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Türk Telekom Arena

Türk Telekom Arena
Arena, Seyrantepe
Türk Telekom Arena logo.svg
GS-FB 3-1 Panorama.jpg
Full name Ali Sami Yen Spor Kompleksi
Türk Telekom Arena
Location Sarıyer, Istanbul, Turkey
Coordinates 41°6′10.33″N 28°59′25.51″E / 41.1028694°N 28.9904194°E / 41.1028694; 28.9904194Coordinates: 41°6′10.33″N 28°59′25.51″E / 41.1028694°N 28.9904194°E / 41.1028694; 28.9904194
Owner Galatasaray SK
Operator Galatasaray SK
Executive suites 198
Capacity 52,652 (all-seater)
70,000 (concerts)
Record attendance 52,044 (Galatasaray-Real Madrid, 9 April 2013)
Field size 105 × 68 m
Acreage 40,000 m²
Surface Grass
Scoreboard 2 x 77,41m²
Construction
Broke ground 13 December 2007
Built 2007-2011
Opened 15 January 2011; 6 years ago (2011-01-15)
Construction cost $250 million
($266 million in 2016 dollars)
Architect 'asp' architekten Stuttgart
Structural engineer İz Mühendislik
Yüksel Proje
Schlaich Bergermann & Partner
Services engineer OBERMEYER: Planungsgesellschaft
Main contractors Varyap-Uzunlar
Tenants
Galatasaray SK (2011–)
Website
www.turktelekomarena.com.tr

Rising in the Seyrantepe quarter of the Şişli district, which is located on the European side of Istanbul, Ali Sami Yen Spor Kompleksi - Türk Telekom Arena is the home ground of the Süper Lig club Galatasaray S.K.. The all-seater stadium has the capacity to host 52,652 spectators in football games.

Türk Telekom Arena was the first stadium in Turkey that met the UEFA Euro 2016 requirements during the country's bid to host the European Championship. In 2011, Türk Telekom Arena was one of the six nominees for the Venue of the Year and New Venue categories of the Stadium Business Awards. Galatasaray SK won the Süper Lig in the first season at Türk Telekom Arena. Türk Telekom Arena and Galatasaray SK were mentioned in the first chapter of Tom Clancy's 2012 novel Threat Vector.

Football (soccer) was first played in Istanbul by some British players in a field known as Papazın Çayırı ("Priest’s Field") in the area that is now the site of Fenerbahçe's Şükrü Saracoğlu Stadium. With the opening of the Taksim Stadium in 1921, it was this new stadium that became the new football headquarters. In the urban development of 1939, the military barracks in which the Taksim Stadium was located was demolished in 1940. The stadium was thus lost. In this period, Fenerbahçe bought the land encompassing Papazın Çayırı and built the Fenerbahçe Stadium, while the Beşiktaş Club moved into the Şeref Stadium, located in the area where today’s Çırağan Palace Hotel stands. It was Galatasaray that experienced the biggest problem with the use of a stadium in that period.


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