Estádio Municipal de Aveiro

Football stadium in Aveiro, Portugal From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Estádio Municipal de Aveiro (English: Aveiro Municipal Stadium) is a football stadium in Aveiro, Portugal. It was designed for the UEFA Euro 2004 tournament by Portuguese architect Tomás Taveira. It has a capacity of 32,830 spectators, making it the fifth largest football stadium in Portugal.[2]

Full name
Estádio Municipal de Aveiro
LocationAveiro, Portugal
OwnerMunicipality of Aveiro
Capacity32,830
Quick facts Full name, Location ...
Estádio Municipal de Aveiro
Interactive map of Estádio Municipal de Aveiro
Full name
Estádio Municipal de Aveiro
LocationAveiro, Portugal
OwnerMunicipality of Aveiro
Capacity32,830
SurfaceGrass
Record attendance
29,935 (19 June 2004)
Netherlands 2–3 Czech Republic
Field size
105 x 68 m
Construction
Built2003
Opened15 November 2003
Construction cost
€68.100 million[1]
ArchitectTomás Taveira
Tenants
Beira-Mar (2003–2015, 2019–present)
Portugal national football team (selected matches)
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The stadium has been primarily used by the historic club SC Beira-Mar since its inauguration, with the exception of the seasons between 2015–2019 when it returned to its former home, the Estádio Mário Duarte, which was demolished in 2020.

Amongst the most notable football games at the venue are two matches of the UEFA Euro 2004 championship, five matches of the Portugal national team, and eleven matches of the Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira (Portuguese Super Cup).

Design

Estádio Municipal de Aveiro Stadium has a unique design that combines a simple shape with a variety of bright colours throughout the entire stadium. It was the design of architect Tomás Taveira to introduce intense tonality colours to the exterior of the stadium and to subsequently give a feeling of motion and a spectacular visual effect. The stadium resembles a toy for children with many coloured parts gathered together.

The stadium's polychromy and dynamism is also reflected on the interior where four tribunes contain a curvilinear profile and multicoloured seats that characterize the stadium. The seats have different colours that are distributed in a random way. Red, green, yellow, blue, white, and black seats offer an original and chromatic animation and a strong feeling of dynamism and cheerfulness - even when the stadium is empty it looks as if the party has already started. Different colours are used in the stadium details, from the entrance gates, to the pillars and supporting beams. Even the walls at the inner ambience are coloured.

The roof also contributes to the harmonization process by making the stadium look like a big toy. It contains sharply red steel pylons that uphold sky-blue edges. From a more formal point of view, the slightly waved roof unifies the curved course of the underlying tribunes that offer a view over the pylons and its steel tie-beams.

UEFA Euro 2004

The following UEFA Euro 2004 - Group D - matches were held in the stadium:

More information Date, Result ...
Date Result Round Attendance
15 June 2004  Czech Republic 2–1  Latvia Group D 21,744
19 June 2004  Netherlands 2–3  Czech Republic 29,935
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Portugal national football team

The following national team matches were held in the stadium.

More information #, Date ...
#DateScoreOpponentCompetition
1.15 November 20031–1 GreeceFriendly
2.8 October 20052–1 LiechtensteinWorld Cup 2006 qualification
3.20 August 20085–0 Faroe IslandsFriendly
4.29 March 20112–0 FinlandFriendly
5.7 September 20140–1 AlbaniaEuro 2016 qualifying
6.7 October 20166–0 AndorraWorld Cup 2018 qualification
7.11 June 20243–0 Republic of IrelandFriendly
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Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira finals

The following Portuguese Super Cup finals took place at this stadium:

Edition Season Date Winner Score Runner-up
31st 2009 9 August 2009 FC Porto 2–0 F.C. Paços de Ferreira
32nd 2010 7 August 2010 2–0 S.L. Benfica
33rd 2011 7 August 2011 2–1 Vitória de Guimarães
34th 2012 11 August 2012 1–0 Académica de Coimbra
35th 2013 10 August 2013 3–0 Vitória de Guimarães
36th 2014 10 August 2014 S.L. Benfica 0–0
3–2 (p)
Rio Ave FC
38th 2016 7 August 2016 3–0 SC Braga
39th 2017 5 August 2017 3–1 Vitória de Guimarães
40th 2018 4 August 2018 FC Porto 3–1 CD Aves
42nd 2020 23 December 2020 2–0 Benfica
43rd 2021 31 July 2021 Sporting CP 2–1 Braga

See also

References

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