Stadionul Național (1953)


Stadionul Național was a multi-purpose stadium in Bucharest, Romania. The stadium held 60,120 people.

History

It was built in 1953, for the 4th World Festival of Youth and Students. According to the book București published in 1968 by Institutul Proiect București, Complexul Sportiv August 23 was designed by the well known architect Vily Juster.
It was first known as Stadionul August 23, and later on as Stadionul Național. The sports complex that included Național Stadium, is named Lia Manoliu after the famous Romanian athlete.
It was used mostly for football matches.
It hosted numerous concerts after the 1989 Revolution, including Michael Jackson's Dangerous World Tour 160,000 Public, as well as the HIStory World Tour concert on September 14, 1996. 70,000 public
In October 2005, it was decided to rebuild the stadium completely; however, initially no funding was found, so some repairs proceeded in lieu of rebuilding. Later, funds became available and the rebuilding is expected to begin in November 2007. The plan calls for completion of a new five-star arena by April 2010. The last football match played was a 6-1 win against Albania on November 21, 2007. After the match, a few seats were removed from the stadium, as a symbolic start of the rebuilding operations. The stadium has subsequently been demolished to make room for a new one.

Attendance

List of matches of Romania national football team on National Stadium, with more than 80,000 persons.
DateHome teamScoreAway teamAttendanceRef
September 28, 19551–090.000
October 26, 19581–290.000
September 18, 19552–3 East Germany90.000
November 16, 19691–162.577
October 25, 19530–190.000
May 29, 19552–280.000
November 25, 19623–172.762
May 30, 19651–080.000
May 12, 19633–280.000
May 22, 19600–280.000
May 14, 19722–260.300
April 16, 19831–080.000
June 1, 19752–252.203
October 15, 19802–180.000
November 3, 19573–054.465
September 29, 19571–168.758
November 8, 19591–080.000
August 2, 19590–080.000
November 2, 19583–070.000
October 9, 19551–170.000
October 12, 19691–058.573