Electrica Stadium

Romanian stadium
45°46′8.5″N 21°15′16″E / 45.769028°N 21.25444°E / 45.769028; 21.25444OwnerTimișoara Public Transport CompanyOperatorRipensia TimișoaraCapacity5,000 (500 on seats)Field size105 × 68 mSurfaceGrassConstructionOpened1960Renovated2016, 2020[1]TenantsElectrica Timișoara (1960–present)
Politehnica II Timișoara (2006–2008)
Ripensia Timișoara (2012–2014; 2019–present)
Poli Timișoara (2018–2021)

Electrica Stadium (Romanian: Stadionul Electrica) is a multi-purpose stadium in Timișoara, Romania. It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home ground of Electrica Timișoara and Ripensia Timișoara. The stadium holds 5,000 people and is located in the Fabric district.[2] In the past it was also the home ground of Politehnica II Timișoara.

In the past, Stadionul UMT, which was placed just a few meters away, was named also as Stadionul Electrica, fact that created some confusion over time.[3]

References

  1. ^ Deliu, Anda (21 May 2020). "Stadionul Electrica din Timișoara e gata pentru fotbal. Renovarea tribunei s-a terminat după două luni de lucrări. Și gazonul arată mult mai bine". ProSport.
  2. ^ "Stadionul „Electrica"". ACS Poli Timișoara. Archived from the original on 2019-08-28. Retrieved 2021-07-10.
  3. ^ Both, Ștefan (27 March 2016). "Stadionul pe care Iolanda Balaș a început atletismul, dărâmat. Ruină și bălării, tot ce-a mai rămas dintr-o arenă legendară". Adevărul.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Fotbal Club Ripensia Timișoara
General topics
  • Players
  • Managers
GroundsOther teams
  • v
  • t
  • e
Football venues in Romania
Romania
SuperLiga
Liga II
Liga III
Seria I
Seria II
Seria III
Seria IV
Seria V
Seria VI
Seria VII
Seria VIII
  • Carani
  • Central-Parc
  • Comunal (Cermei)
  • Comunal (Peciu Nou)
  • Comunal (Periam)
  • Comunal (Socodor)
  • Electrica
  • Iuliu Bodola
  • Progresul
  • Șoimii (Lipova)
Seria IX
Seria X
Other stadiums
Defunct stadiums
  • Arcul de Triumf
  • Francisc von Neuman
  • Giulești-Valentin Stănescu
  • Farul
  • Ilie Oană
  • Ion Moina
  • Ion Oblemenco
  • Lia Manoliu
  • Municipal (Alexandria)
  • Municipal (Brașov)
  • Municipal (Sibiu)
  • Nicolae Dobrin
  • Republicii
  • Romcomit
  • Steaua
  • UMT
  • Tudor Vladimirescu
  • Venus
Closed stadiums
  • CFR (Timișoara)
  • Cotroceni
  • Dan Păltinișanu
  • Municipal (Bacău)
  • Oțelul (Ștei)
Under renovations
Future stadiums
  • Dinamo
  • Dan Păltinișanu

This article about a Romanian sports venue is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e