General |
Millerntor-Stadion | ||
![]() Millerntor-Stadion | ||
Full name | Millerntor-Stadion | |
Location | Hamburg, Germany | |
Broke ground | 1961 | |
Opened | 1963 | |
Renovated | 1988 | |
Expanded | 2006-2015 | |
Tenants | FC St. Pauli | |
Capacity | 29,546 | |
Field dimensions | 105 m × 68 m | |
Surface | Grass | |
Highest attendance | 29,546 (FC St. Pauli - Bielefeld 25 July 2015 |
The Millerntor-Stadion is a multi-purpose stadium in Hamburg St. Pauli, Germany. It is mainly used for football matches and is the home stadium of FC St. Pauli. It is on the Heiligengeistfeld, near the Reeperbahn, the red light district of Hamburg. The stadium had a capacity of 32,000 when it was built in 1961. Sometimes it is used for the American football team of the Hamburg Blue Devils and, although very rarely, for concerts or festivals such as a show by Prince on 31 August 1988, the Retter festival 2003 or the Jubiläumsfestival 100 Jahre FC St.Pauli in 2010.
External links[]
- St. Pauli Official Website in English
- Millerntor-Stadion
- Millerntor-Stadion in German
- Picture of the Millerntor-Stadion in German
FC St. Pauli |
Current season • Club honours • Managers • Players • Millerntor-Stadion History: Seasons |
2. Bundesliga stadiums 2024–25 |
BBBank Wildpark (Karlsruher SC) · BRITA-Arena (Wehen Wiesbaden) · Eintracht-Stadion (Eintracht Braunschweig) · Fritz-Walter-Stadion (1. FC Kaiserslautern) · Heinz von Heiden-Arena (Hannover 96) · Holstein-Stadion (Holstein Kiel) · Home Deluxe Arena (SC Paderborn) · Max-Morlock-Stadion (1. FC Nürnberg) · MDCC-Arena (1. FC Magdeburg) · Merkur Spiel-Arena (Fortuna Düsseldorf) · Millerntor-Stadion (FC St. Pauli) · Olympiastadion (Hertha BSC) · Ostseestadion (Hansa Rostock) · Sportpark Ronhof Thomas Sommer (Greuther Fürth) · Stadion an der Bremer Brücke (VfL Osnabrück) · Veltins-Arena (Schalke 04) · Volksparkstadion (Hamburger SV) · Waldstadion an der Kaiserlinde (SV Elversberg) |
![]() |