Parc Olympique Lyonnais

Multi-purpose stadium in Lyon, France From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

45°45′55″N 4°58′56″E

Address10 Avenue Simone Veil
OperatorOL Groupe
Quick facts Address, Location ...
Parc Olympique Lyonnais
Groupama Stadium
Interactive map of Parc Olympique Lyonnais
Groupama Stadium
Address10 Avenue Simone Veil
LocationDécines-Charpieu, Metropolis of Lyon, France
OwnerOL Groupe
OperatorOL Groupe
Capacity59,186[1]
Executive suites105
SurfaceAirFibr hybrid grass
Record attendance
Field size105 × 68 metres (344 ft × 223 ft)
Public transitLyon tramway Lyon tramway#Line T7 Décines–OL Vallée
Décines–OL Vallée[2]
Construction
Broke groundOctober 22, 2012; 13 years ago (2012-10-22)
OpenedJanuary 9, 2016; 10 years ago (2016-01-09)
Construction cost480 million
ArchitectPopulous
Structural engineerVinci SA
Services engineerVinci SA
General contractorVinci SA
Tenants
Olympique Lyonnais (2016–present)
France national football team (selected matches)
OL Lyonnes (UWCL matches; 2018-present)
Website
Official website
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Parc Olympique Lyonnais, known for sponsorship reasons as Groupama Stadium, is a 59,186-seater stadium in Décines-Charpieu, a commune situated in the Metropolis of Lyon. It is the third largest stadium in France, behind Stade de France in Saint-Denis (Paris) and Orange Velodrome in Marseille.[3]

The home of French football club Olympique Lyonnais, it replaced their previous stadium, the Stade de Gerland, in January 2016. The Stade de Gerland became the home of Lyon OU Rugby.

The stadium was a host of UEFA Euro 2016, and was also chosen to stage the 2017 Coupe de la Ligue Final and the 2018 UEFA Europa League Final, in addition to the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup and football at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris. Outside football, the ground has also held rugby union and ice hockey matches, as well as musical concerts.[4]

Construction

On 1 September 2008, Olympique Lyonnais president Jean-Michel Aulas announced plans to create a new 60,000-seat stadium, tentatively called OL Land, to be built on 50 hectares of land located in Décines-Charpieu, a suburb of Lyon. The stadium would also include state-of-the-art sporting facilities, two hotels, a leisure center, and commercial and business offices.

On 13 October 2008, the project was agreed upon by the French government, the General Council of Rhône, the Grand Lyon, SYTRAL, and the commune of Décines for construction with approximately 180 million of public money being used and between €60–80 million coming from the Urban Community of Lyon.[5] The project was hindered by slow administrative procedures, political interests, and various opposition groups who viewed the stadium as financially, ecologically, and socially wrong for the taxpayers and community of Décines. After landscaping in 2012, stadium construction started in summer 2013.

Football

Olympique Lyonnais played their first game in the new stadium on 9 January 2016, winning 4–1 against Troyes in Ligue 1; Alexandre Lacazette scored the first goal at the ground.[6]

In September 2016, the new stadium was chosen as the host of the 2017 Coupe de la Ligue Final, the first time that the final had been hosted outside the Paris area. Paris Saint-Germain won 4–1 against Monaco.[7] On 9 December 2016, UEFA announced that Parc OL had been chosen to host the 2018 UEFA Europa League Final on 16 May 2018.[8]

The current record league attendance at the Parc OL is 58,257, achieved on 9 November 2025 during a fixture against Paris Saint-Germain during the 2025–26 Ligue 1 season. The current record European league attendance is 58,018, achieved during a fixture against Manchester United on 10 April 2025 during the 2024–25 Europa League season.[9]

Lyon's average domestic league attendances in the Parc OL are listed below.[10]

More information Season, Average ...
Season Average League
2016–17 39,171 Ligue 1
2017–18 46,005
2018–19 49,079
2019–20 47,299[11]
2020–21 N/A[12]
2021–22 32,331
2022–23 46,058
2023–24 43,642
2024–25 50,994
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UEFA Euro 2016

In November 2009, the French Football Federation chose Parc Olympique Lyonnais one of the twelve stadiums to be used in the country's bidding for UEFA Euro 2016. It hosted six games at the tournament, including the hosts' 2–1 win over the Republic of Ireland in the last 16, and eventual champions Portugal's 2–0 win over Wales in the semi-finals.[13][14]

More information Date, Time (CEST) ...
Date Time (CEST) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
13 June 201621:00Belgium 
0–2
 ItalyGroup E
55,408
16 June 201618:00Ukraine 
0–2
 Northern IrelandGroup C
51,043
19 June 201621:00Romania 
0–1
 AlbaniaGroup A
49,752
22 June 201618:00Hungary 
3–3
 PortugalGroup F
55,514
26 June 201615:00France 
2–1
 Republic of IrelandRound of 16
56,279
6 July 201621:00Portugal 
2–0
 WalesSemi-finals
55,679
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2019 FIFA Women's World Cup

The Parc OL was one of nine stadiums hosting matches at the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, staging the semi-finals and the final.[15]

More information Date, Time (CEST) ...
Date Time (CEST) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
2 July 201921:00England 1–2 United StatesSemi-finals
53,512
3 July 201921:00Netherlands 1–0 (a.e.t.) Sweden
48,452
7 July 201917:00United States 2–0 NetherlandsFinal
57,900
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France national football team

More information Date, Team #1 ...
Date Team #1 Result Team #2 Competition
9 June 2018France 
1–1
 United StatesFriendly
7 September 2021France 
2–0
 Finland2022 World Cup qualification
23 March 2024France 
0–2
 GermanyFriendly
9 September 2024France 
2–0
 Belgium2024–25 UEFA Nations League A
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2024 UEFA Women's Nations League Finals

The stadium was one of three selected to host the 2024 UEFA Women's Nations League Finals matches. It hosted one match.

More information Date, Team #1 ...
Date Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
23 February 2024France 
2–1
 GermanySemi-finals
30,267
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2024 Summer Olympics

11 matches, 5 men's and 6 women's, were hosted in the stadium during the 2024 Summer Olympics.[16]

More information Date, Team #1 ...
Date Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
24 July 2024Iraq 
2–1
 UkraineMen's group B
10,637
25 July 2024France 
3–2
 ColombiaWomen's group A
29,208
27 July 2024Argentina 
3–1
 IraqMen's group B
30,008
28 July 2024New Zealand 
0–2
 ColombiaWomen's group A
5,212
30 July 2024Ukraine 
0–2
 ArgentinaMen's group B
10,017
31 July 2024New Zealand 
1–2
 FranceWomen's group A
21,946
2 August 2024Japan 
0–3
 SpainMen's quarter-finals
19,111
3 August 2024Spain 
2–2 (4–2 p)
 ColombiaWomen's quarter-finals
10,355
5 August 2024France 
3–1 (a.e.t.)
 EgyptMen's semi-finals
47,530
6 August 2024United States 
1–0 (a.e.t.)
 GermanyWomen's semi-finals
11,716
9 August 2024Spain 
0–1
 GermanyWomen's bronze medal match
10,995
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Rugby

2023 Rugby World Cup

More information Date, Time (CEST) ...
Date Time (CEST) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
24 September 202321:00Wales 40–6 AustraliaPool C
55,296
27 September 202317:45Uruguay 36–26 NamibiaPool A
49,342
29 September 202321:00New Zealand 96–17 Italy
57,083
5 October 202321:00New Zealand 73–0 Uruguay
57,672
6 October 202321:00France 60–7 Italy
58,102
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France national rugby union team

More information Date, Team #1 ...
Date Team #1 Result Team #2 Competition Attendance Note
14 November 2017France 
23–28
 New Zealand2017 Autumn Internationals
58,607
Uncapped match played between two official tests
16 March 2024France 
33–31
 England2025 Six Nations Championship
58,195
N/a
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European Rugby Cups finals

More information Date, Team #1 ...
Date Team #1 Result Team #2 Competition Attendance
13 May 2016Harlequins England
19–26
France Montpellier2015–16 European Rugby Challenge Cup
28,556
14 May 2016Racing 92 France
9–21
England Saracens2015–16 European Rugby Champions Cup
58,017
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Top 14

More information Date, Team #1 ...
Date Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
25 May 2018Lyon
14–40
Montpellier2017–18 Top 14 semi-finals
58,664
26 May 2018Racing 92
14–19
Castres
56,272
20 June 2025Toulouse
32–25
Bayonne2024–25 Top 14 semi-finals
58,741
21 June 2025Bordeaux Bègles
39–24
Toulon
58,408
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Concerts

More information Date, Artist ...
List of concerts at Parc Olympique Lyonnais, showing date, artist, event and attendance
Date Artist Event Attendance
9 January 2016 will.i.am Stadium inauguration 55,169
23 March 2016 Christophe Maé 2015–16 UEFA Women's Champions League 11,732[17]
19 July 2016 Rihanna Anti World Tour
8 June 2017 Coldplay A Head Full of Dreams Tour 50,901[18]
12 July 2017 Celine Dion Celine Dion Live 2017 39,507[18]
24 May 2019 Ed Sheeran ÷ Tour 55,897[19]
25 May 2019 56,050[19]
26 May 2019 51,759[19]
1 June 2019 Stars 80 Triomphe 17,284[20]
4 June 2019 Phil Collins Not Dead Yet Tour 34,163[21]
11 June 2022 Soprano[22] Chasseur d'étoiles Tour 50,440
25 June 2022 Indochine[23] Central Tour 72,561[24]
8 July 2022 Rammstein Rammstein Stadium Tour 49,124[25]
9 July 2022 49,560[26]
19 July 2022 The Rolling Stones Sixty Tour 50,319[27]
31 May 2023 Depeche Mode Memento Mori World Tour 52,000
15 June 2023 Muse Will of the People World Tour 59,000[28]
23 June 2023 Mylène Farmer[29] Nevermore 2023/2024 45,000
24 June 2023 45,000
11 July 2023 Red Hot Chili Peppers Global Stadium Tour 49,158
2 June 2024 Taylor Swift The Eras Tour 62,000[30]
3 June 2024
15 June 2024 Rammstein Rammstein Stadium Tour
22 June 2024 Coldplay Music of the Spheres World Tour 164,641[31]
23 June 2024
25 June 2024
16 June 2026 Linkin Park From Zero World Tour
28 June 2026 Iron Maiden Run for Your Lives World Tour
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Other uses

The venue hosted an outdoor Ligue Magnus ice hockey game between Lyon and Grenoble on 30 December 2016.[32] In that game, Grenoble defeated Lyon 5–2; the attendance at that game was 25,142, which turned out to be the all-time record attendance for an ice hockey game in France.

Parc Olympique Lyonnais hosted the finals of rugby union's European Rugby Champions Cup and European Rugby Challenge Cup in 2016. It was one of nine venues chosen for France's hosting of the 2023 Rugby World Cup.[33]

The stadium will also host the match between France and England on the final weekend of the 2024 Six Nations on 16 March 2024; this is because the Stade de France in Saint-Denis is unavailable while it is being prepared for use in the 2024 Summer Olympics.

References

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