Fortuna Arena
Football stadium in Prague, Czech Republic / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Fortuna Arena (formerly known as Sinobo Stadium, Eden Arena and Synot Tip Arena) is a football stadium, in Prague-Vršovice, Czech Republic. The stadium has a capacity of 19,370 people and it is the biggest and the most modern football stadium in the Czech Republic.[2]
For Fortuna Düsseldorf's stadium, see Merkur Spiel-Arena.
Quick Facts Former names, Location ...
Eden | |
Former names | Stadion Eden (2008) Synot Tip Arena (2009–2012) Eden Arena (2012–2018) Sinobo Stadium (2018–2022) Fortuna Arena (2022–present) |
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Location | U Slavie 1540/2a, Vršovice, Prague, Czech Republic, 100 00 |
Coordinates | 50°04′03″N 14°28′18″E |
Owner | Eden Arena[1] |
Operator | SK Slavia Prague |
Capacity | 19,370[2] |
Field size | 105 metres (115 yd) x 68 metres (74 yd) |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 15 September 2006 |
Opened | 7 May 2008 |
Construction cost | 1 billion CZK |
Architect | Martin Kotík Daniel Dvořák Leoš Zeman |
Tenants | |
SK Slavia Prague (2008–present) Bohemians 1905 (2010–2012) Czech Republic national football team (selected matches) |
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It is the home venue of SK Slavia Prague and occasionally the Czech Republic national football team. In the 2010–11 and 2011–12 seasons, it was also the venue of Bohemians 1905 home matches. During the 2011–12 season the stadium hosted home matches for FC Viktoria Plzeň in the Champions League group stage. The stadium was used for the 2013 UEFA Super Cup.[3]