Type a search term to find related articles by LIMS subject matter experts gathered from the most trusted and dynamic collaboration tools in the laboratory informatics industry.
Stade Roi Baudouin (French) Koning Boudewijnstadion (Dutch) | |
Former names | Stade du Centenaire or Jubelstadion (1930–1946) Stade du Heysel or Heizelstadion (1946–1995) |
---|---|
Location | Brussels, Belgium |
Capacity | 50,093[1] |
Record attendance | 64,073 (Anderlecht v Dundee, 6 March 1963) |
Field size | 106 m × 66 m (348 ft × 217 ft) |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Opened | 23 August 1930 |
Renovated | 1995 (€37 million) |
Tenants | |
Belgium national football team (1930–1985, 1995–May 2006, November 2006–present) Union SG (2016–2018) Belgium national rugby union team Royal Excelsior Sports Club Brussels (athletics) |
The King Baudouin Stadium (French: Stade Roi Baudouin [stad ʁwɑ bodwɛ̃]; Dutch: Koning Boudewijnstadion [ˌkoːnɪŋ ˈbʌudəʋɛinˌstaːdijɔn]) is a sports ground in Brussels, Belgium. Located in the north-western district of the City of Brussels, it was built to embellish the Heysel/Heizel Plateau in view of the 1935 Brussels International Exposition. It was inaugurated on 23 August 1930, with Crown Prince Leopold attending the opening ceremony. The stadium hosted 70,000 at the time. Its name honours King Baudouin, Leopold's successor as King of the Belgians from 1951 to his death in 1993.
The first version of the King Baudouin Stadium was built in 1929–30 by the architect Joseph Van Neck, also chief architect of the 1935 Brussels International Exposition, in a classical modernist style. Its original name was the Jubilee Stadium (French: Stade du Centenaire, Dutch: Jubelstadion) because it was inaugurated as part of the centenary celebrations of the Belgian Revolution, with an unofficial Belgium–Netherlands football match.
In 1946, the stadium was stripped of the wood of its cycling track, and was renamed the Heysel Stadium (French: Stade du Heysel, Dutch: Heizelstadion), after the neighbourhood in which it is located.[2] In 1971, a tartan track was installed allowing the organisation of athletics competitions. Three years later, in 1974, a new lighting system was installed.
The Heysel Stadium hosted European Cup finals in 1958, 1966, 1974, and 1985 and Cup Winners' Cup finals in 1964, 1976 and 1980. The highest attendance at a European game was over 69,000 in 1958.
Despite its status as Belgium's national stadium, the Heysel Stadium was not well maintained. The stadium's poor condition manifested itself at the 1985 European Cup Final. For example, the outer wall had been made of cinder block, and fans who did not have tickets were seen kicking holes in it to get in.[3] Additionally, the only escape route led upward, and there were only three gates on each short side–nowhere near enough for the 22,000 people standing on the terraces on either side.[4]
The stadium's inadequacies had been well known for some time. When Arsenal played there in the early 1980s, its supporters ridiculed it as a "dump." Indeed, the presidents of the two 1985 European finalists, Juventus and Liverpool, had concluded that Heysel was in no condition to host a European Final, especially one featuring two of the largest and most powerful clubs in Europe at the time. They urged UEFA to move the match to another ground, to no avail.[5][6] It later emerged that UEFA had only spent half an hour inspecting the stadium.[4]
The Heysel Stadium disaster resulted in the deaths of 39 Juventus spectators after they were attacked by Liverpool fans before the match. Since the disaster, Liverpool FC have maintained that their fans were not to blame. However all detailed reports state that the Liverpool fans started the charge, incited the violence and were ultimately to blame for the deaths of 39 Juventus fans and local Belgian supporters. They are still yet to accept full responsibility, but prefer to adopt a strategy of whitewashing and deflection. [3] Despite the disaster, the stadium continued to be used for Belgium international games from 1986 to 1990 with only minimal improvements made following the disaster. This was in part because the government had already drawn up plans to remodel the stadium into a 35,000-seat facility. Finally, in 1990, UEFA forced the issue by barring Belgium from hosting a European Final until at least 2000.[4] It also continued to host track and field events and it still hosts the Memorial Van Damme every year.
In 1995, a decade after the disaster, the ground was rebuilt at a cost of BEF 1,500 million (around €37/$50 million in 1995), and at this time renamed King Baudouin Stadium, after the Belgian monarch who had died two years previously. All that remains of the old stadium is a renovated gateway near the main entrance. The new structure combined the football ground with a running track and facilities for field events. It was re-opened on 23 August 1995 as the home of the Belgium national football team and is the largest stadium in Belgium; it can seat 50,093 spectators. The remodelled stadium hosted the 1996 European Cup Winners Cup final, as well as the opening game for Euro 2000.
On 26 May 2006, the Belgian Football Association decided not to use the King Baudouin Stadium anymore for the national team home matches and for the Cup final, because the gates of stand one were too narrow and the stadium was deemed unsafe. The next match of the national team was thus held at the Constant Vanden Stock Stadium. The City of Brussels complained that contrary to these claims the stadium was safe, and this complaint was upheld in court. On 6 October 2006, the Belgian Football Association met with representatives of the City of Brussels and they agreed to renew the contract and extend it to 30 June 2008.
In March 2019, the Belgian football association announced plans for a new redevelopment of the King Baudouin Stadium. The stadium would be rebuilt to a reduced capacity of 40,000 spectators and renamed to the Golden Generation Arena with a prospective completion date of 2022.[7] That idea was quietly discarded. An architectural firm has never been appointed, an environmental study ordered or a client sought. From the politicians, who were said to be positive about the idea across party lines in the beginning, hardly anything is moving.[8]
Major international football matches have taken place in the King Baudouin Stadium: the finals of the European Champion Clubs' Cup in 1958, 1966, 1974 and 1985, those of the Cup of Cups in 1964, 1976, 1980 and 1996, as well as that of the European Championships in 1972 between West Germany and the USSR (3–0).
The stadium hosted five matches of the UEFA Euro 2000, organised by Belgium and the Netherlands, including the inaugural match between Belgium and Sweden (2–1) on 10 June, and the semi-final between Portugal and France (1–2) on 28 June.
UEFA Euro 2000 matches:
Date | Team 1 | Result | Team 2 | Round |
---|---|---|---|---|
10 June 2000 | Belgium | 2–1 | Sweden | Group B |
14 June 2000 | Italy | 2–0 | Belgium | |
19 June 2000 | Turkey | |||
24 June 2000 | Italy | 2–0 | Romania | Quarter-finals |
28 June 2000 | France | 2–1 (asdet) |
Portugal | Semi-finals |
On 18 February 2021, the Belgian women's team played its first official match there. This was a friendly match against the Netherlands (1–6) played as part of the promotion of the triple bid to host the Women's Football World Cup, the third country being Germany. This choice was explained by the work carried out at the Eneco Stadium (where the Red Flames usually play) during this period.[9]
The UCI Track Cycling World Championships were organized in the Heysel stadium in 1930 and 1935.
The stadium has also been used for road cycling. For instance, stage 2 of both the 1949 and the 1960 Tour de France finished in the Heysel stadion.[10]
On 25 August 2007, Belgium played Argentina in rugby union as part of Argentina's 2007 Rugby World Cup preparations. Argentina defeated Belgium 36–8.
The stadium was scheduled to witness a rugby union milestone on 19 December 2009, when the Parisian club Stade Français planned to take their Heineken Cup home match against Irish club Ulster to the stadium in a match that had sold more than 30,000 tickets. However, heavy snowfall in Brussels on the intended matchday forced the cancellation of what would have been the first Heineken Cup match held in Belgium; the fixture was instead played the following day in Paris.[11]
The stadium had another shot at hosting a Heineken Cup match in 2012. On 20 October 2012, English club Saracens took their Heineken Cup pool match against Racing Métro to Brussels.[12]
On 8 July 2010, the stadium played host to the Best of Belgium gala which featured a tennis match originally scheduled to be between Justine Henin and Kim Clijsters. Unfortunately Henin had to pull out and Serena Williams replaced her as the match was played in front of the largest crowd ever for a single match, beating the attendance set at the Battle of the Sexes.[13]
Every year, it hosts major sporting events such as the national football team's matches, the Belgian Football Cup final, the prestigious Van Damme Memorial and more. It has also showcased concerts by some of the world's greatest artists, including the Rolling Stones, U2, Madonna, Beyoncé, Céline Dion, Johnny Hallyday, Robbie Williams, Genesis, Bruce Springsteen, Ed Sheeran, Coldplay, Rammstein and many more.[14]
Concerts at King Baudouin Stadium | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Artist | Event | Attendance | Ref(s) |
20 June 1997 | Céline Dion | Falling into You: Around the World | — | [15] |
16 June 1999 | Céline Dion | Let's Talk About Love World Tour | 59,876 / 59,876 | [16] |
8 July 2000 | Johnny Hallyday | — | — | [17] |
12 May 2003 | Bruce Springsteen | The Rising Tour | — | [18] |
13 June 2003 | Johnny Hallyday | — | — | [19] |
10 June 2005 | U2 | Vertigo Tour | 60,499 / 60,499 | [20] |
24 June 2007 | Genesis | Turn It On Again Tour | 30,736 / 45,000 | [21] |
14 June 2008 | Bon Jovi | Lost Highway Tour | 31,041 / 31,041 | [22] |
13 September 2008 | André Rieu | — | — | |
22 September 2010 | U2 | U2 360° Tour | 144,338 / 144,338 | [23] |
23 September 2010 | ||||
12 July 2012 | Madonna | The MDNA Tour | 36,778 / 36,778 | [24] |
3 August 2013 | Robbie Williams | Take the Crown Stadium Tour | — | [25] |
13 June 2015 | One Direction | On the Road Again Tour | 56,110 / 56,110 | [26] |
31 July 2016 | Beyoncé | The Formation World Tour | 48,955 / 48,955 | [27] |
21 June 2017 | Coldplay | A Head Full of Dreams Tour | 100,489 / 100,489 | [28] |
22 June 2017 | ||||
1 August 2017 | U2 | The Joshua Tree Tours | — | |
1 September 2017 | Coely | Memorial Van Damme 2017 | — | |
16 June 2019 | Metallica | WorldWired Tour | 49,039 / 49,039 | [29] |
11 July 2022 | The Rolling Stones | Sixty | — | |
22 July 2022 | Ed Sheeran | The Mathematics Tour | 104,473 / 127,999 | [30] |
23 July 2022 | ||||
5 August 2022 | Coldplay | Music of the Spheres World Tour | 224,719 / 224,719 | [31] |
6 August 2022 | ||||
8 August 2022 | ||||
9 August 2022 | ||||
14 May 2023 | Beyoncé | Renaissance World Tour | 53,062 / 53,062 | [32] |
11 July 2023 | the Weeknd | After Hours til Dawn Tour | 103,297 / 103,297 | |
12 July 2023 | ||||
3 August 2023 | Rammstein | Rammstein Stadium Tour | 150,000 / 150,000 | |
4 August 2023 | ||||
5 August 2023 | ||||
14 July 2024 | P!nk | Summer Carnival 2024 | — |
To celebrate the 75th anniversary of the stadium, the Belgian State released a commemorative coin: the 10 euro 75 years of Heysel Stadium commemorative coin. The obverse depicts an image of a footballer with the stadium in the background. The flags of Belgium and the Netherlands can be seen on top of the stadium as well as the year that the stadium was built.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
50°53′45″N 4°20′3″E / 50.89583°N 4.33417°E
Events and tenants | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by | European Cup Final venue 1958 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by | European Cup Winners' Cup Final venue 1964 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by | European Cup Final venue 1966 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by | UEFA European Championship Final venue 1972 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by | European Cup Final venue 1974 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by | European Cup Winners' Cup Final venue 1976 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by | European Cup Winners' Cup Final venue 1980 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by | European Cup Final venue 1985 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by | UEFA Cup Winners' Cup Final venue 1996 |
Succeeded by |