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General
Schwarzwald-Stadion
Full name Schwarzwald-Stadion
Former name(s) Dreisamstadion (1954–2004)
badenova-Stadion (2004–2011)
MAGE SOLAR-Stadion (2011–2014)
Schwarzwald-Stadion (2014-2021)
Owners City of Freiburg
Location Freiburg
Opened 1954
Renovated 1970
1980
1993-1995
1999
2004
Tenants SC Freiburg (1954-2021)
SC Freiburg II (2021-present)
SC Freiburg Frauen (2021-present)
Capacity 24.000
Surface Grass

The Schwarzwald-Stadion is a football stadium in Freiburg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home stadium of SC Freiburg II. The stadium holds 24,000 spectators and was built in 1953. The stadium was called the Dreisamstadion until June 2004. Following that it was christened the Badenova-Stadion, the Mage Solar Stadion, and for a short time the Stadion an der Schwarzwaldstraße. Due to a sponsorship deal, it is currently named the Schwarzwald-Stadion.

External links[]

Template:SC Freiburg II

3. Liga stadiums 2023-24

Audi Sportpark (FC Ingolstadt) · BWT-Stadion am Hardtwald (SV Sandhausen) · Carl-Benz-Stadion (Waldhof Mannheim) · Donaustadion (SSV Ulm) · Dreisamstadion (SC Freiburg II) · Erzgebirgsstadion (Erzgebirge Aue) · Grünwalder Stadion (1860 Munich) · Home Deluxe Arena (SC Verl) · Jahnstadion Regensburg (Jahn Regensburg) · Leuna Chemie Stadion (Hallescher FC) · Ludwigsparkstadion (1. FC Saarbrücken) · Preußenstadion (Preußen Münster) · Rudolf-Harbig-Stadion (Dynamo Dresden) · Schauinsland-Reisen-Arena (MSV Duisburg) · Schüco-Arena (Arminia Bielefeld) · Sportpark Höhenberg (Viktoria Köln) · Sportpark Unterhaching (SpVgg Unterhaching) · Stadion an der Hafenstraße (Rot-Weiss Essen) · Stadion Lohmühle (VfB Lübeck) · Stadion Rote Erde (Borussia Dortmund II)

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