Estadio Ciudad de Lanús – Néstor Díaz Pérez

Estadio Ciudad de Lanús – Néstor Díaz Pérez, also known as La Fortaleza (The Fortress),[2] is a football stadium in Lanús, Argentina, and home ground of Club Atlético Lanús. The stadium holds 47,027 people and was built in 1929.[3] In September 2010, the club started construction on a roof for the local stand, which has since been completed. Several other works were completed in 2014, these additions consisting in a new changing rooms, a press conference room, an official club shop, a highly competitive gym, a café for club members and a secondary school behind the stadium.

City of Lanús Stadium
Estadio Ciudad de Lanús
La Fortaleza
View of the stadium in 2014
Full nameEstadio Ciudad de Lanús Néstor Díaz Pérez
AddressRamón Cabrero 2007
Lanús
Argentina
OwnerC.A. Lanús
Capacity47,027
45,319 (international)[1]
Field size105 x 70 m
SurfaceGrass
Construction
OpenedFebruary 24, 1929 (1929-02-24)
Expanded2003
Tenants
C.A. Lanús (1929–present)
Website
clublanus.com/estadio

The stadium is named after Néstor Díaz Pérez,[4] former president of the club under whose mandate the stadium was built.[5]

History

Aerial view of the stadium in 1938

Club Lanús' first stadium was located on Wield and Deheza streets, north side from the Buenos Aires Great Southern Railway tracks. The team was promoted to Primera División in 1919, debuting in 1920 v Sportivo Almagro in the old venue. In 1929, the club built a new stadium on Inocencio Arias (nowadays, Héctor Guidi) and General Acha streets, 650 mts from the former venue. The stadium was inaugurated on February 24, 1929. One year after, the club expanded the capacity of the venue, building new grandstands, to 30,000 spectators.[6]

In early 1960s the club built the first concrete grandstand at the stadium, with a sector for the press, while the rest of the venue still was made of wood. In 1993, Lanús started works to refurbish the stadium with the purpose of replacing all the wood grandstands by concrete structures and other improvements, nevertheless works were delayed and they were not completed until 2003.[6]

Lanús stadium hosted its first international club matches in the 2008 Copa Libertadores, where Lanús debuted, defeating the Uruguayan side Danubio 3–1.[7] Lanús' international games at its own stadium also included matches of Copa Sudamericana.[8]

References

  1. Anuario Conmebol Sudamericana 2022. CONMEBOL. 3 April 2023. p. 18. Retrieved 12 May 2023.
  2. Lanús es una fortaleza, Clarín, 8 Apr 2013 by Waldemar Iglesias
  3. La Fortaleza Cumple 91 Años by Bruno Russo, 24 Feb 2020
  4. Lanús venue on Soccerway
  5. Estadio Ciudad de Lanús on Copa Argentina
  6. "Estadio Lanús" history on Viejos Estadios (blogsite)
  7. Libertadores: Lanús derrota 3-1 a Danubio on Myplainview, 13 Feb 2008
  8. Fecha y hora de la final de vuelta Lanús vs. Ponte Preta, Copa Sudamericana 2013, Starmedia

34°43′03.6″S 58°23′01.7″W

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.