Dan Păltinișanu Stadium (1963)

Romanian stadium

45°44′25.65″N 21°14′39.1″E / 45.7404583°N 21.244194°E / 45.7404583; 21.244194Public transitBus line E2
Trolleybus line 16
Tram line 9OwnerTimiș County CouncilCapacity32,972Record attendance65,000 (Lepa Brena concert, 1984)Field size105 m × 68 m (344 ft × 223 ft)SurfaceGrassScoreboardYesConstructionBroke ground25 July 1960Built1960–1963Opened1 May 1963Renovated1985, 2002, 2008Closed25 February 2022TenantsFC Politehnica Timișoara (1963–2012)
ACS Poli Timișoara (2012–2020)
SSU Politehnica Timișoara (2014–present)
SCM Rugby Timișoara (2014–present)

The Dan Păltinișanu Stadium (Romanian: Stadionul Dan Păltinișanu) is a former multi-purpose stadium in Timișoara, Romania. It was the second-largest stadium in Romania, with a seating capacity of 32,972.[1] Until its closure in 2022, it was used mostly for football matches by the local team, SSU Politehnica Timișoara. The stadium was named after footballer Dan Păltinișanu (1951–1995) who played 10 seasons at FC Politehnica Timișoara.[2] The stadium will be demolished for the construction of a new arena with 32,000 seats.[3]

History

The stadium was officially inaugurated on 1 May 1963,[4] then named 1 May. The construction of the stadium was done with the workers from the city's factories.[5] Its structure was similar to the one used to build most of the Romanian stadiums of that time, i.e. compacted earth. This constructive solution proved to be extremely problematic, as the compaction of the earth over time led to the deterioration of the stadium.[5] The original capacity was 40,000 on benches, but in 2005, when the plastic seats were installed, the capacity was reduced to 32,972. The floodlighting system, with a density of 1,456 lx,[1] was inaugurated in 2003, at a match against Petrolul Ploiești.[6] Following two general renovations, in 2002 and 2008, the venue was able to host UEFA Champions League games. It was a four-star establishment with all the facilities required for the team, internet for the press room, 30 cameras for video surveillance, electrically heated pitch, an automated irrigation system and a modern scoreboard.

The Romania national football team were also a tenant. The first game played by the national team at Dan Păltinișanu was in March 1983 against Yugoslavia. Since then another six games were played, the last one in March 2010 against Israel.

The stadium has long been in an advanced state of degradation,[7] and will be demolished to make way for a new arena with 32,000 seats. It was finally closed on 25 February 2022, as it no longer met the quality standards.[8] The last event on the stadium was a Liga 2 match between Poli Timișoara and Petrolul Ploiești during which the floodlight dimmed twice and thus the city team lost at the "green table".[9]

Events

Association football

International football matches
Date Competition Home Away Score Attendance
30 March 1983 Friendly Romania Romania Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia 0–2 ~25,000
28 August 1985 1986 FIFA World Cup qualification Romania Romania Finland Finland 2–0 ~35,000
23 April 1986 Friendly Romania Romania Soviet Union Soviet Union 2–1 ~25,000
20 November 2002 Friendly Romania Romania Croatia Croatia 0–1 ~38,000
6 June 2007 UEFA Euro 2008 qualifying Romania Romania Slovenia Slovenia 2–0 27,850
3 March 2010 Friendly Romania Romania Israel Israel 0–2 ~18,000
International football clubs matches
Date Competition Home Away Score Attendance
13 September 1978 UEFA Cup Romania Politehnica Timișoara Hungary MTK Hungária 2–0 ~25,000
1 November 1978 UEFA Cup Romania Politehnica Timișoara Hungary Budapest Honvéd 2–0 ~20,000
1 October 1980 European Cup Winners' Cup Romania Politehnica Timișoara Scotland Celtic 1–0 ~48,000
5 November 1980 European Cup Winners' Cup Romania Politehnica Timișoara England West Ham United 1–0 ~45,000
19 August 1981 European Cup Winners' Cup Romania Politehnica Timișoara East Germany Lokomotive Leipzig 2–0 ~34,000
19 September 1990 UEFA Cup Romania Politehnica Timișoara Spain Atlético Madrid 2–0 ~48,000
7 November 1990 UEFA Cup Romania Politehnica Timișoara Portugal Sporting CP 2–0 ~38,000
16 September 1992 UEFA Cup Romania Politehnica Timișoara Spain Real Madrid 1–1 ~50,000
18 September 2008 UEFA Cup Romania Politehnica Timișoara Serbia Partizan 1–2 25,000
5 August 2009 UEFA Champions League Romania Politehnica Timișoara Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk 0–0 32,000
18 August 2009 UEFA Champions League Romania Politehnica Timișoara Germany Stuttgart 0–2 33,446
1 October 2009 UEFA Europa League Romania Politehnica Timișoara Croatia Dinamo Zagreb 0–3 30,000
22 October 2009 UEFA Europa League Romania Politehnica Timișoara Belgium Anderlecht 0–0 36,893
2 December 2009 UEFA Europa League Romania Politehnica Timișoara Netherlands Ajax 1–2 38,085
5 August 2010 UEFA Europa League Romania Politehnica Timișoara Finland MYPA 3–3 18,000
19 August 2010 UEFA Europa League Romania Politehnica Timișoara England Manchester City 0–1 34,695

Concerts

Date Artist Tour Attendance
10 August 1984 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Lepa Brena Bato, Bato Tour 65,000[10]
17 July 2006 Colombia Shakira Oral Fixation Tour 30,000

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dan Păltinișanu Stadium.
  1. ^ a b Matei, Alina (21 July 2015). "Stadionul Dan Păltinișanu". Merg.În.
  2. ^ "Dan Păltinişanu, un nume de legendă: bunicul fotbalist, tatăl baschetbalist. Ce va fi nepotul?" [Dan Paltinisanu, a legendary name: the footballer grandfather, the basketballer father. What will the nephew be?] (in Romanian). Adevarul.ro. Retrieved 10 December 2021.
  3. ^ "Timișoara va avea un nou stadion! Când va fi gata noua "bijuterie" din Banat în care se vor investi 120 de milioane de euro". sport.ro. 10 June 2021.
  4. ^ Silaghi, Vali (1 May 2010). "47 de ani de istorie pe stadionul "Dan Păltinișanu"". Adevărul.
  5. ^ a b Bloancă, Robert (1 May 2014). "Povestea celui mai mare stadion din Banat, care își serbează ziua pe 1 Mai". Adevarul.
  6. ^ "Istoria clubului Poli Timișoara". Ziare.com. 25 May 2008.
  7. ^ "Imaginile degradării pe un stadion din România » Cum a ajuns să arate una dintre arenele-simbol din fotbalul nostru". gsp.ro. 23 February 2021.
  8. ^ Dumitru, Silviu (25 February 2022). "Stadionul "Dan Păltinișanu" din Timișoara își închide porțile – Locația nu mai întrunește standardele de calitate". HotNews.ro.
  9. ^ Anghel, Marius (24 February 2022). "Timișoara în beznă! Nocturna de pe "Dan Păltinișanu" a picat de două ori și Petrolul va câștiga la "masa verde" meciul cu Poli Timișoara". Liga 2.
  10. ^ Both, Ștefan (16 September 2023). "Cântăreața iugoslavă care a înnebunit România în anii '80. Concertul ei de la Timișoara din 1984, de neuitat". Adevărul.

See also

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Societatea Sportivă Universitară Politehnica Timișoara
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Other stadiums
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  • Arcul de Triumf
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  • CFR (Timișoara)
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Future stadiums
  • Dinamo
  • Dan Păltinișanu