Mommsenstadion

Mommsenstadion
The Mommsenstadion in winter
Location Berlin, Germany
Coordinates 52°30′3″N 13°15′51″E / 52.50083°N 13.26417°E / 52.50083; 13.26417Coordinates: 52°30′3″N 13°15′51″E / 52.50083°N 13.26417°E / 52.50083; 13.26417
Owner State of Berlin
Operator SCC Berlin
Capacity 15,005
Field size 107 × 72 m
Surface Grass
Scoreboard Electronic (since 2000)
Construction
Opened 17 August 1930
Renovated 1950–1956
Expanded 1987
Architect Fred Forbát
Tenants
Tennis Borussia Berlin
SCC Berlin
Berlin Rebels

The Mommsenstadion is a multi-purpose stadium in Berlin, Germany, named after the historian Theodor Mommsen. It is currently used mostly for football and hosts the home matches of Tennis Borussia Berlin and SCC Berlin. The stadium has a capacity of 15,005 people (13,200 standing), although the DFB have set an upper limit of 11,500 supporters for football games.[1]

The stadium opened on 17 August 1930 and replaced the former ground of SCC Berlin that fell prey to the extension of the neighbouring Messe Berlin fairgrounds. It soon adopted its name from a nearby gymnasium. The Mommsenstadion was the site of some football matches during the 1936 Summer Olympics[2] and several ISTAF athletics meetings of the IAAF Golden League. Since 1945 it has also been the home ground of Tennis Borussia Berlin.

During the 2006 FIFA World Cup, the Germany national football team used the Mommsenstadion as their training ground.

Matches at the 1936 Summer Olympics

Date Time (CET) Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round Attendance
3 August 193617:30 Turkey0–4 NorwayRound of 168,000
5 August 193617:30 Austria3–1 EgyptRound of 166,000
6 August 193617:30 Great Britain2–0 China PRRound of 168,000
7 August 193617:30 Italy8–0 JapanQuarter-finals8,000

References

  1. "Heimat Mommsenstadion". Tennis Borussia Berlin (in German). Retrieved 21 July 2010.
  2. "1936 Summer Olympics official report" (PDF). International Olympic Committee. pp. 1047–1056. Retrieved 22 August 2010.


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