Bloomfield Stadium

Bloomfield Stadium
אצטדיון בלומפילד
Location Tel Aviv, Israel
Coordinates 32°3′6.22″N 34°45′41.18″E / 32.0517278°N 34.7614389°E / 32.0517278; 34.7614389Coordinates: 32°3′6.22″N 34°45′41.18″E / 32.0517278°N 34.7614389°E / 32.0517278; 34.7614389
Owner City of Tel Aviv
Operator Sport Palaces LTD.
Capacity 14,413 (29,000 after redevelopment)
Surface Grass
Construction
Broke ground 4 September 1960
Opened 13 October 1962
Renovated 2000, 2008–2010, 2012, 2016–2019
Tenants
Hapoel Tel Aviv (1962–present)
Maccabi Tel Aviv (1968–1985, 2000–present)
Bnei Yehuda (1962–1970, 2004–present)
Beitar Tel Aviv (years unknown)
Shimshon Tel Aviv (years unknown)
Maccabi Jaffa (years unknown)
Beitar Jerusalem (1986–1988)
Maccabi Haifa (2007) (Only in UEFA Cup games)

Bloomfield Stadium (Hebrew: אצטדיון בלומפילד) is a 14,413-seat football stadium in Tel Aviv, Israel. It is the home stadium of Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv.

History

Bloomfield Stadium was built on the land where Basa Stadium, home to Hapoel Tel Aviv since 1950, once stood. Finance for the stadium project came from the Canadian Association of Labour Israel, a Canadian charity supporting the charitable works of the Hapoel Sports Movement of the Histadrut Labour Organization in Israel, the Bloomfield family of Montreal, Canada, directly and through their family foundation called the Eldee Foundation. The project was financed in Canada and intended to honor the names of brothers Bernard M. Bloomfield and Louis M. Bloomfield, Q.C. of Montreal, Canada for their lifelong dedication to the ideals of sport in Israel. The First match at the new stadium was 1–1 drew between Hapoel and Shimshon Tel Aviv on 13 October 1962. The stadium officially opened on 13 December 1962 on a friendly match between Hapoel and Dutch club Sportclub Enschede.

In 2000, Hapoel's city rivals, Maccabi moved into Bloomfield after hosting many of their matches at the national stadium. In 2004, Bnei Yehuda moved into Bloomfield making it the only stadium in the top three divisions of Israeli football to have three tenants.

In September 2010, Bloomfield was granted Category 4 status by UEFA, which will allow it to host Champions League Group Stage matches.

It was one of four venues at the 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship, holding three matches in Group A.

Since 2016, it has been under renovation for expansion to 29,000 seats.[1] As a result, the three clubs will play their home games in Petah Tikva and Netanya until 2019.

Concerts

The stadium has hosted musical acts such as Pixies, Soundgarden, Phil Collins, The Black Eyed Peas, Scorpions, Barbra Streisand, Rihanna and U2.

Gates

  • Gate 1 – VIP section, media stand and seating area of all gold tier season ticket holders for all three tenants. Seating capacity: 724.
  • Gate 2 – Hapoel/Maccabi stands. Seating capacity: 1994.
  • Gates 4–5 – Hapoel stands, during Maccabi games, is used for away stands, depending on the game. Seating capacity: 2219.
  • Gate 7 – Hapoel/Maccabi stands. Seating capacity: 2668.
  • Gate 8 – Home stand for Hapoel, Maccabi and Bnei Yehuda. Seating capacity: 2655.
  • Gates 10–11 – Home to Maccabi's supporters. In Hapoel matches, this stand is used for visiting supporters. Seating capacity: 2053.
  • Gate 13 – Home stand for Hapoel, Maccabi and Bnei Yehuda. Seating capacity: 2100.

References

  1. "תפנית: בלומפילד יוגדל לכ-29 אלף מקומות". one.co.il. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
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