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Full name | Žalgiris Stadium |
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Location | Vilnius, Lithuania |
Coordinates | 54°41′36″N 25°17′25″E / 54.69333°N 25.29028°E |
Owner | Hanner |
Capacity | 15,029 |
Construction | |
Opened | 1951 |
Renovated | 1949–1950 |
Closed | 2011 |
Demolished | 2016 |
Žalgiris Stadium (Lithuanian: Žalgirio stadionas) was a multi-purpose stadium in Žirmūnai elderate of Vilnius, Lithuania. The stadium held 15,029 and was the largest in Lithuania until its demolition. It had been built on the desecrated graves of Jews interred in the Old Jewish Cemetery under the stadium.
It was named after the Battle of Grunwald and was rebuilt by the German POWs after World War II and finished in 1950 (the stadium existed already before World War II and was used by Pogoń Wilno; in 1936 the Polish athletics championships were held at the stadium).
After independence it was used by the Lithuania national football team, but later it lost its meaning as the national stadium and all the international football matches were played either at Darius and Girėnas Stadium in Kaunas or at the renovated LFF Stadium in Vilnius.
In 2015, the stadium was sold to Lithuanian real estate company Hanner who planned to demolish it and make way for apartments, hotel and offices.[1]
The demolition of Žalgiris stadium was started on 5 July 2016.[2][3]
In 2010, Žalgiris Stadium was used by the BBC to film the television film United, depicting the Munich air disaster, as the location double of the Stadium JNA, where the quarterfinal game of 1957–58 European Cup was played.[4]