The Agia Sophia Stadium (pronounced [aˈʝa soˈfça]), also known as OPAP Arena[4] for sponsorship reasons and as AEK Arena for UEFA competitions, is the home stadium of AEK Athens. With an all-seater capacity of 32,500[1] it is the third largest football stadium overall in Greece. It is located in Nea Filadelfeia, a northwestern suburb of Athens, Greece. The new arena was built on the site of the former Nikos Goumas Stadium. The construction of the arena was completed in October 2022. Agia Sophia Stadium is the newest stadium built in Greece.

Quick Facts Full name, Address ...
OPAP Arena
Agia Sophia
Αγιά Σοφιά (Greek)
Thumb
Full nameCentre of Sports, Remembrance and Culture Agia Sophia
AddressFokon 11, 14341
LocationNea Filadelfeia, Greece
Public transitAthens Metro Athens Metro Line 1 at Perissos
Parking1,200 (surface)
400–500 (underground)
Owner AEK Athens F.C.
OperatorAEK Athens F.C.
Executive suites40
Capacity32,500[1]
Field size105 m × 68 m (344 ft × 223 ft)
Surfacenatural grass
Scoreboard2
Construction
Broke ground28 July 2017
BuiltSeptember 2022
Opened30 September 2022
Years active2 years
Construction cost 75,000,000[2]
ArchitectAthanassios Kyratsous
Project managerDimitris Andriopoulos
General contractorErmonassa S.A.[3]
Tenants
AEK Athens F.C. (2022–present)
Greece national football team (2023–2024)
Website
opaparena.gr
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The stadium hosted the 2024 UEFA Europa Conference League final on 29 May 2024.[5][6][7][8]

Name

The original name of the stadium, Agia Sophia, named after the Byzantine-built former Orthodox cathedral Hagia Sophia, was picked in order to commemorate the roots of the club from the city of Constantinople (present day Istanbul).[9] The commercial name of the stadium, OPAP Arena, was picked after OPAP – Greek Organisation of Football Prognostics S.A. secured the naming rights for five years, starting from 2022 onwards. As UEFA does not allow for stadiums to be named after a sponsor, AEK Arena is used for the European governing body's competitions.

History

In 1926, land in Nea Filadelfeia that was originally set aside for refugee housing was donated as a training ground for the Greek refugees. A stadium was built at the site in 1930, named "Nikos Goumas", and became the home ground of AEK Athens FC.[10]

In 2003, Giannis Granitsas, president of AEK at the time, advocated for demolishing the stadium at the interest of erecting a new one at the same location, citing that the stadium was seriously damaged from the 1999 Athens earthquake.[10][11] His plan was to build a new stadium at the same site, which would include also a basketball indoor hall and a mall. The goal was for the stadium to be ready in time for the 2004 Summer Olympics.[12]

However, shortly before the construction of the new stadium was to commence, it was halted by the Council of State, which decided that the construction plans of the stadium were contrary to the Constitution of Greece.[12]

In 2005, Dimitris Melissanidis was a candidate for the presidency of AEK, and presented a plan for the construction of a stadium at the area of Nikos Goumas, bearing the name Agia Sophia. However, he lost the elections.[13]

In 2007, AEK Athens FC's president Demis Nikolaidis was developing a project to build a 50,000-capacity stadium at Ano Liosia. The plan was canceled due to a lack of fan support and lack of funds.[12]

After the bankruptcy and relegation of AEK Athens FC in 2013, Dimitris Melissanidis took up the reorganization of the club and re-introduced the plan of Hagia Sophia in a press conference held on 10 July 2013.[14]

The first presentation of the stadium took place on 2 October 2013 in the Miltos Kountouras hall at the Nea Filadelfeia High School.[15][16] The project manager of the stadium Dimitris Andriopoulos announced the first features and facilities. The stadium will fulfill the criteria to be a four-category in the UEFA stadium categories, it will have a capacity of 32,500 and will have 40 suites. There will be a museum about the Greek refugees who left from Asia Minor in 1922. It will offer 1,500–2,000 jobs during its construction and 250,400 permanent jobs when it was constructed. The stadium's construction was expected to begin in 2014 and finish by 2015. The first images of the stadium were also exposed. The stadium is designed after the Walls of Constantinople where the club originated from, and it will resemble a castle from the outside.[17]

The grand presentation of the stadium took place on 6 November 2013 at the Onassis Cultural Center in Athens, which will contribute financially to the construction of the stadium. A symbolic fund was also donated by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople. Technical information about the stadium was presented and its facilities were illustrated in a 20-minute video.[18][19]

On 2 January 2015, the municipality of Filadelfeia-Chalkidona filed a complaint at the Council of State against the decision of the Forests Directorate of the Attica Decentralized Administration[20] calling for the redevelopment of 0.6 hectares from the Grove of Nea Filadelfeia in accordance with the overall plans for the new stadium.[21] Additionally, 17 citizens of the municipality of Filadelfeia-Chalkidona filed a complaint on 1 December 2014 about the same matter.[22]

The case was heard at the Council of State on 6 March 2015.[23] The decision was issued on 5 June 2015, and it rejected the claims of the municipality and the citizens as unsubstantive and obscure.[24]

The plan for the building of the stadium was released for public consultation by the Ministry of Productive Reconstruction, Environment and Energy on 22 July. The process would be completed in 45 days.[25] The municipality of Filadelfeia-Chalkidona filed an application for an extension of the public consultation for an extra 45 days,[26] which was accepted.[27] The consultation was finally concluded on 24 November 2015.[28]

On 28 January 2016, the meeting of the Administrative Regiοn of Attica approved the Study of the Environmental Impact of the project.[29]

The minister of Environment and Energy, Panos Skourletis, signed the Study of the Environmental impact of the stadium on 31 March 2016.[30]

The planning permission was acquired from the Ministry of Environment on 25 July 2017.[31][32]

Funding

The net construction cost is estimated at 81,700,000. The funding will be completed in three stages. The first phase of construction will cost 25,000,000; the second phase 20,000,000 and the third 14,700,000.[33] The Administrative region of Attica will fund the stadium with 20,000,000.[34] The sum left will be funded by Dikefalos 1924, a company that was founded for the construction of the stadium.[35][36]

Construction

The construction of the stadium began with earthworks on 28 July 2017.[37] The first phase of construction consisted of excavations and retaining works, which according to the initial planning would last for 5 months.[38] Eventually, the first phase was completed on 5 December 2017.[39]

On 6 February 2018, it was announced that the company «ERMONASSA SA» would undertake the completion of the second phase regarding the construction of the stadium. These include, according to the official announcement, the remaining earthworks, the reinforced concrete main structure of the stadium, the construction of the concrete reinforced and prestressed pillars, and finally the construction and installation of the stands. The completion of this phase is planned to last 14 months.[40] The works began on 12 February 2018.[41] The third and final phase started on 30 March 2020 and was completed in early September 2022.

Facilities

Agia Sophia Stadium offers the following facilities, amenities, and attractions.[42]

  • A small church of Hosios Loukas, in honour of AEK Athens FC former president Loukas Barlos
  • Double dressing rooms for tournaments
  • 32,500 capacity (31,100 seated)
  • Conference room
  • VIP Entrance
  • VIP Area
  • VVIP Members Club
  • Cigar Lounge
  • 40 suites
  • Executive suite
  • AEK Boutique
  • AEK Athens FC History Museum
  • Museum of Greek Refugees
  • OPAP betting shop
  • Panoramic view restaurant
  • Traditional coffee shop
  • Traditional shoe shop & locksmith
  • Double-headed eagle statue (stadium main entrance)
  • AEK Offices

Transport connections

The stadium is accessible from the Athens Metro Line 1 with the closest stations to Agia Sophia Stadium are Perissos and Pefkakia. All are 600 to 900 metres (10–15 minutes) from the stadium. Agia Sophia Stadium is also served by several Bus and Trolleybus routes.

These are:

  • Trolleybus: Line 6 (Pindou stop) and Line 3 (N.Filadelfeia stop - end of line)
  • Bus Lines: 619, Β9 (both lines Trochonomos stop), 755, 755Β (both lines Pindou stop), 421 (AEK Stadium stop), and Α8 (near Metro Station Perissos & Metro Station Pefkakia)

There are also a few bus lines further away that serve the stadium: 605 (1st Perissou stop, 900 meters, approx 13 minutes), 602 (Trochonomos stop, 1 km away, 15 minutes), 024 (Vrioulon stop, 1 km) and 604 (1st El. Venizelos stop, 1.2 km)

The stadium is also expected to be served by the New Filadelfia metro station line 4. The station will be located in the Asia Minor and Forgotten Homelands Memorial Park Nea Filadelfeia and will be delivered in the fourth phase of the line's completion, expected around the end of the 2030s.

Opening ceremony and matches

The stadium's opening ceremony took place on 30 September 2022.[43][44][45]

AEK Athens beat Ionikos 4–1 in their new stadium's opening match on 3 October 2022, a match conducted for the sixth fixture of the 2022–23 Greek Super League.[46]

More information Date, Attendance ...
Date Attendance Score Competition Opponent
3 October 2022 31,100 4–1 Super League Ionikos
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On 7 March 2023, the Hellenic Football Federation committee announced Agia Sophia stadium as the home ground of Greece for the UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying round.[47][48] However, Greece played its first international game in Agia Sophia stadium earlier that year against Lithuania.[49][50]

More information Date, Attendance ...
Date Attendance Score Competition Opponent
27 March 2023 15,000 0–0 Exhibition Game Lithuania
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Greece national football team matches

  Win   Loss   Draw

More information Nr, Competition ...
Nr Competition Date Opponent Result Attendance Scorers for Greece Ref.
1 Friendly 27 March 2023  Lithuania 0–0 15,000 [50]
2 UEFA Euro Qualifiers 16 June 2023  Republic of Ireland 2–1 18,079 Anastasios Bakasetas, Georgios Masouras [51]
3 UEFA Euro Qualifiers 10 September 2023  Gibraltar 5–0 11,237 Dimitrios Pelkas, Konstantinos Mavropanos, Georgios Masouras [52]
4 UEFA Euro Qualifiers 16 October 2023  Netherlands 0–1 27,000 [53]
5 UEFA Euro Qualifiers 21 November 2023  France 2–2 24,820 Anastasios Bakasetas, Fotis Ioannidis [54]
6 UEFA Euro Qualifiers 21 March 2024  Kazakhstan 5–0 25,200 Dimitrios Kourbelis, Anastasios Bakasetas, Fotis Ioannidis, Dimitris Pelkas [55]
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UEFA competition finals

Key
Match won after extra time
More information Season, Country ...
List of UEFA Europa Conference League finals[56]
Season Country Winners Score Runners-up Country Venue Attendance Ref
2023–24  Greece Olympiacos 1–0[lower-alpha 1] Fiorentina  Italy Agia Sophia Stadium, Athens, Greece 26,842 [57]
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Record

More information Team, Competition ...
Team Competition Matches Wins Draws Losses GF GA GD
AEK Athens Super League 38 30 7 1 89 18 +71
Greek Cup 5 4 1 0 11 0 +11
UEFA 7 2 2 3 9 11 -2
Total 50 36 10 4 109 29 +80
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Last updated: 2 October 2024.
Source: aekfc.gr

More information Team, Competition ...
Team Competition Matches Wins Draws Losses GF GA GD
Greece FIFA World Cup Qualifiers 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
UEFA Euro Qualifiers 5 3 1 1 14 4 +10
UEFA Nations League 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Exhibition Games 1 0 1 0 0 0 0
Total 6 3 2 1 14 4 +4
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Last updated: 21 November 2023.
Source: epo.gr

See also

Notes

  1. The score was 0–0 after 90 minutes.

References

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