General |
Camp Nou | ||
![]() Camp Nou at night | ||
Full name | L'Estadi Camp Nou | |
Owners | FC Barcelona | |
Location | Barcelona, Spain | |
Broke ground | 28 March 1954 | |
Built | 1954-1957 | |
Opened | 24 September 1957 | |
Renovated | 1994 | |
Expanded | 1982 | |
Tenants | FC Barcelona (1957–present) Catalonia | |
Capacity | 100,001 (2012–) | |
Field dimensions | 105 x 68 m | |
Highest attendance | 120,000 (FC Barcelona - Juventus, 5 March 1986) |
Camp Nou (kamˈnɔw, New Field, often referred to as The Nou Camp in English) is a football stadium in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain, which has been the home of Futbol Club Barcelona since 1957.
The Camp Nou holds 99,354 people, and thus is the largest stadium in Europe and the 4th largest association football stadium in the world in terms of capacity. It has hosted numerous international matches at a senior level, including two UEFA Champions League finals and the football competition at the 1992 Summer Olympics.
External links[]
- Camp Nou at World of Stadiums
- bcn.travel/camp-nou-stadium-barcelona Stadium profile including photos and videos.
- Estadios de España(English)
- Camp Nou photos and info from wikistadiums.org
- Stadium Guide Article
- Barcelona Tickets and Vacation Package
![]() |
Current season •
Club honours •
Managers •
Players •
Squads •
Barcelona Atlètic •
Camp Nou |
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup final stadiums |
1961: Ibrox Park & Communale Stadium · 1962: Hampden Park & Neckarstadion · 1963: De Kuip · 1964: Heysel Stadium & Bosuil Stadium · 1965: Wembley Stadium · 1966: Hampden Park · 1967: Frankenstadion · 1968: De Kuip · 1969: St. Jakob Stadium · 1970: Prater Stadium · 1971: Karaiskakis Stadium · 1972: Camp Nou · 1973: Kaftanzoglio Stadium · 1974: De Kuip · 1975: St. Jakob Stadium · 1976: Heysel Stadium · 1977: Olympisch Stadion · 1978: Parc des Princes · 1979: St. Jakob Stadium · 1980: Heysel Stadium · 1981: Rheinstadion · 1982: Camp Nou · 1983: Nya Ullevi · 1984: St. Jakob Stadium · 1985: De Kuip · 1986: Stade de Gerland · 1987: Spiros Louis Stadium · 1988: Stade de la Meinau · 1989: Wankdorf Stadium · 1990: Nya Ullevi · 1991: De Kuip · 1992: Estádio da Luz · 1993: Wembley Stadium · 1994: Parken Stadium · 1995: Parc des Princes · 1996: King Baudouin Stadium · 1997: De Kuip · 1998: Råsunda Stadium · 1999: Villa Park |
1982 FIFA World Cup stadiums |
José Rico Peréz (Alicante) · Martínez Valero (Elche) · Camp Nou (Barcelona) · Sarrià (Barcelona) · San Mamés (Bilbao) · El Molinón (Gijón) · Riazor (La Coruña) · Santiago Bernabéu (Madrid) · Vicente Calderón (Madrid) · La Rosaleda (Malaga) · Carlos Tartiere (Oviedo) · La Romareda (Zaragoza) · Municipal de Heliópolis (Sevilla) · Pizjuán (Sevilla) · Luis Casanova (Valencia) · José Zorrilla (Villadolid) Balaídos (Vigo) |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
|
![]() |