Vasil Levski National Stadium

Coordinates: 42°41′15.30″N 23°20′7.60″E / 42.6875833°N 23.3354444°E / 42.6875833; 23.3354444
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Addbot (talk | contribs) at 15:31, 25 February 2013 (Bot: Migrating 15 interwiki links, now provided by Wikidata on d:q1327903 (Report Errors)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Vasil Levski National Stadium
Map
LocationSofia, Bulgaria
Coordinates42°41′15.30″N 23°20′7.60″E / 42.6875833°N 23.3354444°E / 42.6875833; 23.3354444
OwnerMinistry of Physical Education and Sport of Bulgaria
OperatorMinistry of Physical Education and Sport of Bulgaria
Capacity43,230[1]
Field size105 X 68
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Opened1953
Renovated1966, 2002, 2012
ArchitectKano Dundakov
Tenants
Bulgaria national football team

Vasil Levski National Stadium (Bulgarian: Национален стадион „Васил Левски“), named after Bulgarian national hero Vasil Levski, is the country's largest stadium. The stadium has 43,230 seats and is located in the centre of Sofia, on the territory of the city's oldest and most famous park - the Borisovata gradina.

Vasil Levski National Stadium was officially opened in 1953 and reconstructed in 1966 and 2002. The Bulgaria national football team's home matches and the Bulgarian Cup finals are held at the venue, as well as athletics competitions. It was also used as the home venue for Levski Sofia's Champions League games.

Prior to their demolition by the Communist authorities during the 1940s, two other stadiums stood on the ground where the current national stadium lies. One of those was Levski Sofia's club stadium, called Levski Field (Bulgarian: Igrishte Levski, completed 1934), and the other - the Yunak Stadium (built 1928). The latter used to host national football team matches with its capacity of about 15,000 seats. Levski were compensated for their loss with a place in the suburbs of Sofia where they were allowed to build a new stadium - the present day Georgi Asparuhov.

The stadium offers also judo, artistic gymnastics, basketball, boxing, aerobics, fencing and table tennis halls, as well as a general physical training hall, two conference halls and three restaurants. It hosted the 1957 European basketball championship.[2]

It was the proposed venue for the Opening and Closing Ceremonies in Sofia's bid for the 2014 Winter Olympics.

In July 2011 plans were announced to build a new, state of the art 40000-seater national stadium in the Sofia suburbs.

Concert venue

The stadium has hosted music shows by a number of regional and world stars.

The most succssesful concert in Bulgaria ever and thus at the Vasil Levski stadium was held by Yugoslav superstar Lepa Brena in 1990 in front of 100.000 people.[3] This record remains unbroken till date. The curiosity of the concert was the way Lepa Brena arrived at the stadium - by landing from the helicopter directly to the stage.

American metal band Metallica held one of the most successful concerts in Bulgaria in the stadium as part of their 2008 European Vacation Tour, attracting 50,000 people.[4]

American superstar Madonna had a very successful concert here as part of the second European second leg of her Sticky & Sweet Tour on August 29, 2009. She performed in front of 54,000 people [5] and was warmly welcomed by her numerous fans. After the show, the grass was badly damaged, which caused some discontent amongst football fans, national team players, coaches and staff.

On 14 May 2010, Australian rock band AC/DC played the Bulgarian capital Sofia, in front of nearly 60,000 fans as part of their Black Ice World Tour.

A festival, under the name Sofia Rocks, part of Sonisphere Festival took place on the Vasil Levski National Stadium. The festival was held over 2 days on the 22nd and 23 June with live performances by world renowned bands such as Rammstein, Metallica, Manowar and Alice in chains among others.

The Big Four, Metallica, Megadeth, Slayer, and Anthrax, performed all together during the Sonisphere Festival. The event was broadcast live around the world.

In October 30, the american rock band Bon Jovi announced that they will perform live in Levski during their Because We Can tour in May 14, 2013

Concerts

Concerts at Vasil Levski National Stadium
Date Artist Tour Attendance
24 July 1990 Lepa Brena Boli me uvo za sve Tour 100.000
24 July 2008 Metallica 2008 European Vacation Tour 50.000
29 August 2008 Madonna Sticky & Sweet Tour 53,660
14 May 2010 AC/DC Black Ice World Tour 60.000
22 June 2010 Metallica World Magnetic Tour -
23 June 2010 Rammstein Liebe ist für alle da Tour -
8 July 2012 Guns N' Roses Up Close and Personal Tour 50.000
14 May 2013 Bon Jovi Because We Can: The Tour -
26 July 2013 Rammstein Made in Germany 1995–2011 (tour) -
30 August 2013 Roger Waters The Wall Live (concert tour) -

References

  1. ^ http://www.uefa.com/MultimediaFiles/Download/FirstDiv/uefaorg/Publications/01/67/03/93/1670393_DOWNLOAD.pdf
  2. ^ Eurobasket History - The 50's
  3. ^ "Serbia's Pop Folk Legend Lepa Brena to Thrill Bulgarian Fans in April". Novinite.com. March 27, 2008. {{cite web}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Missing or empty |url= (help); Unknown parameter |http://www.novinite.com/view_news.php?id= ignored (help)
  4. ^ M3 Web - http://m3web.bg (2008-07-26). "Legendary ???Metallica??? Musicians Rock Sofia: Legendary "Metallica" Musicians Rock Sofia - Novinite.com - Sofia News Agency". 188.40.98.135. Retrieved 2010-05-24. {{cite web}}: External link in |author= (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ "Madonna HOME". Madonna.com. Retrieved 2010-05-24.
Preceded by Eurobasket
Final Venue

1957
Succeeded by
Preceded by Universiade
1977
Succeeded by