Location | Gothenburg, Sweden |
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Coordinates | 57°42′22″N 11°58′50″E / 57.70611°N 11.98056°E |
Owner | Gothenburg Municipality |
Operator | Municipal company in cooperation with tenant clubs |
Capacity | 18,416, of which 15,000 are seated and 3,416 are standing (2,400 on a combined sitting/standing terrace) |
Field size | 105 x 68 m |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 9 January 2007 |
Built | Spring 2007 – 30 November 2008 |
Opened | 5 April 2009 |
Construction cost | SEK 335 million (estimated) |
Architect | Lars Iwdal (Arkitektbyrån) |
Project manager | Jan-Åke Johansson (Higabgruppen) |
Main contractors | Higabgruppen |
Tenants | |
GAIS (2009–) IFK Göteborg (2009–) Örgryte IS (2009–2013, 2015–) BK Häcken (2014–2015) Sweden women's national football team (2009–) |
Gamla Ullevi (Swedish pronunciation: [ˈɡamːˈla ˈɵlːəviː]) is a football stadium in Gothenburg, Sweden, that opened on 5 April 2009. The stadium replaced the city's previous main football stadium, also called Gamla Ullevi, and is the home ground of GAIS, IFK Göteborg and Örgryte IS. It is also the national stadium for the Sweden women's national football team. The new stadium was built on the ground of the now-demolished old stadium. The construction of the stadium was surrounded by controversy, regarding the cost of the project, the supposedly low standard of the finished stadium, as well as the name of the stadium.
The first competitive match at the stadium on 5 April 2009 was also a derby between Örgryte IS and GAIS, attracting 17,531 spectators. The current attendance record of 18,276 was, however, set about a week later when IFK Göteborg played their first game at Gamla Ullevi against Djurgårdens IF.
The three clubs of the Gothenburg Alliance (Göteborgsalliansen)—GAIS, IFK Göteborg and Örgryte IS—played the majority of their matches on the old Gamla Ullevi from its inauguration in 1916 until the newer Ullevi stadium was completed in 1958 for the 1958 World Cup in Sweden. From that year most matches were played on the large stadium with a capacity of over 40,000, but as the attendance numbers decreased in the 1980s and early 1990s, and in connection with the removal of the terraces, calls for a move back to the old stadium was heard. After a renovation, Gamla Ullevi was from 1992 once again the home of the Alliance clubs.