Gelora Bung Tomo Stadium

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LocationBenowo, Surabaya, East Java, Indonesia
Coordinates7°13′23.8″S 112°37′21.8″E / 7.223278°S 112.622722°E / -7.223278; 112.622722
Publictransit Benowo
Bus interchange Wirawiri Suroboyo feeder: Stadion GBT
OwnerGovernment of Surabaya
Gelora Bung Tomo Stadium
Stadion Gelora Bung Tomo
GBT
The stadium in 2023
Gelora Bung Tomo Stadium is located in Surabaya
Gelora Bung Tomo Stadium
Gelora Bung Tomo Stadium
Location in Surabaya
LocationBenowo, Surabaya, East Java, Indonesia
Coordinates7°13′23.8″S 112°37′21.8″E / 7.223278°S 112.622722°E / -7.223278; 112.622722
Public transit Benowo
Bus interchange Wirawiri Suroboyo feeder: Stadion GBT
OwnerGovernment of Surabaya
Capacity46,806[1]
Capacity history
  • 55,000 (2010–2020)
    46,806 (2020–present)
SurfaceZoysia japonica
Construction
Broke ground2008
Built2008–2010
Opened6 August 2010; 15 years ago (2010-08-06)
Renovated2019–2020
Construction costIDR500 billion (2008–2010)
IDR100 billion (2019–2020)
Tenants
Persebaya Surabaya (2012–present)
The stadium during the 2023 FIFA U-17 World Cup.

Gelora Bung Tomo Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium in Benowo, Surabaya, East Java, Indonesia. It is a part of the Surabaya Sports Center. The rest of the sports complex consists of an indoor stadium, a racing circuit, a roller skating track, three football training pitches, and a mosque. This stadium is used mostly for football matches. It replaced the older Gelora 10 November Stadium. The stadium is used for football matches and is a new base for Persebaya Surabaya. GBT can accommodate 46,806 spectators. The stadium is named after Bung Tomo, who is a National Hero of Indonesia.

Groundbreaking occurred on 1 January 2008. Construction cost was estimated at Rp100 billion. The arena was designed by Malaysian architects KLIA. Stadion Gelora Bung Tomo was officially opened by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono on 11 August 2010.

International football matches

Date Competition Team 1 Res. Team 2
10 September 2012 2012 SCTV Cup  Indonesia 0–2  North Korea
15 September 2012 Friendly  Indonesia 0–0  Vietnam
14 June 2023 Friendly  Indonesia 0–0  Palestine
8 September 2023 Friendly  Indonesia 2–0  Turkmenistan
5 September 2025 Friendly  Indonesia 6–0  Chinese Taipei
8 September 2025 Friendly  Indonesia 0–0  Lebanon

2023 FIFA U-17 World Cup

The stadium hosted eight matches during the 2023 FIFA U-17 World Cup, including all of Indonesia U-17 team group stage matches. The stadium capacity for the tournament was reduced to 44,200 seats.[2]

Date Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round Attendance
10 November 2023 Panama0–2 MoroccoGroup A13,437
10 November 2023 Indonesia1–1 EcuadorGroup A30,583
13 November 2023 Morocco0–2 EcuadorGroup A5,498
13 November 2023 Indonesia1–1 PanamaGroup A17,239
16 November 2023 Canada1–5 MaliGroup B10,269
16 November 2023 Morocco3–1 IndonesiaGroup A26,454
21 November 2023 Mali5–0 MexicoRound of 167,034
21 November 2023 Morocco1–1 (4–1 p) IranRound of 161,552

Renovations

To accommodate the stadium facilities for the 2021 FIFA U-20 World Cup, renovations are being done to the stadium. Including the installation of the scoreboard in the north upper tribune, repainting and repairing the facade, and adding seats to the stadium to make it a suitable all-seater stadium. The seats are arranged in a mosaic based in a green color representing the home team colors of Persebaya.

The Bung Tomo ornament and the stadium sign is already installed outside the Gelora Bung Tomo and also the floodlights (2400 lux) in December 2020. The first test of the new floodlights was in December, the second test of the new floodlights was increased at the brightness of 3500 lux. Three training fields are now finished. The floodlights were tested after the installation and the brightness is 800 lux, the second test in March 2021 was now in 1200 lux.

An inside panorama of Gelora Bung Tomo before renovation

See also

References

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