Olympic Stadium of Melmingen: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox venue
{{Infobox venue
| name                  = Olympic Stadium of Melmingia
| name                  = Olympic Stadium of Melmingen
| native_name            = Melminger Olympiastadion
| native_name            = Melminger Olympiastadion
| native_name_lang      =  
| native_name_lang      =  
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| fullname              =  
| fullname              =  
| former names          = *Ochsenbeinstadion (1955-1966)
| former names          = *Ochsenbeinstadion (1955-1966)
*Melminger Südstadium (1966-1991)
*Südmelminger Stadium (1966-1991)
| address                =  
| address                =  
| city                  =  
| city                  =  
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| opened                = 1 October 1955<!-- {{Start date|YYYY|MM|DD|df=y}} -->
| opened                = 1 October 1955<!-- {{Start date|YYYY|MM|DD|df=y}} -->
| renovated              =  
| renovated              =  
| expanded              = 1977
| expanded              = 1987
| closed                =  
| closed                =  
| demolished            =  
| demolished            =  

Revision as of 15:11, 16 December 2022

Olympic Stadium of Melmingen
Melminger Olympiastadion
MelmingiaOlympicStadium.png
Former names
  • Ochsenbeinstadion (1955-1966)
  • Südmelminger Stadium (1966-1991)
LocationSüdstadt, Melmingia, Maurenmark, Besmenia
OwnerGovernment of Maurenmark
OperatorMelminger Olympiastadion GmbH
Capacity70,634
Construction
Built1951-1955
Opened1 October 1955
Expanded1987
Construction costBM 38 million
ArchitectFranz Peerschmidt
Tenants

The Olympic Stadium of Melmingen, (Besmenian: Melminger Olympiastadion) is a multifunctional stadium in Melmingen. It was built between 1951 and 1955. The stadium was the home stadium of FC SW Melmingen until 2012, since 1968 host stadium for many BFB international games and in 1990 host stadium for the 1990 Summer Olympic Games and for the 1999 Melmingen World Cup.

Originally the name for the stadium was Südmelminger Stadion (South Melmingia Stadium), but after Karl Ochsenbein's death during construction in 1954, it was decided to name the stadium after him.

History

Gallery