Arena do Grêmio is a multi-use stadium in Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul. It was inaugurated on December 8, 2012.[1]
Address | Padre Leopoldo Brentano Avenue, 110 |
---|---|
Location | Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul |
Coordinates | 29°58′24.40″S 51°11′39.85″W / 29.9734444°S 51.1944028°W |
Owner | Grêmio Foot-Ball Porto Alegrense |
Operator | Arena Porto-Alegrense |
Executive suites | 135 |
Capacity | 55,225[3] (seated) 60,540 (total)[4] |
Field size | 105 m × 68 m (344 ft × 223 ft) |
Surface | Lolium perenne Desso GrassMaster |
Scoreboard | LED |
Construction | |
Broke ground | September 20, 2010 |
Opened | 8 December 2012[1] |
Construction cost | € 205 million |
Architect | PLARQ Arquitetura[2] |
General contractor | OAS |
Tenants | |
Grêmio (2013–present) | |
Website | |
Official website |
It is used mostly for football matches and as the home stadium of Grêmio Foot-Ball Porto Alegrense, replacing the Estádio Olímpico Monumental. With a 60,540 capacity (55,662 current official capacity), the stadium is one of the most modern venues in South America.
In Sisbrace, the Brazilian Ministry of Sport's football stadium evaluation system, Arena do Grêmio received the highest rating in all aspects.[5] Arena also received from UEFA a "Category Four" evaluation from UEFA's stadium categories, the only in Brazil.[6] Even though it is one of the most modern stadiums in Brazil, it was not listed as a host of the 2014 FIFA World Cup, held in the country, but in 2019 Arena do Grêmio was selected as one of the venues for the 2019 Copa América where five matches were played in the stadium.
Concept
editA mile from the international airport of Porto Alegre and alongside the road way, the stadium site appeared perfect to create a multifunctional urban center. The complex includes a Conference and Congress Center, hotel, a mall, housing, condominiums and parking. The arena itself intends to be functional year round.
The architectural firm PLARQ is responsible for the stadium projects design and concept and OAS is the general contractor.
History
editIn the mid-2000s, an idea came within the Grêmio, to build a new stadium to host matches of the Tricolor. The idea was carried out in 2006 with the beginning of the work viability studies. The objective was to make a self-sustaining stadium, unlike the Estádio Olímpico Monumental, that was already falling apart. In May 2006, the Grêmio's master patrimonial plan was formulated, which, precisely, headed the project. From there began a discussion about the construction place, in the current location of Olímpico or in a new place. In November 2006, aiming to dispel this doubt, was made a pre-feasibility study for the construction of a new stadium, with the Dutch company Amsterdam Advisory Arena. The conclusion was that the Estádio Olímpico would not meet the expectations of the club, due to high maintenance cost, age of construction, low standard of comfort, security and services, insufficient parking and location in very populated region. This combination of factors led the club to opt for building an Arena, with the financial assistance of partners, with the standard required by FIFA.
Beginning of construction
editIn October 2009, fences were installed to surround the region.[7] On May 13, 2010, a flagpole with Grêmio's flag was inaugurated on the ground.
The official launch of the works took place on September 20, 2010, after a motorcade output from the Estádio Olímpico. On the same day, at the ceremony of start of construction, Hugo de León planted a patch of grass of Olímpico on the Arena ground after landing in a helicopter. Later, the former footballer represented symbolically the works to push the button on a machine and turn it on.
In late February 2011, about three hundred workers stopped their activities, protesting for better wages, working conditions and housing, days off to visit their families - as many workers were from the northeast of Brazil - and a longer rest.[8] Requests were met quickly, and all worked back to full steam.
Important matches
editInauguration
edit8 December 2012 | Grêmio | 2–1 | Hamburger SV | Porto Alegre, Brazil |
22:00 UTC−2 | André Lima 9' Moreno 87' |
Report | Westermann 71' | Stadium: Arena do Grêmio Attendance: 60,540 Referee: Carlos Amarilla (Paraguay) |
2012 Match Against Poverty
edit19 December 2012 | Ronaldo's XI | 3–2 | Zidane's XI | Porto Alegre, Brazil |
21:00 UTC−2 | Bebeto 36' Cacá 79' Leandro Damião 87' |
Report | Falcão 60' Zidane 65' |
Stadium: Arena do Grêmio Attendance: 60,540 Referee: Pierluigi Collina (Italy) |
First official match: Copa Libertadores 2013, First Stage (second leg)
edit30 January 2013 | Grêmio | 1–0 (1–1 agg.) (5–4 p) | LDU Quito | Porto Alegre, Brazil |
22:00 UTC−2 | Elano 62' | Report | Stadium: Arena do Grêmio Attendance: 41,461 Referee: Saúl Laverni (Argentina) | |
Penalties | ||||
André Lima Saimon Willian José Pará Vargas Alex Telles |
Saritama Vitti Reasco Vélez Canuto Morante |
International friendly: Brazil vs France
edit9 June 2013 | Brazil | 3–0 | France | Porto Alegre, Brazil |
16:00 UTC−3 | Oscar 53' Hernanes 84' Lucas Moura 90+2' (pen.) |
Report | Stadium: Arena do Grêmio Attendance: 51,643 Referee: Víctor Hugo Carrillo (Peru) |
City derby
edit9 August 2015 | Grêmio | 5–0 | Internacional | Porto Alegre, Brazil |
18:30 UTC−3 | Giuliano 34' Luan 42', 48' Fernandinho 75' Réver 83' (o.g.) |
Report | Stadium: Arena do Grêmio Attendance: 46.010 Referee: Dewson Freitas |
Brazilian Cup Final
edit7 December 2016 | Grêmio | 1–1 | Atlético-MG | Porto Alegre, Brazil |
21:45 UTC−3 | Stadium: Arena do Grêmio Attendance: 55.000 Referee: Luiz Flávio de Oliveira (FIFA) |
31 August 2017 | Brazil | 2–0 | Ecuador | Porto Alegre, Brazil |
21:45 UTC−3 | Paulinho 69' Coutinho 76' |
Report (FIFA) Report (CONMEBOL) |
Stadium: Arena do Grêmio Attendance: 38,000 Referee: Mario Díaz de Vivar (Paraguay) |
2017 Copa Libertadores Final 1st leg
edit22 November 2017 | Grêmio | 1–0 | Lanús | Porto Alegre, Brazil |
21:45 UTC−2 | Cícero 82' | Report | Stadium: Arena do Grêmio Attendance: 55,188 Referee: Julio Bascuñán (Chile) |
2019 Copa América
editDate | Time (UTC-03) | Team #1 | Res. | Team #2 | Round | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
June 15, 2019 | 16:00 | Venezuela | 0–0 | Peru | Group A | 13,370 |
June 20, 2019 | 20:00 | Uruguay | 2–2 | Japan | Group C | 39,733 |
June 23, 2019 | 16:00 | Qatar | 0–2 | Argentina | Group B | 41,390 |
June 27, 2019 | 21:30 | Brazil | 0–0 (4–3 pen.) | Paraguay | Quarter-finals | 44,902 |
July 3, 2019 | 21:30 | Chile | 0–3 | Peru | Semi-finals | 33,058 |
Concerts
editWith the multi-use stadium concept, the Arena do Grêmio easily adapts to receive more different genres of shows and events. The first was to be held in April 2013, receiving a concert celebrating the 72 years old of singer Roberto Carlos, with a sold-out audience of 50,000. In June 2014, the Arena hosted the first show of the 2014 Green Valley World Tour, which was attended by the residents of the largest electronic music festival in the world and known as the "Maestros of Tomorrowland": Dimitri Vegas & Like Mike, to an audience of over 14,000 fans.
Date | Event | Artist(s) | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|
20 April 2013 | 2013 Roberto Carlos Tour | Roberto Carlos | 50,000 |
18 June 2014 | 2014 Green Valley World Tour | Dimitri Vegas & Like Mike, WolfPack, Thomaz Krause, Marcelo CIC, Rapha Costa | 14,000 |
14 December 2014 | Happy Holi | Alok, FTampa, Diego Miranda, LyoPak | 12,000 |
2 May 2015 | Save Festival - Super Club | Nicky Romero | 7,000 |
11 November 2015 | 2015 Latin America Tour | Pearl Jam | 29,667 |
16 December 2015 | Rattle That Lock Tour | David Gilmour | 37,674 |
11 November 2017 | A Head Full of Dreams Tour | Coldplay | 50,229 |
14 March 2018 | Witness: The Tour | Katy Perry | 19,000 |
23 October 2018 | El Dorado World Tour | Shakira | 28,300 |
17 February 2019 | ÷ Tour | Ed Sheeran | 38,635 |
9 October 2019 | Legacy of the Beast World Tour | Iron Maiden | 60,000 |
April 26, 2022 | End of the Road World Tour | Kiss | TBA |
September 24, 2022 | Guns N' Roses 2020 Tour | Guns N' Roses | TBA |
November 1, 2023 | This Is Not a Drill | Roger Waters | TBA |
November 16, 2023 | Global Stadium Tour | Red Hot Chili Peppers | TBA |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b Araujo, Luis Fernando o (2014). Assim é Porto Alegre (in Portuguese). Porto Alegre: Artes e Ofícios. ISBN 9788574212272.
- ^ "Plarq— estudos de arquitetura e urbanismo". Archived from the original on December 28, 2012. Retrieved 2012-12-21.
- ^ "CNEF - Cadastro Nacional de Estádios de Futebol" (PDF) (in Portuguese). January 18, 2016. Retrieved June 6, 2016.
- ^ "Arena do Grêmio –". Stadiumdb.com. Retrieved August 22, 2022.
- ^ Paulo, Por SporTV comSão (January 28, 2016). "Entre 155 estádios, apenas 13 deles ganham avaliação máxima em sistema". sportv.com (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved June 6, 2023.
- ^ "Arena do Grêmio é o único estádio com selo UEFA no Brasil" (in Brazilian Portuguese). August 7, 2022. Retrieved June 6, 2023.
- ^ "GloboEsporte.com > Futebol > Grêmio - NOTÍCIAS - Terreno da Arena do Grêmio é demarcado". Archived from the original on March 28, 2014. Retrieved 2012-12-06.
- ^ "Últimas Notícias de Porto Alegre e Rio Grande do Sul". May 29, 2022.