Krestovsky Stadium

59°58′22.8″N 30°13′13.8″E / 59.973000°N 30.220500°E / 59.973000; 30.220500 Krestovsky Stadium, known as Gazprom Arena for sponsorship reasons (Russian: «Газпром Арена»), is a retractable roof stadium with a retractable pitch in the western portion of Krestovsky Island in Saint Petersburg, Russia, which serves as home for FC Zenit Saint Petersburg.

The stadium was opened in 2017 for the FIFA Confederations Cup.

Gazprom Arena
Krestovsky Stadium
LocationFutbol'naya Alleya 1, Saint Petersburg, Russia
Public transitLine 3 (Saint Petersburg Metro) Nevsko–Vasileostrovskaya Line

Zenit Station
Line 5 (Saint Petersburg Metro) Frunzensko–Primorskaya Line

Krestovsky Ostrov Station
OwnerSaint Petersburg City Administration
OperatorFC Zenit Saint Petersburg
Capacity67,800
64,468 (2018 FIFA World Cup)
80,000 (concerts)
Record attendance71,381 (Channel One Cup, Russia v. Finland, 16 December 2018)
Field size105 x 68 m
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Broke groundLate 2008
Built29 December 2016 (commissioning)
Opened22 April 2017
Construction cost 43 billion
597 million
$ 660 million
ArchitectKisho Kurokawa
Project managerКБ ВиПС (KB ViPS) (https://kbvips.ru/)
Tenants
FC Zenit St. Petersburg (2017–present)
Russia national football team (selected matches)
Website
gazprom-arena.com

It is called Saint Petersburg Stadium during major international tournaments, including the 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup, 2018 FIFA World Cup, and UEFA Euro 2020. It was to host the 2022 UEFA Champions League Final, but as a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, UEFA moved the final out of Russia and to the Stade de France in Saint-Denis, a suburb of Paris.

History

The stadium was built as one of the venues for the 2018 FIFA World Cup. The competition between architectural projects was won by Kisho Kurokawa's "The Spaceship". The design of the stadium is a modified and enlarged version of Toyota Stadium in Toyota City, Japan, which was also designed by Kurokawa. The stadium was built on the location where the former Kirov Stadium used to stand before it was demolished. The capacity of 56,196 seats was increased to 68,000 seats for the World Cup. It also has 104 luxuriously designed skyboxes.

In 2005 the planning of the stadium began. Initial construction work began in late 2008.

In January 2009 The St. Petersburg Times reported that the project was now to be funded by the city government of St Petersburg, with Gazprom switching to build a separate skyscraper project. The City Hall had to step in after Gazprom declined to invest any further money into the stadium's construction. Before the stadium was named Sankt Petersburg in October 2015, it was known under the names Zenit Arena, Gazprom Arena and Piter Arena.

On 25 July 2016 the general contractor, Inzhtransstroy-Spb, issued a statement that the city authorities have failed to pay 1 billion rubles ($15.8 million at the current exchange rate) worth of construction work and stopped the work. The next day the contract was terminated. On 1 August there were reports of wind damage to parts of the metal sheathing, and a flood.

In the end of August 2016, the new general contractor, Metrostroy, resumed construction works on the site.

In April 2017 the work on the stadium was completed. The total cost of the stadium amounted to 24 billion rubles. The first official match held at the stadium was the Russian Premier League game between FC Zenit Saint Petersburg and FC Ural on 22 April 2017. Branislav Ivanović scored the first goal in the stadium's history.[citation needed]

On 17 June 2017, the first game of 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup was held on the stadium with the Group A match between the host Russia and New Zealand.

On 2 July 2017, the 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup Final was held at the stadium between Chile and Germany, becoming the most attended match of the tournament and also setting the record attendance for the stadium.[citation needed]

On 15 February 2018 the government of Saint Petersburg signed a contract for the rights and use of the stadium with Zenit Arena LLC, which is a subsidiary of JSC football club Zenit.

On 16 December 2018 the stadium hosted a Channel One Cup ice hockey match between Russia and Finland. 71,381 spectators attended the game, setting a record attendance for domestic ice hockey and the stadium overall.

On 2 August 2019 Rammstein played a concert at the stadium as part of their stadium tour.

After the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, it was announced that the 2022 UEFA Champions League Final would be moved from the Gazprom Arena to the Stade de France.

The stadium under construction in 2016; the stadium during the 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup Final

2017 FIFA Confederations Cup

Date Time Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
17 June 2017 18:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Russia 2–0 Krestovsky Stadium  New Zealand Group A 50,251
22 June 2017 18:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Cameroon 1–1 Krestovsky Stadium  Australia Group B 35,021
24 June 2017 18:00 Krestovsky Stadium  New Zealand 0–4 Krestovsky Stadium  Portugal Group A 56,290
2 July 2017 21:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Chile 0–1 Krestovsky Stadium  Germany Final 57,268

2018 FIFA World Cup

Saint Petersburg was one of the host venues, seven matches during the 2018 FIFA World Cup.

Date Time Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
15 June 2018 18:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Morocco 0–1 Krestovsky Stadium  Iran Group B 62,548
19 June 2018 21:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Russia 3–1 Krestovsky Stadium  Egypt Group A 64,468
22 June 2018 15:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Brazil 2–0 Krestovsky Stadium  Costa Rica Group E 64,468
26 June 2018 21:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Nigeria 1–2 Krestovsky Stadium  Argentina Group D 64,468
3 July 2018 17:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Sweden 1–0 Krestovsky Stadium   Switzerland Round of 16 64,042
10 July 2018 21:00 Krestovsky Stadium  France 1–0 Krestovsky Stadium  Belgium Semi-final 64,286
14 July 2018 17:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Belgium 2–0 Krestovsky Stadium  England Third place match 64,406

UEFA Euro 2020

On 19 September 2014, it was announced by UEFA that the stadium was chosen to host four UEFA Euro 2020 finals fixtures, three group games and a quarter-final match. On 23 April 2021, the stadium was given three additional group stage matches in Group E (Poland vs. Slovakia, Sweden vs. Slovakia and Sweden vs. Poland) following the removal of the Aviva Stadium in Dublin as a Euro 2020 host city due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic in the Republic of Ireland.

Date Time Team #1 Score Team #2 Round Attendance
12 June 2021 21:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Belgium 3–0 Krestovsky Stadium  Russia Group B 26,264
14 June 2021 18:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Poland 1–2 Krestovsky Stadium  Slovakia Group E 12,862
16 June 2021 15:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Finland 0–1 Krestovsky Stadium  Russia Group B 24,540
18 June 2021 15:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Sweden 1–0 Krestovsky Stadium  Slovakia Group E 11,525
21 June 2021 21:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Finland 0–2 Krestovsky Stadium  Belgium Group B 18,545
23 June 2021 18:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Sweden 3–2 Krestovsky Stadium  Poland Group E 14,252
2 July 2021 19:00 Krestovsky Stadium   Switzerland 1–1 (a.e.t.)
(1–3 p)
Krestovsky Stadium  Spain Quarter-finals 24,764

UEFA Champions League Matches

On 24 September 2019, UEFA announced that the stadium would host the 2021 UEFA Champions League Final. However, due to adjustments of the 2020 final caused by the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe, their hosting time was pushed back a year to 2022. As a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine on 24 February, UEFA called an extraordinary meeting of the Executive Committee, and the next day, UEFA confirmed that the final would be moved to the Stade de France in Saint-Denis, a suburb of Paris.

Date Time (MSK) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
2 October 2019 22:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Zenit Saint Petersburg 3–1 Krestovsky Stadium  Benfica Group G 51,683
5 November 2019 20:55 0–2 Krestovsky Stadium  RB Leipzig 50,452
27 November 2019 20:55 2–0 Krestovsky Stadium  Lyon 51,183
20 October 2020 19:55 1–2 Krestovsky Stadium  Club Brugge Group F 16,682
4 November 2020 20:55 1–1 Krestovsky Stadium  Lazio 17,427
8 December 2020 20:55 1–2 Krestovsky Stadium  Borussia Dortmund 10,860
29 September 2021 19:45 4–0 Krestovsky Stadium  Malmö FF Group H 15,339
20 October 2021 22:00 0–1 Krestovsky Stadium  Juventus 18,717
8 December 2021 19:45 3–3 Krestovsky Stadium  Chelsea 29,349

UEFA Europa League Matches

Date Time (MSK) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
3 August 2017 20:00 Krestovsky Stadium  Zenit Saint Petersburg 0-1 Krestovsky Stadium  Bnei Yehuda Third qualifying round 45,670
24 August 2017 20:00 2-0 (a.e.t.) Krestovsky Stadium  FC Utrecht Qualifying round play-offs 49,237
28 September 2017 20:00 3-1 Krestovsky Stadium  Real Sociedad Group L 50,487
19 October 2017 20:00 3-1 Krestovsky Stadium  Rosenborg BK 46,211
23 November 2017 21:00 2-1 Krestovsky Stadium  FK Vardar 38,196
22 February 2018 21:00 3-0 Krestovsky Stadium  Celtic FC Round of 32 50,492
15 March 2018 21:00 1-1 Krestovsky Stadium  RB Leipzig Round of 16 44,092
23 August 2018 19:00 3-1 Krestovsky Stadium  Molde FK Qualifying round play-offs 40,677
4 October 2018 19:55 1-0 Krestovsky Stadium  Slavia Prague Group C 45,408
25 October 2018 19:55 2-1 Krestovsky Stadium  FC Bordeaux 45,723
25 October 2018 20:55 1-0 Krestovsky Stadium  FC Copenhagen 45,199
21 February 2019 20:55 1-0 Krestovsky Stadium  Fenerbahçe Round of 32 50,448
7 March 2019 20:55 1-3 Krestovsky Stadium  Villarreal CF Round of 16 51,826
17 February 2022 20:45 2–3 Krestovsky Stadium  Real Betis Knockout round play-offs 28,936
Krestovsky Stadium 
Saint Petersburg Arena after a UEFA Champions League match in 2021

Conditions for spectators with disabilities

Saint Petersburg Arena offers 560 seats for people with disabilities, 266 of them are for wheelchair users. Moreover, the stadium design includes special lobbies, elevators and ramps to ensure accessibility to spectators with limited mobility.

Safety and security

The stadium has been fully prepared for the FIFA World Cup games in accordance with the FIFA requirements for capacity and security. The stadium is equipped with a video surveillance and identification system that makes it possible to detect any troublemakers and fans who are not allowed to enter.

References

Preceded by FIFA Confederations Cup
Final venue

2017
Succeeded by
last stadium

Tags:

Krestovsky Stadium HistoryKrestovsky Stadium 2017 FIFA Confederations CupKrestovsky Stadium 2018 FIFA World CupKrestovsky Stadium UEFA Euro 2020Krestovsky Stadium UEFA Champions League MatchesKrestovsky Stadium UEFA Europa League MatchesKrestovsky Stadium Conditions for spectators with disabilitiesKrestovsky Stadium Safety and securityKrestovsky Stadium2017 FIFA Confederations CupFC Zenit Saint PetersburgKrestovsky IslandRussian languageSaint PetersburgStadium

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