Former names | Tractor Stadium (1926–1940) Dzerzhinets Stadium (1940–1967) |
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Location | Kharkiv, Ukraine |
Coordinates | 49°58′51.09″N 36°15′42.13″E / 49.9808583°N 36.2617028°ECoordinates: 49°58′51.09″N 36°15′42.13″E / 49.9808583°N 36.2617028°E |
Owner | Kharkiv city council |
Operator | Metalist 1925, Shakhtar Donetsk |
Capacity | 40,003 (football) |
Field size | 105 x 68m |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 1925 |
Opened | 12 September 1926 |
Renovated | 5 December 2009 |
Architect | Z. V. Permilovskyi |
Tenants | |
UEFA Euro 2012 |
"Metalist" Oblast Sports Complex (Ukrainian: Обласний спортивний комплекс «Металіст»), commonly known as Metalist Stadium (Ukrainian: Стадіон «Металіст»), is a multi-use stadium in Kharkiv, Ukraine. It is currently used chiefly for football matches and is the home of FC Metalist Kharkiv. The stadium, which was a venue for Euro 2012, currently seats 40,003.
After Metalist Kharkiv financially collapsed in May 2016 professional football temporary disappeared from the stadium.Shakhtar Donetsk made the stadium its home stadium in February 2017.
Construction on the stadium began in 1925 by order of Anastas Mikoyan on the site of the Holy Spirit cemetery. Opened on September 12, 1926, the new stadium was known as "Traktor", as it was then being sponsored by the local tractor production plant. Prior to World War II, the facility was renamed Dzerzhynets Stadium in honor of Felix Dzerzhinsky, the first head of the Cheka. Since 1967, it has borne its present moniker; in that same year, the capacity of the stadium reached 10,000.
Including improvements for Euro 2012, the stadium has undergone four renovations over the course of its history. The first of these took place in the mid-1960s, when the western section of the structure was renovated. The next, begun in 1970 and finished four years later, saw the addition of the north and south stands, raising capacity to 30,000. The architect for the project was Yu. Tabakova. Also added were the stadium's first roof and drainage system, as well as floodlighting, an information panel, and a hotel, located under the north stand and gymnasium.
A third renovation was begun in 1979 to renovate the East and South stands but was completed only three decades later. After the demolition of the South Stand in that year, construction was halted indefinitely, resuming only in 1998 after a delay of nearly twenty years. A new East Stand and a partially reconstructed South Stand were erected.