|
From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia, by MultiMedia |
A total of 12 German cities have been selected to host the World Cup final tournament. The stadium capacities shown are all seated capacities. Many of the stadiums have higher capacities for German domestic football matches as some of the seats are replaced with terraces.
| City | Original stadium | World Cup 2006 stadium names1 | Host club(s) | Capacity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Berlin | Olympiastadion | Olympiastadion | Hertha BSC Berlin | 77,176 |
| Dortmund | Signal Iduna Park | FIFA World Cup Stadium, Dortmund | Borussia Dortmund | 64,000 |
| Frankfurt | Commerzbank-Arena | FIFA World Cup Stadium, Frankfurt | Eintracht Frankfurt | 50,132 |
| Gelsenkirchen | Veltins-Arena | FIFA World Cup Stadium, Gelsenkirchen | FC Schalke 04 | 53,804 |
| Hamburg | AOL Arena | FIFA World Cup Stadium, Hamburg | Hamburger SV | 51,055 |
| Hanover (Hannover) | AWD-Arena | FIFA World Cup Stadium, Hanover | Hannover 96 | 44,652 |
| Kaiserslautern | Fritz-Walter-Stadion | Fritz-Walter-Stadion | 1. FC Kaiserslautern | 41,170 |
| Cologne (Köln) | RheinEnergieStadion | FIFA World Cup Stadium, Cologne | 1. FC Köln | 46,120 |
| Leipzig | Zentralstadion | Zentralstadion | FC Sachsen Leipzig | 44,199 |
| Munich (München) | Allianz Arena | FIFA World Cup Stadium, Munich | Bayern München, TSV 1860 München | 66,000 |
| Nuremberg (Nürnberg) | Franken-Stadion | Franken-Stadion | 1. FC Nürnberg | 41,926 |
| Stuttgart | Gottlieb-Daimler-Stadion | Gottlieb-Daimler-Stadion | VfB Stuttgart | 54,267 |
Map of Germany with the host cities
1During the World Cup, many of the stadiums will be officially known by different names, as FIFA prohibits sponsorship of stadium names. For example, Allianz Arena will be known during the competition as "FIFA World Cup Stadium, Munich" (or in German: "FIFA WM-Stadion München"). These new names are reflected in the table. Of the twelve hosting stadia, all but one (Leipzig) are in the former West Germany.
Football World Cup 2006, made by MultiMedia | Free content and software
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.