Estadio Julio Humberto Grondona, nicknamed El Viaducto,[3] is a football stadium located in the city of Sarandí in Avellaneda Partido, Argentina. It is owned and operated by Arsenal Fútbol Club.[4] and has a capacity of 18,500 spectators.[2]
Estadio Julio Grondona | |
El Viaducto | |
Full name | Estadio Julio Humberto Grondona |
---|---|
Address | Sarandí Argentina |
Owner | Arsenal F.C. |
Capacity | 18,500[2] |
Field size | 103 x 70 m[1] |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Opened | October 12, 1964[1] |
Renovated | 2004 |
Tenants | |
Arsenal F.C. | |
Website | |
arsenalfc.com.ar/estadio |
The stadium is named after Julio Grondona, co-founder, first president (1957−1976), and player of Arsenal F.C.[5] and then president of the Argentine Football Association from 1979 to his death in 2014.[6]
Overview
editThe stadium was built during the presidency of Mario Actis on a land that belonged to the General Direction of Ports of Buenos Aires. The first grandstand was acquired to Club Atlético Banfield while the stalls (with capacity for 1,400 people) was built with money given by club members, the same for the press booths.[1]
Arsenal invested m$n14 million to build the stadium, originally for 5,000 spectators. The first match held in the stadium was on 22 August 1964, when Arsenal played vs Almirante Brown, winning 2–0 (Grudzien and Grondona[n 1][8] scored). But it was not until 12 October 1964 when the stadium was officially inaugurated in a friendly match, Arsenal vs Banfield.[1]
In 2001, the club built a new grandstand made of concrete. During the time works were carried out, the team played their home venues at C.A. Lanús Stadium, returning to Sarandí in December. After Arsenal promoted to Primera División in 2002, the club decided to completely refurbish the stadium, replacing the remaining wooden grandstands for concrete ones. As a result, the team had to move to other venues while works were in progress, first to Lanús Stadium and then to Racing Stadium.[1][9]
Works finished in 2004, and the stadium was officially re-inaugurated in the 2010 Copa Sudamericana match when Arsenal vs Banfield,[2] which was also Arsenal's debut in an international football competition.[1] The match ended 1–1.[10]
In 2017, former President of Argentina Cristina Fernández de Kirchner was the only speaker in the launching of her political party, Unidad Ciudadana, held in Estadio Julio Grondona.[11][12]
Notes
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d e f Estadio on Arsenal F.C. website
- ^ a b c Estadio Julio Humberto Grondona on Copa Argentina website
- ^ El viaducto es un testigo incrédulo by Diego Mazzei on La Nación, 16 Nov 2007 (archived)
- ^ Venue Profile
- ^ Arsenal de Sarandí, del nombre que no fue al fanatismo en Inglaterra on TyC, 13 Jan 2023
- ^ Julio Grondona: el "animal político" del fútbol argentino on Télam, 18 Sep 2021. Archived 2021-09-19 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Falleció Héctor Grondona, hermano menor de Julio y ex Presidente de Independiente, Infobae, 12 Nov 2017
- ^ La historia de Julio Grondona como futbolista, La Nación, 31 Jul 2014
- ^ 1 ARSENAL - 1 TALLERES on Página/12, 3 Aug 2003
- ^ Copa Sudamericana 2004 by Juan Pablo Andrés on the RSSSF
- ^ Cristina Kirchner lanzó Unidad Ciudadana pero no confirmó si será candidata, Télam, 20 Jun 2017
- ^ Ante una multitud, Cristina Kirchner lanzó el frente Unidad Ciudadana on Infobae, 20 Jun 2017