[edit]

The stadium was officially inaugurated on 1 May 1963,[3] then named 1 May. The construction of the stadium was done with the workers from the city's factories.[4] Its structure was similar to the one used to build most of the Romanian stadiums of that time, i.e. compacted earth. This constructive solution proved to be extremely problematic, as the compaction of the earth over time led to the deterioration of the stadium.[4] The original capacity was 40,000 on benches, but in 2005, when the plastic seats were installed, the capacity was reduced to 32,972.

The stadium wasnamed after deceased footballerDan Păltinișanu (1951–1995) who played 10 seasons atFC Politehnica Timișoara.[5]

The floodlighting system, with a density of 1,456lx,[1] was inaugurated in 2003, at a match againstPetrolul Ploiești.[6] Following two general renovations, in 2002 and 2008, the venue was able to hostUEFA Champions League games. It was a four-star establishment with all the facilities required for the team, internet for the press room, 30 cameras for video surveillance, electrically heated pitch, an automated irrigation system and a modern scoreboard.

The stadium has long been in an advanced state of degradation,[7] and plans for demolishment to make way for a new venue with 32,000 seats were drawn up. It was finally closed on 25 February 2022, as it no longer met the quality standards.[8] The last event on the stadium was aLiga 2 match betweenPoli Timișoara andPetrolul Ploiești during which thefloodlight dimmed twice by the 37th minute, and thus resulting in an automatic technical loss being sanctioned for the hosting city team.[9] It was then demolished in 2025.

Events

[edit]

Association football

[edit]

TheRomania national football team played selected matches at the venue. The first game was played in March 1983 againstYugoslavia. Since then another six games were played[contradictory], the last one in March 2010 againstIsrael.

International football matches
DateCompetitionHomeAwayScoreAttendance
30 March 1983FriendlyRomaniaRomaniaSocialist Federal Republic of YugoslaviaYugoslavia0–2~25,000
28 August 19851986 FIFA World Cup qualificationFinlandFinland2–0~35,000
23 April 1986FriendlySoviet UnionSoviet Union2–1~25,000
20 November 2002FriendlyRomania RomaniaCroatiaCroatia0–1~38,000
6 June 2007UEFA Euro 2008 qualifyingSloveniaSlovenia2–027,850
3 March 2010FriendlyIsraelIsrael0–2~18,000
International football clubs matches
DateCompetitionHomeAwayScoreAttendance
13 September 1978UEFA CupRomaniaPolitehnica TimișoaraHungaryMTK Hungária2–0~25,000
1 November 1978UEFA CupHungaryBudapest Honvéd2–0~20,000
1 October 1980European Cup Winners' CupScotlandCeltic1–0~48,000
5 November 1980European Cup Winners' CupEnglandWest Ham United1–0~45,000
19 August 1981European Cup Winners' CupEast GermanyLokomotive Leipzig2–0~34,000
19 September 1990UEFA CupRomania Politehnica TimișoaraSpainAtlético Madrid2–0~48,000
7 November 1990UEFA CupPortugalSporting CP2–0~38,000
16 September 1992UEFA CupSpainReal Madrid1–1~50,000
18 September 2008UEFA CupSerbiaPartizan1–225,000
5 August 2009UEFA Champions LeagueUkraineShakhtar Donetsk0–032,000
18 August 2009UEFA Champions LeagueGermanyStuttgart0–233,446
1 October 2009UEFA Europa LeagueCroatiaDinamo Zagreb0–330,000
22 October 2009UEFA Europa LeagueBelgiumAnderlecht0–036,893
2 December 2009UEFA Europa LeagueNetherlandsAjax1–238,085
5 August 2010UEFA Europa LeagueFinlandMYPA3–318,000
19 August 2010UEFA Europa LeagueEnglandManchester City0–134,695

Concerts

[edit]
DateArtistTourAttendance
10 August 1984Lepa BrenaBato, Bato Tour65,000[10]
17 July 2006ShakiraOral Fixation Tour30,000

References

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toDan Păltinișanu Stadium.
  1. ^abMatei, Alina (21 July 2015)."Stadionul Dan Păltinișanu".Merg.În.
  2. ^"Timișoara va avea un nou stadion! Când va fi gata noua "bijuterie" din Banat în care se vor investi 120 de milioane de euro".sport.ro. 10 June 2021.
  3. ^Silaghi, Vali (1 May 2010)."47 de ani de istorie pe stadionul "Dan Păltinișanu"".Adevărul.
  4. ^abBloancă, Robert (1 May 2014)."Povestea celui mai mare stadion din Banat, care își serbează ziua pe 1 Mai".Adevarul.
  5. ^"Dan Păltinişanu, un nume de legendă: bunicul fotbalist, tatăl baschetbalist. Ce va fi nepotul?" [Dan Paltinisanu, a legendary name: the footballer grandfather, the basketballer father. What will the nephew be?] (in Romanian). Adevarul.ro. 3 October 2011. Retrieved10 December 2021.
  6. ^"Istoria clubului Poli Timișoara".Ziare.com. 25 May 2008.
  7. ^"Imaginile degradării pe un stadion din România » Cum a ajuns să arate una dintre arenele-simbol din fotbalul nostru".gsp.ro. 23 February 2021.
  8. ^Dumitru, Silviu (25 February 2022)."Stadionul "Dan Păltinișanu" din Timișoara își închide porțile – Locația nu mai întrunește standardele de calitate".HotNews.ro.
  9. ^Anghel, Marius (24 February 2022)."Timișoara în beznă! Nocturna de pe "Dan Păltinișanu" a picat de două ori și Petrolul va câștiga la "masa verde" meciul cu Poli Timișoara".Liga 2.
  10. ^Both, Ștefan (16 September 2023)."Cântăreața iugoslavă care a înnebunit România în anii '80. Concertul ei de la Timișoara din 1984, de neuitat".Adevărul.

See also

[edit]
Teams
General information
Stadium
Romania
SuperLiga
Liga II
Liga III
Seria I
Seria II
Seria III
Seria IV
Seria V
Seria VI
Seria VII
Seria VIII
Other stadiums
Defunct stadiums
Closed stadiums
Under renovations
Future stadiums
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dan_Păltinișanu_Stadium_(1963)&oldid=1308900728"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp