Volksparkstadion Hamburg – venue for the European Championship 2024

Building design
Hamburg's Volksparkstadion is to be the venue for the 2024 European Championships. Photo: Robert Bye via Unsplash

Hamburg's Volksparkstadion is to be the venue for the 2024 European Championships. Photo: Robert Bye via Unsplash

The Volksparkstadion in Hamburg was already the venue for the European Football Championship in 1988. The Volksparkstadion also hosted matches at the 1974 and 2006 World Cups. Now the home stadium of Hamburger SV is to be the venue for a major soccer tournament once again, as it has been clear since June of this year that the EURO 2024 matches will take place in Hamburg as planned despite financial disagreements regarding the modernization of the stadium.

The Volksparkstadion in Hamburg was already the venue for the European Football Championship in 1988. The Volksparkstadion also hosted matches at the 1974 and 2006 World Cups. Now the home stadium of Hamburger SV is to be the venue for another major soccer tournament, as it has been clear since June of this year that the EURO 2024 matches will take place in Hamburg as planned despite financial disagreements regarding the modernization of the stadium.

Venue for international soccer tournaments

The Volksparkstadion in Hamburg is not only the home of HSV, but has also hosted various international soccer tournaments and sporting events. World Cup matches were held here in 1974 and 2006. The semi-finals of the 1988 European Championship and the final of the 2009/10 UEFA Europa League were also held at the Volksparkstadion. In addition, the German athletics championships have been held in Hamburg’s Volksparkstadion on several occasions.

Germany’s first stadium suitable for the World Cup

However, the HSV stadium was not always as popular as it is today, as it was one of the most unpopular soccer stadiums in the whole of Germany until it was renovated in 1998. Nevertheless, there were several initiatives among the fans to preserve the old, open “concrete bowl”. However, the riots after the championship celebrations in 1979, which resulted in many injuries, made it necessary to rebuild the stadium. However, this did not take place until almost 20 years later. The aim of the 1998 renovation was also to make the stadium UEFA and FIFA-compliant. With the conversion, which was completed in 2000 and for which the architect Manfred O. Steuerwald was responsible, the Volksparkstadion was the first German stadium to be suitable for the World Cup. During the renovation in 1998, the stands were moved closer to the pitch and the pitch was rotated by 90 degrees. As the stadium is located in the main flight path of Hamburg Airport, a special permit was required from the German Federal Aviation Office in order to carry out the conversion of the stadium.

Stadium with a historic past

The Altonaer Stadion, also known as the Altonaer Volksparkstadion, is considered the predecessor of today’s Volksparkstadion. The district of Altona, which today belongs to the city of Hamburg, was an independent town until 1938. The Altona stadium was inaugurated on September 11, 1925 with a gymnastics and sports week and two days later with the first soccer match. The stadium, designed by the German architect and town planner Gustav Oelsner, also hosted international matches for the first time from 1927. During the Second World War, the Altona Stadium also served as accommodation for around 130 Italian prisoners of war who lived in the stadium’s stands.

As large parts of the stadium were destroyed during the Second World War, the Senate and the Parliament finally voted to demolish the Altona Stadium in 1951 and to build a new, larger stadium. The opening of this new stadium, today’s Volksparkstadion, took place on July 12, 1953. In November 1953, Germany won their first international match here 5:1 against Norway. The Volksparkstadion originally offered space for around 76,000 spectators and was the second largest stadium in Germany at the time. However, as the architecture of the stadium at the time was not compatible with current safety precautions and standing room was converted into seating, the number of seats was reduced to around 57,000 spectators. Various sponsors have also repeatedly changed the name of the Volksparkstadion in recent years. At times, the Volksparkstadion has been called the AOL Arena, HSH Nordbank Arena and Imtech Arena, among others.

Roof of 40 panels

A special feature of the Volksparkstadion is undoubtedly the roof of the stadium, which consists of a transparent coating made up of a total of 40 fields, each with an area of 800 square meters. As only part of the stadium was initially covered, a covered stand was built for spectators for the 1974 World Cup, of which a total of three matches, including the only German-German international match, were played in the Volksparkstadion. The cost of this conversion amounted to around DM 20 million at the time. The current roof of the stadium, which spans the entire spectator area, was planned by the engineers Schlaich Bergermann und Partner. The roof has an inner tension ring, which is connected to an outer compression ring by 40 cable ties. This compression ring is in turn supported by a total of 40 steel masts, which are located behind the stands.

Current challenge for HSV

Renovation and refurbishment measures worth several million euros are once again required for EURO 2024 in order to meet current safety requirements and make the stadium suitable for the European Championships. According to sportbuzzer, the 44,000 square meter roof membrane in particular urgently needs to be replaced. This construction measure alone is expected to cost up to 14 million euros. This presents HSV with a major challenge, as it is still unclear how the renovation is to be financed. As part of the sale of the stadium site, HSV received a sum of 23.5 million euros from the city of Hamburg, which was intended for the modernization of the stadium. However, this sum has already been almost completely used up by HSV without the renovation work having even begun. Whether the planned matches for the 2024 European Championship will actually take place in the Volksparkstadion remains to be seen.

A total of five matches are planned for the European Championships in 2024 in Hamburg’s Volksparkstadion. The EURO 2024 matches in Hamburg:
16.06.2024: D1 – D2
19.06.2024: B2 – B4
22.06.2024: F2 – F4
26.06.2024: F4 – F1
05.07.2024: quarter-finals

Find out more about other soccer stadiums here: Euro 2021: The round must go into the square.

POTREBBE INTERESSARTI ANCHE

Retired police parking garage

Building design
An old parking garage in Amsterdam has become obsolete. An office designed by Ronald Janssen Architecten is now located in the existing building. Photo: Sebastian van Damme

Ronald Janssen Architecten's design for the new offices revitalizes the old building. The view for Aham employees. Photo: Sebastian van Damme

An old police parking garage in Amsterdam has had its day. The building is now used as an office building. Nothing here is reminiscent of a parking garage. The design by Ronald Janssen Architecten impresses with its minimalism, exposed concrete slabs and the view of one of the city’s most important waterways.

An old police parking garage in Amsterdam has had its day. The building is now used as an office building. Nothing here is reminiscent of a parking garage. The design by Ronald Janssen Architecten impresses with its minimalism, exposed concrete slabs and the view of one of the city’s most important waterways.

Aham Vastgoed normally brokers real estate from and in Amsterdam. But when the company itself was looking for a home for its offices, it turned to Ronald Janssen Architecten. The architect from Amsterdam redesigned existing architecture from 1969 for this task. More specifically, an old parking garage belonging to the Dutch police, which also served as storage space for the Stadgenoot social housing association. However, the conversion as a sustainable solution is only one aspect of the design. It draws another quality from the location. The building is located directly on the Singelgracht waterway, which encircles the entire center of the Dutch capital. And it was precisely this proximity to the water and the resulting quality of stay that the architects wanted to exploit for their conversion.

Floor-to-ceiling windows and sliding doors with wooden frames, concrete columns and prefabricated façades made of exposed aggregate concrete divide the water-facing side of the building evenly into five sections. Two of these five sections also reveal the heart of the architecture from the outside – the large, high office space. From here, employees not only have direct access to the terrace on the canal, but also to meeting rooms, function rooms and lounges, including a kitchenette. While the interior spaces are oriented towards the waterway, Ronald Janssen Architects positioned the entrance and parking spaces towards the inner courtyard. A solid wooden door leads to the entrance area, which is ultimately just a long corridor with a concealed checkroom. It connects the mixed-use sanitary room with the open-plan office and a medium-sized meeting room.

Photo: Sebastian van Damme, Plans: Ronald Janssen Architecten

The materials and colors used by Ronald Janssen Architecten follow the motto “less is more”. The existing structure was cleaned, the walls painted light and the ceiling dark. The dark gray carpet connects the rooms. Windows, doors and cladding are made of iroko wood. The exposed aggregate concrete panels on the façade also pick up on the warm wood color. The colorful icing on the cake is green and is literally on top: the flat roof is greened with moss.

A building in which the color green is the main protagonist is located on the school campus of Naters in the Swiss canton of Valais – the learning villa by Office Oblique.

Although it is a new building, asp architects have created a central component for the energy supply of a district with their parking garage in Stuttgart. And it’s green too: Neckarpark Stuttgart parking garage.

Garden shows 2019 – an overview

Building design

Everything about the 2019 garden show year

The first garden shows of 2019 opened their doors just in time for the spring-like Easter weekend. In addition to the Federal Garden Show in Heilbronn, this year there were also state garden shows in Baden-Württemberg, Bavaria, Brandenburg, Saxony and Upper Austria.

Heilbronn used the BUGA event (April 17 to October 6, 2019) to renew itself from the inside out on a 40-hectare area in the immediate vicinity of the train station. Situated on an island between the Neckar Canal and the Altneckar, the isolated site had been used as an industrial and commercial location and freight station for over 100 years and had long disappeared from the consciousness of the people of Heilbronn. Following the relocation of a section of the B39 federal highway and the extensive removal of explosives and contaminated sites, the future Neckarbogen district will eventually provide living space for 3,500 people and 1,000 jobs in the coming years. The first three completed building plots were already integrated into the garden show as an “urban exhibition”.

In order to create a sustainable living space worth living in for the people of Heilbronn, the city took a new approach to neighborhood development (read the article by Thomas Armonat in G+L 4/2019). A colourful and diverse mix of usage concepts, buildings and residents, along with reduced car traffic, short distances and a modern energy supply, should make the neighbourhoods flexible for future adaptations to changing living conditions.

Pictures: Federal Garden Show Heilbronn 2019 GmbH

Garden shows 2019: experiencing nature in the middle of the city

The concept of the Berlin landscape architects from sinai played a key role in the quality of life of the Neckarbogen. They created four landscape ribbons from the existing patchwork of landscapes. As a result, visitors pass urban cores at the raft harbor with nine-storey buildings and within 15 minutes find themselves at Karlssee lake, which has been landscaped with reed zones. This also serves as a retention basin and filter for rainwater from the neighborhood.

At the same time, a spectacular landscape structure was created towards the Neckar canal. Since then, a cliff up to twelve meters high has shielded noise from the industrial Neckar Canal. Towards the garden show grounds, the shotcrete surface, which is reminiscent of the rocky edges of the surrounding countryside, conceals a vertical playground with climbing and sliding facilities. Gabions filled with local natural stone also border the sides as a compensatory measure for the habitats of lizards and other animals. With the new riverbank design and a 600-metre-long wooden footbridge in the Neckaruferpark, the landscape architects are not only bringing the river back into people’s consciousness, but also enabling them to experience nature in an impressive way – right in the middle of the city!

You can read a detailed article on the BUGA Heilbronn concept in G+L 7/2019.

The concept for the Brandenburg State Garden Show in Wittstock an der Dosse (April 18 to October 6, 2019) also comes from sinai. The town of 15,000 inhabitants is located in the Prignitz region between the Elbe and Müritz rivers. In the south, the 13.5-hectare garden show grounds form a semicircle around the historic brick ring wall of the well-preserved medieval town. To the west of the city wall, the River Glinze flows through the listed Friedrich Ebert Park dating from 1925 with its old trees. To the east, a newly designed and ecologically improved oxbow of the Dosse – the Dossebogen – borders the park on the Bleichwall, which begins at the foot of the former Bischofsburg. There, between an existing row of lime trees with an accompanying promenade and the city wall as a historical backdrop, the landscape architects staged an open meadow space. The “Bleichgärten”, meanwhile, are based on the former commons and, as citizens’ gardens, invite communal appropriation.

Pictures: State Garden Show Wittstock/Dosse 2019

Frankenberg in Saxony is just ten minutes from Chemnitz. Dresden can be reached in half an hour, Leipzig in three quarters of an hour. The attractive location for commuters is a welcome ray of hope in the structural change for the once industrial community of 16,000 inhabitants. As part of the Saxon State Garden Show in Frankenberg, Berlin-based landscape architects Weidinger Landschaftsarchitekten designed two differently characterized parts of the site: a six-hectare, robust leisure park on the Zschopau floodplain to the west of the town center and the landscaped, almost five-hectare valley along the meandering Mühlbach stream to the east.

The heart of the park on the Zschopau is the so-called Zeit-Werk-Stadt, an experience museum for urban and industrial history. To the north of it, a bridge by Sauerzapfe Architekten known as the “snake” spans the B 169 federal road and the Zschopau for pedestrians and cyclists and now connects higher-level cycle paths. Visitors can reach the valley, which the Mühlbach stream has cut around 15 to 20 meters deep, via the town center. The city has added flood protection and ecological water restoration to the wild and romantic atmosphere there. Thanks to a new pedestrian underpass and newly laid out footpaths and cycle paths, many people will in future pass through the Mühlgraben located above the park, which the landscape architects have restored to its historical course as an open channel.

In Baden-Württemberg, 16 municipalities in the Rems Valley, east of Stuttgart, have joined forces to create an atypical state garden show: from the source of the Rems in Essingen via Schwäbisch Gmünd, Schorndorf and Waiblingen to the mouth of the river Neckar near Remseck. They are all located in the Rems Landscape Park, for which the Planstatt Senner office from Überlingen originally worked together with the municipalities on the topics of tourism, cultural landscape and settlement areas. The focus was on improving the quality of life along the river and closing the gaps in the accompanying cycle path network. The good cooperation between the municipalities subsequently led to the idea of hosting a joint Remstal Garden Show in 2019 (May 10 to October 20, 2019).

In addition to the “16 Stations” architectural project, for which each municipality developed a landmark, Schorndorf and Schwäbisch Gmünd – where a state garden show was held as recently as 2014 – also hosted adventure gardens that were open to the public. In Schorndorf, for example, the Munich-based firm Lohrer.Hochrein gave the castle park and the town park a contemporary look. They presented the castle on an open lawn. Meanwhile, a square with water fountains rising from the ground was created at the intersection of the path axes. In the city park, on the other hand, densely planted edges and entrances carved out of them now define the space traversed by a circular path. Flattened bank areas towards the lake even allow visitors to lie down on the grass by the water.

Instead of a large-scale garden show like the one in Rems Valley, the Bavarian municipality of Wassertrüdingen, located halfway between Nuremberg and Ulm, organized a so-called Small State Garden Show (24 May to 8 September 2019). The Berlin-based Planorama office designed two landscaped parks on 13 hectares: the Wörnitzpark to the south of the town center and the Klingenweiherpark to the north. Both are also connected by a path through the city center. Between the Baudenhardt recreation area in the north of the city and the Oettinger Forst forest in the south, a green belt now also extends the urban area. This has also created ecological retreats and recreational areas for residents in the floodplain landscape of the Wörnitz.

Along the Klingenweiher ponds in the north, the landscape architects also added footbridges, pathways and vantage points to the area, known as the Weihersteig. Another architectural highlight is a golden platform that juts out into the water. The hill of a former landfill site has also been turned into a viewing point. To the south, the Wörnitzpark links the town center to the adjacent floodplain landscape. Seating steps border the Mühlweiher pond not far from the old town wall. A gap in the wall at the Entengraben is now closed by a metal lattice construction as a reminder.

Close to the Czech border, the Upper Austrian municipality of Aigen-Schlägl in the Mühlviertel region hosted a regional garden show (May 17 to October 13, 2019), which was dedicated firstly to the themes of conscious living and secondly to the use of resources. For the garden show, the municipality also cooperated with the Schlägl Premonstratensian Abbey, which has been in existence for 800 years, and the Schlägl Organic School, both of which are located on the 15-hectare site. The concept – a circular path linking the gardens and fields of the organic school, the new garden and leisure area for the town and the monastery along with the brewery and the founder’s garden – was also created by the Berlin office ST raum a.

A good fit for the organic cycle, which on the one hand explains to visitors how organic food gets onto their plates and on the other hand addresses how we want to design gardens and agriculture in the future. One of the biggest lasting attractions for Schlägl residents will be the newly created “Aigen-Schlägler Terraces”. There are not only new picnic and barbecue areas for residents, but also community gardens. In addition, the gardens in the Sacred Grove are intended to bring visitors closer to the themes of Christianity, peace and finding oneself. Narrow side paths branch off from the circular route, allowing visitors to discover small, enchanted or special places.

Do you remember the garden shows three years ago? If not, you can also find a review of the 2016 shows here.