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Estadio El Teniente

Estadio El Teniente-Codelco
Templo de las Ilusiones (Temple of Illusions)
El Mundialista de Rancagua (The World Cup Stadium of Rancagua)
El Teniente Logo.png
Desfile 2 de Octubre Bicentenario Batalla Rancagua 01.JPG
The stadium in October 2014.
Full name Estadio El Teniente-Codelco
Former names Estadio Braden Copper Co. (1947–1971)
Estadio Parque El Teniente (1971–2014)
Location Rancagua, Chile
Coordinates 34°10′39.95″S 70°44′15.79″W / 34.1777639°S 70.7377194°W / -34.1777639; -70.7377194Coordinates: 34°10′39.95″S 70°44′15.79″W / 34.1777639°S 70.7377194°W / -34.1777639; -70.7377194
Owner Codelco
Operator Codelco El Teniente
Executive suites 750 seats
Capacity 13,849
Field size 105 x 68 m
Surface Grass (natural)
Scoreboard Digital (LED)
Construction
Broke ground 1 June 1945
Built 1945–1947 (2 years)
Opened 1947
Renovated 1995, 2013–14
Expanded 1962
Reopened 6 March 2014
Demolished 2013
Construction cost $9,900,000
Architect Gerardo Marambio
Claudio Aceituno
Pablo Allende
Pedro Pinochet
Project manager IND–Chilestadios
General contractor Cerinco
Tenants
O'Higgins (1955–present)
Website
www.ohigginsfc.cl

Estadio El Teniente, also known as Estadio El Teniente-Codelco for sponsorship reasons, is a multi-purpose stadium in Rancagua, Chile. It is currently used mostly for football matches. The stadium actually holds approximately 13,000 people and was built in 1945 with the name Braden Copper Company Stadium (Estadio Braden Copper Co.). The stadium is the home stadium for O'Higgins, the team of the city of Rancagua.

The stadium hosted seven matches of 1962 FIFA World Cup, where played matches of the group stage and quarter-finals.

In 2013, the stadium was renovated for hosting the 2015 Copa América, to be played in Chile. Two matches of the group stage will be played in this stadium.

The stadium, since its construction, was owned by the U.S. copper mining company Braden Copper Company, which operated the mineral-extraction complex "El Teniente".

The designation of the Braden Copper Stadium to host matches in the 1962 FIFA World Cup was due to an emergency. Indeed, the 1960 Valdivia earthquake severely damaged or destroyed facilities in some of the originally-designated host cities of the FIFA World Cup in 1962 including Talca, Concepción, Talcahuano and Valdivia, which caused the original schedule to be discarded and forced its almost complete modification. Further, Antofagasta and Valparaíso were deterred from fulfilling their offers to host because they could not feasibly construct self-funded stadiums, a condition that had been imposed by the Federation due to its own lack of resources. However, given the bleak outlook for the organization, the U.S. mining interests allowed the use of their stadium in Rancagua.


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