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Kleanthis Vikelidis Stadium

Coordinates: 40°36′0.25″N 22°58′10.20″E / 40.6000694°N 22.9695000°E / 40.6000694; 22.9695000
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Kleanthis Vikelidis Stadium
Χαριλάου
Map
LocationThessaloniki, Greece
OwnerAris Thessaloniki
OperatorAris F.C. (Thessaloniki)
Capacity22,800
SurfaceGrass
ScoreboardYes
Construction
Broke ground1951
Opened6 November 1951[1]
Renovated2004
Tenants
Aris F.C. (Thessaloniki) (1951–present)

The Kleanthis Vikelidis Stadium (Template:Lang-el) or Harilaou Ground (Γήπεδο Χαριλάου) is a football stadium in Thessaloniki, Greece. It was built in 1951 as the home stadium of Aris F.C. (Thessaloniki), one of the most popular football clubs in Greece. For many years, the ground's official name was Aris Stadium, until it was renamed in honor of Kleanthis Vikelidis, a legendary player of Aris FC in the 1930s. However, most commonly referred to as "Harilaou Stadium", after the district in which it was built. The stadium's capacity was 23,200, although it got limited to 22,800 after the renovations for the 2004 Summer Olympics, where it served as a training ground for Football at the 2004 Summer Olympics. Its facilities include dressing rooms, a gym, a swimming pool, VIP boxes, a VIP lounge, a restaurant with pitch view and press rooms.

History

The football stadium opened in 1951. The expansion of the stadium took place in stages. In 1969 it was moved for the first time to a grass surface. In 1972, the grandstand was roofed in the West. The North Stand, which is the home crowd reserved, was completed 1975. During the Olympic football tournaments of the 2004 Summer Olympics, modernization measures were adopted.

Architecture

The Charilaou is a pure football stadium without running track for athletics competitions. The most obvious change after the renovation of 2004 was the establishment of a new grandstand. This is in contrast to the old holding a top rank, is what defined by a tier of boxes from the lower part.

The stadium got new seats, which are the club colors of yellow and black. In addition, the grids were in front of the side stands, which separated the stands from the field, removed and, at the point where the local fans are housed by plexiglas.

Other uses

Below the grandstand is located next to the dressing rooms, a sports hall and a sports pool , which serves the swimming division of Aris Thessaloniki as a training facility. In addition, the stadium has a restaurant, cafes and catering areas for VIPs .

References

40°36′0.25″N 22°58′10.20″E / 40.6000694°N 22.9695000°E / 40.6000694; 22.9695000