Stadionul Tineretului (Oradea)

Stadionul Tineretului is a multi-use stadium in Oradea, Romania. The stadium was opened on 4 June 1895 as part of the sports pavilion of the Rhédey Garden. Located in the southwestern part of the city between Nicolae Bălcescu Park and Oradea Zoological Garden, the stadium is considered to be the birthplace of many sports in the city located on the banks of the Crișul Repede river. Besides historical and sentimental value, the arena has also an architectural value, in the northern end of the stadium being a ground floor building and two small towers originally built to serve for dancing, a new restaurant and a buffet. The building is the work of famous architects Kálmán Rimanóczy Sr. and Kálmán Rimanóczy Jr.[1]

Stadionul Tineretului
Former namesGrădina Rhédey
(Rhédey Garden)
Voievodul Mihai
(Prince Michael)
AddressCalea Matei Basarab, nr. 4
LocationOradea, Romania
Coordinates47°02′56″N 21°55′10.5″E
OwnerMinistry of National Education
OperatorLPS Bihorul Oradea
Capacity5,000 (0 seated)
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Opened4 June 1895
Renovated2005, 2009
Tenants
CA Oradea (1910–1924)
CS Bihorul (1920–1940)
Olimpia Oradea (1950–1975)
Dinamo MIU Oradea (1975–1976)
Înfrățirea Oradea (1976–2000)
LPS Bihorul Oradea (1977–present)
Lotus Băile Felix (2006–2007)

On 14 May 1898 on Stadionul Tineretului was held the first cycling contest and on 1 June 1902, the first football match was played. The stadium was also the home ground of Club Atletic Oradea from its foundation until 1924, when Stadionul Iuliu Bodola was opened. In the 1930s the stadium was renamed as Stadionul Voievodul Mihai, in the honor of Prince Michael being the home of CS Bihorul and the home ground of many sports competitions.[1]

After the establishment of the communism in Romania, the stadium was mainly the venue of the youth competitions and was renamed as Stadionul Tineretului (Youth Stadium). From 1977 the main operator of the stadium and sports pavilion is LPS Bihorul Oradea, the Sports High School from the city. The Arena underwent renovations in 2005 and 2009, and it would now need new ones.[1][2][3]

References

  1. "Oradea ieri, Oradea azi: Stadionul Tineretului a fost prima arenă sportivă a oraşului" [Oradea yesterday, Oradea today: Tineretului Stadium was the first sports arena of the city] (in Romanian). ebihoreanul.ro. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  2. "Oradea: Stadionul Tineretului renovat" [Oradea: Tineretului Stadium renovated] (in Romanian). adevarul.ro. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  3. "Caută soluții pentru reabilitare" [looking for solutions for rehabilitation] (in Romanian). bihon.ro. Retrieved 5 May 2019.


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