General |
Stade de la Beaujoire | ||
La Beaujoire | ||
![]() | ||
Location | Route de Saint Joseph 44300, Nantes, France | |
Opened | 1984 | |
Tenants | FC Nantes (1984–present) | |
Capacity | 35,322 |
The Stade de la Beaujoire – Louis Fonteneau, mostly known as Stade de la Beaujoire, is a stadium in Nantes, France. It is the home of French football club FC Nantes.
The stadium opened for the first time on 8 May 1984, for a friendly game between FC Nantes and Romania in front of 30,000 fans. It was named after Louis Fonteneau, who was president of FC Nantes between 1969–1986. It was renovated in 1998, for the 1998 FIFA World Cup. While its original capacity was 52,923, in 1998 it was converted to an all-seater stadium and its current capacity is 38,128. Highest attendance was 51,359 for France-Belgium match in 1984. Previously, the team played at Stade Marcel Saupin.
![]() |
Current season •
Club honours •
Managers •
Players •
La Beaujoire-Louis Fonteneau |
2023–24 Ligue 1 stadiums |
Stade Francis-Le Blé (Brest) · Stade Gabriel Montpied (Clermont) · Stade Océane (Le Havre) · Stade Bollaert-Delelis (Lens) · Stade Pierre-Mauroy (Lille) · Stade du Moustoir (Lorient) · Parc Olympique Lyonnais (Lyon) · Stade Vélodrome (Marseille) · Stade Saint-Symphorien (Metz) · Stade Louis-II (Monaco) · Stade de la Mosson (Montpellier) · Stade de la Beaujoire (Nantes) · Allianz Riviera (Nice) · Parc des Princes (Paris Saint-Germain) · Stade Auguste-Delaune (Reims) · Roazhon Park (Rennes) · Stade de la Meinau (Strasbourg) · Stadium de Toulouse (Toulouse) |
Template:UEFA Euro 1984 stadiums
1998 FIFA World Cup stadiums |
Parc Lescure · Stade Bollaert-Delelis · Stade de Gerland · Stade Vélodrome · Stade de la Mosson · Stade de la Beaujoire · Parc des Princes · Stade de France · Stade Geoffroy-Guichard · Stadium Municipal |
![]() |