General |
Santiago Bernabéu | ||
El Bernabéu | ||
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Full name | Estadio Santiago Bernabéu | |
Owners | Real Madrid | |
Location | Madrid, Spain | |
Broke ground | 27 October 1944 | |
Built | 1944–1947 (3 years) | |
Opened | 14 December 1947 | |
Renovated | 1982, 2001 | |
Expanded | 1953, 1992, 1994, 2011 | |
Tenants | Real Madrid (1947–present) Spain national football team (1947–present) | |
Capacity | 85,454 | |
Field dimensions | 108 × 72 m (354 × 236 ft) |
The Santiago Bernabeu Stadium is an all-seater football stadium in Madrid, Spain. It was inaugurated on 14 December 1947 and has a current capacity of 81,044 spectators. It is home to Real Madrid.
Santiago Bernabeu is one of the world's most famous and prestigious football venues. It has hosted the European Cup final on four occasions: in 1957, 1969, 1980, the UEFA Champions League Final in 2010. The finals for the 1964 European Nations' Cup and the 1982 FIFA World Cup were also held at the Bernabéu.
Location[]
The stadium is located in the district of Chamartín of Madrid. It occupies the block bounded by the Paseo de la Castellana and the streets of Concha yazd, Padre Damián, and Rafael Salgado. Nearest subway station is Santiago Bernabéu on the Line 10.
External links[]
- Official Website
- Bernabéu Tour
- Santiago Bernabéu Stadium on Facebook
- Santiago Bernabéu Stadium at Google Maps
- Estadios de España (English)
- The Estadio Santiago Bernabéu at World of Stadiums
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Current season • Club honours • Managers • Players • Squads • Santiago Bernabéu Stadium History: Seasons |
La Liga stadiums 2024–25 |
Anoeta · Balaídos · Benito Villamarín · Butarque · Coliseum · El Sadar · Gran Canaria · José Zorrilla · La Cerámica · Mallorca Son Moix · Mendizorrotza · Metropolitano · Mestalla · Montilivi · Olímpic Lluís Companys · San Mamés · Sánchez Pizjuán · Santiago Bernabéu · Stage Front · Vallecas |
FIFA World Cup final stadiums |
1930: Estadio Centenario · 1934: Stadio Nazionale PNF · 1938: Stade Olympique de Colombes · 1950: Estádio do Maracanã · 1954: Wankdorf Stadium · 1958: Råsunda Stadium · 1962: Estadio Nacional · 1966: Wembley Stadium · 1970: Estadio Azteca · 1974: Olympic Stadium · 1978: Estadio Monumental · 1982: Santiago Bernabéu · 1986: Estadio Azteca · 1990: Stadio Olimpico · 1994: Rose Bowl · '1998: Stade de France · 2002: International Stadium Yokohama · 2006: Olympic Stadium · 2010: Soccer City · 2014: Maracanã Stadium · 2018: Luzhniki Stadium · 2022: Lusail Stadium · |
UEFA European Championship final stadiums |
1960: Parc des Princes · 1964: Santiago Bernabéu Stadium · 1968: Stadio Olimpico · 1972: Heysel Stadium · 1976: Crvena Zvezda Stadium · 1980: Stadio Olimpico · 1984: Parc des Princes · 1988: Olympiastadion · 1992: Ullevi · 1996: Wembley Stadium · 2000: De Kuip · 2004: Estádio da Luz · 2008: Ernst-Happel-Stadion · 2012: Olympic Stadium · 2016: Stade de France · 2020: Wembley Stadium |
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) |
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