Stade Gerland

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Stade Gerland
Le Temple
UEFA
Full name Stade de Gerland
Location 353, Avenue Jean-Jaurès, 69007 VIIè Arrondissement, Lyon, France
Coordinates 45°43′25.6″N, 4°49′56.1″E
Built 1914
Opened 1926
Expanded 1960, 1980, 1998
Owner Olympique Lyonnais
Operator Olympique Lyonnais
Surface Grass
Construction cost 32.7m
(including renovations)
Architect Tony Garnier
René Gagis (renovation)
Tenants
Olympique Lyonnais (Ligue 1 de Orange)
1950-present
Capacity
43,051
Dimensions
112 x 65m

The Stade de Gerland is the principal sporting hub of the city of Lyon. Situated in the Gerland quarter, it is presently used by Olympique Lyonnais. It hosted numerous 2007 Rugby World Cup matches.

Work began on the stadium, designed by Lyon resident Tony Garnier, in 1913. The construction soon halted because of World War I. After the war ended, construction restarted in 1919, with the assistance of a large number of German POWs. The stadium was fully functional by 1920.

Originally, the stadium had no sheltered seating areas, and hence needed to undergo vast amounts of rebuilding through its history. The cycling track that ran around the football pitch had to be sacrificed in 1960 in order to increase the seating capacity to over 50,000. In 1984, attendances reached 51,680 for certain European Football Championship matches.

Further renovations were needed to prepare the stadium for the 1998 FIFA World Cup, as by that time FIFA had mandated that all stadiums used for international matches, including the World Cup, had to be all-seated. The north and south stands were completely knocked down and rebuilt, and the athletics track that had remained even after the cycling track had been removed was taken out. The new incarnation of Gerland had a maximum capacity of 43,051.

The stadium currently consists of two stands: a north and a south one. It also has two side stands: The tribune Jean Jaurès and the tribune Jean Bouin.

Since 1950 the stadium has been home to Olympique Lyonnais, which needed to find a new ground after splitting from the Lyon Olympique sport club which played at the Stade des Iris.

Since 1967 the stadium has been classed as a historic monument, especially its entrance archways.

The record attendance for a Ligue 1 match is 48,552 for a derby match between Olympique Lyonnais and AS Saint-Étienne in 1982.

During the 1998 World Cup, the stadium hosted 5 group matches:

plus the quarterfinal fixture between

Tragedy struck during the 2003 Confederations Cup semi-final at the stadium between Cameroon and Colombia, as Cameroon midfielder Marc-Vivien Foé collapsed on the pitch and died shortly afterwards in hospital.

In 1972 it hosted the Rugby League World Cup final.

Lyon is planning to move to a new stadium in 2010.

Preceded by
De Kuip
Rotterdam
European Cup Winners Cup
Final Venue

1986
Succeeded by
Spiros Louis Stadium
Athens


Parc Lescure (Bordeaux) • Stade Félix-Bollaert (Lens) • Stade Gerland (Lyon) • Stade Vélodrome (Marseille) • Stade de la Mosson (Montpellier) • Stade de la Beaujoire (Nantes) • Parc des Princes (Paris) • Stade de France (Saint-Denis) • Stade Geoffroy-Guichard (Saint-Étienne) • Stade de Toulouse (Toulouse)

Coordinates: 45°43′25.60″N, 4°49′56.10″E

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