Kybunpark

Football stadium in St. Gallen, Switzerland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Kybunpark, formerly known as AFG Arena, is a multi-use stadium in St. Gallen, Switzerland, completed in 2008. It is used mostly for football matches and hosts the home matches of FC St. Gallen of the Swiss Super League. It replaces the Espenmoos stadium.

Quick Facts Former names, Location ...
Kybunpark
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Former namesAFG Arena (2008–12)
LocationSt. Gallen, St. Gallen (Wahlkreis), Switzerland
Coordinates47°24′30″N 9°18′23″E
OwnerStadion St.Gallen AG
Capacity19,694
Construction
Broke ground14 September 2005
Opened2008
Construction cost340 million CHF (2008)
ArchitectBruno Clerici, St. Gallen
Bayer Partner AG, Architekten, St. Gallen
Philippe Joye & Associés Sàrl, Geneva
Tenants
FC St. Gallen (2008–present)
FC Wil (temporary)
Switzerland national football team (selected matches)
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The stadium has a capacity of 20,000 people. Between 2008 and 2016 the stadium was named after the sponsor Arbonia-Forster-Gruppe (AFG). In July 2016 the name was changed to Kybunpark.[1]

When it was completed, FC St. Gallen had just been relegated to the Challenge League. The first match in the new stadium was played on 30 May 2008 when Switzerland won against Liechtenstein 3:0 (18,000 spectators). The official inauguration was held on 5 July 2008.

Starting July 2012, the Kybunpark was the temporary home of FC Wil, while the second division side built its own new stadium to meet Swiss Football League requirements.

The Kybunpark is also used for international games between national football teams, such as Brazil or Spain.[2]

The roof of the Kybunpark is home of the cities biggest solar-electric powerplant. The first part of the powerplant was installed in 2015 and delivered a peak power of 633 kW. 2025 a second batch of solar panels was switched online, bumping the peak power to 1205 kW.[3]

International matches

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Perspective
While under construction (2008)
More information Date, Result ...
Date Result Competition
30 May 2008Switzerland 3–0 LiechtensteinFriendly
11 October 20082–1 Latvia2010 FIFA World Cup qualification
19 November 20081–0 FinlandFriendly
3 March 20101–3 Uruguay
3 September 20100–0 Australia
2 September 2011Spain 3–2 Chile
28 February 2012Bosnia and Herzegovina 1–2 Brazil
26 May 2012Spain 2–0 Serbia
14 November 2012Chile 1–3
5 March 2014Switzerland 2–2 Croatia
15 November 20144–0 LithuaniaUEFA Euro 2016 qualifying
9 October 20157–0 San Marino
29 May 2016Spain 3–1 Bosnia and HerzegovinaFriendly
31 August 2017Switzerland 3–0 Andorra2018 FIFA World Cup qualification
28 May 2018Italy 2–1 Saudi ArabiaFriendly
3 June 2018Saudi Arabia 0–3 Peru
8 September 2018Switzerland 6–0 Iceland2018–19 UEFA Nations League
15 October 20191–0 GeorgiaUEFA Euro 2020 qualifying
7 October 20201–2 CroatiaFriendly
28 March 20211–0 Lithuania2022 FIFA World Cup qualification
31 March 20213–2 FinlandFriendly
30 May 2021[4]2–1 United States
3 June 2021[5]70 Liechtenstein
2 September 2021Liechtenstein 0–2 Germany2022 FIFA World Cup qualification
27 September 2022Switzerland 2–1 Czech Republic2022–23 UEFA Nations League A
15 October 20233–3 BelarusUEFA Euro 2024 qualifying
8 June 20241–1 AustriaFriendly
15 October 20242–2 Denmark2024–25 UEFA Nations League A
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UEFA Women's Euro 2025

The stadium was one of the venues for the UEFA Women's Euro 2025.

The following games were played at the stadium during the UEFA Women's Euro 2025:

More information Date, Time (CEST) ...
Date Time (CEST) Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round Spectators
4 July 2025--:--Germany  PolandGroup C
9 July 2025--:--France  WalesGroup D
13 July 2025--:--England 
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See also

References

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