Mercedes-Benz Arena (Stuttgart)


Mercedes-Benz Arena is a stadium located in Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Germany and home to German Bundesliga club VfB Stuttgart.
Before 1993 it was called Neckarstadion, named after the nearby river Neckar and between 1993 and July 2008 it was called Gottlieb-Daimler-Stadion. From the 2008–09 season, the stadium was renamed the Mercedes-Benz Arena, starting with a pre-season friendly against Arsenal on 30 July 2008.

History

The stadium was originally built in 1933 after designs by German architect Paul Bonatz. After It was built, it was named "Adolf-Hitler-Kampfbahn". From 1945 to 1949 it was called Century Stadium and later Kampfbahn and was used by US Troops to play baseball. The name Neckarstadion was used since 1949. It is home to VfB Stuttgart in the Bundesliga.
After a major refurbishment in the late 1980s and early 1990s partly financed by Daimler-Benz, the Stuttgart town council dedicated the stadium to Gottlieb Daimler. The inventor had tested both the first internal combustion motorcycle and the first 4-wheel automobile there in the 1880s, on the road from Cannstatt to Untertürkheim. The new museum, the headquarters and a factory of Mercedes-Benz are nearby.
The stadium capacity was reduced to around 41,000, after one stand was demolished during summer 2009 in the process of converting it to a pure football arena. The rebuilt arena was completed in December 2011 with a new capacity of 60,000, including terracing. Due to UEFA regulations, which only allows seating, the capacity is reduced to 54,906 during international football matches.
It is divided into four sections,
The Mercedes-Benz Arena features a unique fabric roof construction, making it easily recognizable. Made of precision-tailored membranes of PVC-coated polyester, the roof tissue is durable enough to withstand 1,000 kg of weight per square decimeter. It is suspended from an aesthetic steel frame that runs around the entire stadium weighing approximately 2,700 metric tons. The steel cables connecting the roof to the frame alone weigh about 420 tons. The roof was added during the refurbishment preceding the 1993 World Athletics Championships.

International matches

The Mercedes-Benz Arena hosted four matches of the 1974 FIFA World Cup, two matches of the 1988 UEFA European Football Championship and six games of the 2006 FIFA World Cup, including a Round of 16 game and the third-place playoff match.
The stadium also hosted the finals of the European Cup in 1959 and 1988.

Trivia

The 1986 European Athletics Championships in which the hammer throw world record by Yuriy Sedykh was set, and the 1993 World Athletics Championships were held there, and the Daimler-Stadium was the host the IAAF World Athletics final from 2006 to 2008. The arena has also been the venue of several Eurobowl finals of American Football in the 1990s. The last athletics event took place in September 2008, after which the stadium underwent redevelopment in order to build a football-only arena.

Redevelopment

The redevelopment was announced along with the stadium's name change in late March 2008. The first computer images of the new arena were released at the same time, also showing a large cube with four video scoreboards above the centre circle, similar to the one in the Commerzbank-Arena in Frankfurt.
Starting in 2009, the Mercedes-Benz Arena has been redeveloped into a football-specific stadium. New stands were constructed during the summer of 2011, with pitch level being lowered by 1.30 metres in time for the beginning of the 2009–10 season. After the interior redevelopment finished, the roof was expanded to cover all the new rows of the seats. The entire construction was completed by the end of 2011.
Within the first couple of weeks of the redevelopment, 18 undetonated bombs left over from the air raids on Stuttgart during the Second World War were found on the construction site.

International tournaments matches

All times local

1974 FIFA World Cup

Stuttgart hosted the following matches at the 1974 FIFA World Cup:
DateTimeTeam #1Res.Team #2RoundSpectators
15 June 197418:003–21st round, Group 431,500
19 June 197419:301–11st round, Group 468,900
23 June 197416:002–11st round, Group 468,900
26 June 197419:300–12nd round, Group B43,755

UEFA Euro 1988

These UEFA Euro 1988 matches were played in Stuttgart:
DateTimeTeam #1Res.Team #2RoundSpectators
12 June 198815:300–11st round, Group B51,573
22 June 198820:152–0Semi-finals61,606

2006 FIFA World Cup

The following games were played at the stadium during the 2006 FIFA World Cup:
DateTimeTeam #1Res.Team #2RoundSpectators
13 June 200618:000–0Group G52,000
16 June 200618:002–1Group C52,000
19 June 200621:003–1Group H52,000
22 June 200621:002–2Group F52,000
25 June 200617:001–0Round of 1652,000
8 July 200621:003–1Third-place match52,000

Concerts

performed at the stadium on 25 June 1989 as part of their 1989 Another Lapse European Tour.
Depeche Mode performed at the stadium on 3 June 2013 during their Delta Machine Tour, in front of a sold-out crowd of 36,225 people.