La Joya de La Sabana "The Jewel of The Savanna"[1] | |
Location | San José |
---|---|
Coordinates | 9°56′11″N 84°6′28″W / 9.93639°N 84.10778°W |
Owner | Government of Costa Rica |
Capacity | 35,062 |
Surface | Grass |
Scoreboard | Yes |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 2008 |
Built | 2009–2011 |
Opened | March 26, 2011 |
Construction cost | US$110 million |
General contractor | Anhui Foreign Economic Construction Group |
Tenants | |
Costa Rica national football team (2011–present) |
The National Stadium of Costa Rica (Spanish: Estadio Nacional de Costa Rica) is a multi-purpose stadium in La Sabana Metropolitan Park, San José, Costa Rica. It is the first modern sport and event arena to be built in Central America.[2] The stadium was completed in 2011 and officially opened its doors to the public on March 26 that year, with a capacity of 35,175 seats.[3][2] The stadium replaced the original National Stadium, and is the home stadium of the Costa Rica national football team.[4]
It has one high-definition 160-square-metre (1,700 sq ft) screen, located in the southern section of the stadium, along with a smaller monochromatic screen, and another monochromatic screen of the same dimensions in the northern section.[5]
It was used to host matches during the 2014 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup, including the opening game, the third place match and the Final.
It was used to host matches during the 2022 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup, including the opening game and the Final.
It hosted the first show of Coldplay's Music of the Spheres World Tour due to the green credentials of the country.
Funding and Construction
The initial cost was $88 million, it grew to $100 million.[6]
The Chinese government financed the construction, furnishing, and general costs of the stadium on their own.[7] The old National Stadium was demolished on May 12, 2008, after UCR (Universidad de Costa Rica) vs. Brujas FC[8] match and a 200M race where Nery Brenes set a new national record (20:28 seconds).
The president of Costa Rica, Óscar Arias and the leader of People's Republic of China Hu Jintao, agreed to build the stadium during Arias' first visit to China in October 2007.[9] The construction began on March 12, 2009, and it finished in 2011.
The Chinese company Anhui Foreign Economic Construction[4] was in charge of the construction of the stadium. About 800 Chinese workers immigrated.
Inauguration
The grand inauguration ceremony occurred on March 26, 2011. National and international sports activities and entertainment went on through April 10. An official stadium inauguration website was created,[10] which informed the population of all inaugurating events.
The main inaugurating event was a friendly association football match between Costa Rica and China, which ended 2–2, with Álvaro Saborío scoring the first goal ever in the stadium.
During 2011, the new stadium was subject of a heavy investment made by the Costa Rican Football Federation to propel Costa Rican football into the world scene. To do this, the federation organized friendly matches against previous FIFA World Cup winners Argentina, Brazil, and Spain, with the latter being the then most recent winners of the tournament.[11]
Football tournaments
2013 Copa Centroamericana
The Estadio Nacional hosted all 14 matches of the 2013 Copa Centroamericana.
Date | Team #1 | Result | Team #2 | Round | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
18 January 2013 | Guatemala | 1–1 | Nicaragua | Group A (opening match) | 200 |
Honduras | 1–1 | El Salvador | Group B | 2,500 | |
Costa Rica | 1–0 | Belize | Group A | 5,484 | |
20 January 2013 | Belize | 0–0 | Guatemala | Group A | 250 |
El Salvador | 0–0 | Panama | Group B | ||
Costa Rica | 2–0 | Nicaragua | Group A | 5,980 | |
22 January 2013 | Nicaragua | 1–2 | Belize | Group A | 750 |
Panama | 1–1 | Honduras | Group B | 3,450 | |
Costa Rica | 1–1 | Guatemala | Group A | 6,760 | |
25 January 2013 | Guatemala | 1–3 | Panama | 5th Place Match | 279 |
Honduras | 1–0 | Belize | Semifinals | 1,664 | |
Costa Rica | 1–0 | El Salvador | 4,993 | ||
27 January 2013 | El Salvador | 1–0 | Belize | Third place match | 1,997 |
Costa Rica | 1–0 | Honduras | Final | 14,146 |
2014 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup
El Nacional hosted nine games of the 2014 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup. It hosted four Group A matches; including the opener, a Group C and Group D game, two quarterfinal matches, the 3rd place play-off and the final. The games were:
Date | Team #1 | Result | Team #2 | Round | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
15 March 2014 | Italy | 2–0 | Zambia | Group A (opening match) | 34,453 |
Costa Rica | 0–3 | Venezuela | Group A | ||
18 March 2014 | Venezuela | 4–0 | Zambia | 25,624 | |
Costa Rica | 0–1 | Italy | |||
23 March 2014 | Japan | 3–0 | New Zealand | Group C | 5,100 |
Nigeria | 3–0 | Mexico | Group D | ||
27 March 2014 | Venezuela | 3–2 | Canada | Quarter-finals | 1,812 |
Ghana | 2–2 (4–3 p) | Italy | |||
4 April 2014 | Venezuela | 4–4 (2–0 p) | Italy | Third place match | 29,814 |
Japan | 2–0 | Spain | Final |
2022 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup
Estadio Nacional hosted eighteen games of the 2022 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup. It hosted four Group A matches, two Group B games, four Group C games, and two Group D games, two quarterfinal matches, two semifinal matches, the 3rd place play-off and the final. The games were:
Date | Team #1 | Result | Team #2 | Round | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
10 August 2022 | Spain | 0–0 | Brazil | Group A | 9,819 |
Costa Rica | 1–3 | Australia | 22,506 | ||
11 August 2022 | France | 0–1 | Nigeria | Group C | 723 |
Canada | 0–2 | South Korea | 839 | ||
13 August 2022 | Mexico | 1–1 | Colombia | Group B | 9,336 |
Costa Rica | 0–5 | Spain | Group A | 22,446 | |
14 August 2022 | United States | 0–3 | Netherlands | Group D | 2,652 |
France | 3–1 | Canada | Group C | 2,652 | |
16 August 2022 | Colombia | 2–2 | New Zealand | Group B | 3,378 |
Brazil | 5–0 | Costa Rica | Group A | 11,923 | |
17 August 2022 | Netherlands | 4–1 | Ghana | Group D | 814 |
South Korea | 0–1 | France | Group C | 979 | |
20 August 2022 | Spain | 1–0 | Mexico | Quarter-finals | 4,914 |
Colombia | 0–1 | Brazil | 7,874 | ||
25 August 2022 | Spain | 2–1 | Netherlands | Semi-finals | 4,054 |
Brazil | 1–2 | Japan | 6,571 | ||
28 August 2022 | Netherlands | 1–4 | Brazil | Third place match | 15,672 |
Spain | 3–1 | Japan | Final | 29,891 |
Concerts
Concerts at National Stadium of Costa Rica (2011) | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date | Artist | Tour | Attendance |
10 April 2011 | Shakira | The Sun Comes Out World Tour | 34,516 |
21 May 2011 | Miley Cyrus | Gypsy Heart Tour | 33,451 |
12 September 2011 | Red Hot Chili Peppers | I'm with You World Tour | 20,716 |
27 September 2011 | Judas Priest (Whitesnake) |
Epitaph World Tour | TBA |
20 November 2011 | Pearl Jam | Pearl Jam Twenty Tour | TBA |
3 February 2012 | Elton John | Greatest Hits Tour | 12,363 |
3 November 2012 | Lady Gaga | Born This Way Ball | 29,014 |
1 October 2013 | Aerosmith (AKASHA) |
Global Warming Tour | TBA |
22 October 2013 | Black Sabbath | Black Sabbath Reunion Tour | TBA |
1 May 2014 | Paul McCartney | Out There | 27,001 |
5 September 2015 | Camila | Elypse World Tour | TBA |
20 February 2016 | Marc Anthony (Gente de Zona) |
TBA | TBA |
16 April 2016 | Chayanne | I will be in everything Tour | TBA |
19 May 2016 | Alejandro Sanz | Sirope Tour | TBA |
20 August 2016 | Laura Pausini | Pausini Stadi Tour 2016 | TBA |
5 November 2016 | Metallica | WorldWired Tour | 32,934 |
26 November 2016 | Guns N' Roses (Gandhi) |
Not in This Lifetime... Tour | 29,560 |
24 April 2017 | Justin Bieber (Bartosz Brenes) |
Purpose World Tour | 23,377 |
7 May 2017 | Soy Luna | Soy Luna Live | TBA |
9 May 2017 | Sting | 57th & 9th Tour | TBA |
19 August 2017 | Ricardo Montaner | Normal Man Tour | TBA |
7 December 2017 | Bruno Mars (DNCE) |
24K Magic World Tour | Sold Out |
28 February 2018 | Myriam Hernández | Gala of love | TBA |
7 March 2018 | Joaquín Sabina | TBA | TBA |
14 July 2018 | Jesús Adrián Romero | TBA | TBA |
8 August 2018 | Laura Pausini | Fatti Sentire World Tour | TBA |
18 August 2018 | Marc Anthony | TBA | TBA |
15 September 2018 | Soy Luna | Soy Luna Live 2 | TBA |
24 November 2018 | Roger Waters | Us + Them Tour | 46,500 |
30 November 2018 | Chayanne | Tour From the Soul | 25,000 |
8 December 2018 | Romeo Santos | TBA | TBA |
21 March 2019 | Luis Miguel | México Por Siempre Tour | TBA |
6 April 2019 | Marco Antonio Solís | And the story continues Tour | TBA |
17 August 2019 | Ricardo Montaner | TBA | TBA |
30 November 2019 | Morat | Balas Perdidas Tour | TBA |
7 December 2019 | Chayanne and Marc Anthony | Tour From the Soul | 38,000 |
15 February 2020 | Pandora + Yuri | Together Tour | TBA |
20 February 2020 | Pablo Alborán | Promise Tour | TBA |
23 February 2020 | Caifanes | TBA | TBA |
21 March 2020 | Yanni | CANCELLED | CANCELLED |
4 April 2020 | Carlos Rivera | War Tour | CANCELLED |
28 April 2020 | KISS | CANCELLED | CANCELLED |
18 March 2022 | Coldplay (H.E.R., MishCatt) |
Music of the Spheres World Tour | 86,199 (Sold Out) |
19 March 2022 | |||
21 May 2022 | Nodal (Charlie Zaa) |
Outlaw Tour | Sold Out |
22 May 2022 | |||
26 June 2022 | Paulina Rubio | Costa Rica Live | TBA |
3 September 2022 | Jesús Adrián Romero | Tour of hope | TBA |
10 September 2022 | Marc Anthony (Manuel Turizo) |
Living Tour | TBA |
8 October 2022 | Marco Antonio Solís | I'm so excited to see you World Tour | TBA |
16 October 2022 | Jessi Uribe | Bohemios Tour | TBA |
22 October 2022 | Daddy Yankee | La Última Vuelta World Tour | Sold Out |
23 October 2022 | |||
19 November 2022 | Morat | Morat World Tour | Sold Out |
24 November 2022 | Bad Bunny | World's Hottest Tour | Sold Out |
25 November 2022 | Eros Ramazotti | Battito Infinito World Tour | TBA |
2 December 2022 | Sebastián Yatra | Dharma Tour | TBA |
9 December 2022 | Ricardo Arjona | Black and White Tour | 52,000 (Sold Out) |
10 December 2022 | |||
28 January 2023 | Pandora + Flans | Unexpected Tour | TBA |
25 February 2023 | Joaquín Sabina | Against all odds Tour | TBA |
5 March 2023 | Caifanes | TBA | TBA |
17 March 2023 | Melendi | Likes and Scars Tour | TBA |
18 March 2023 | Sin Bandera | Frequency Tour | TBA |
15 April 2023 | Carlos Rivera | A Tour To Everywhere | TBA |
10 June 2023 | Juan Luis Guerra | Entre Mar y Palmeras Tour | Sold Out |
29 July 2023 | Grupo Firme | You Have To Connect It Tour | TBA |
13 August 2023 | Lucero + Manuel Mijares | Until we were made | TBA |
9 September 2023 | Rubén Blades | Salswing Tour | TBA |
7 October 2023 | Rauw Alejandro | Saturno World Tour | TBA |
31 October 2023 | Red Hot Chili Peppers | Global Stadium Tour | Sold Out |
2 December 2023 | Roger Waters | This Is Not a Drill | TBA |
27 January 2024 | Nitro Circus | TBA | |
8 February 2024 | Luis Miguel | Luis Miguel Tour 2023-24 | TBA |
Fire incident
During the opening ceremony of the 2013 Central American Games, a fire broke out in the stadium because of a stray firework which hit the western part of the stadium roof.[12] The fire damaged some lighting equipments but the stadium was still used for the Games.[13]
Panorama view
References
- ↑ "FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup: Destination - San José". FIFA.com. FIFA. Archived from the original on November 28, 2016. Retrieved 27 November 2016.
- 1 2 Costa Rica’s 35,000-seat National Stadium opens Archived 2013-10-05 at the Wayback Machine Tico Times, 2011-03-25.
- ↑ Pinto afirma que la Selección jugará en el estadio Saprissa La Nación, 2012-11-07. (in Spanish)
- 1 2 http://wvw.nacion.com/ln_ee/2009/julio/28/deportes2040316.html , Spanish.
- ↑ "Estadio Nacional tendrá pantalla de 140 metros HD - DEPORTES - la Nación". Archived from the original on 2010-08-28. Retrieved 2012-12-03.
- ↑ http://www.nacion.com/2010-10-15/Deportes/NotaPrincipal/Deportes2556136.aspx Archived 2010-10-18 at the Wayback Machine, Spanish.
- ↑ "El nuevo Estadio Nacional costará $12 millones más - DEPORTES - la Nación". Archived from the original on 2010-10-18. Retrieved 2012-12-03.
- ↑ "Noticias de deportes en Costa Rica".
- ↑ "Football Ramble | Stak".
- ↑ http://www.nuevoestadionacional.com/ Archived November 27, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ "Los ticos, puro lujo". La Prensa Gráfica. 14 November 2011. Archived from the original on November 28, 2016. Retrieved 27 November 2016.
- ↑ Chacón, Rocío; Fernández, Evelyn (3 March 2013). "Incendio en el Estadio Nacional tras ceremonia de inauguración" (in Spanish). aldia.cr. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
- ↑ "Roof of National Stadium catches fire during inauguration of Central American Games". insidecostarica.com. 4 March 2013. Retrieved 7 September 2016.