Camp de Les Corts ( Catalan pronunciation: [ˈkam də ləs ˈkoɾts] ), commonly referred to as Les Corts , was a sports stadium in Barcelona , Catalonia , Spain . It was the home for FC Barcelona until the club moved to the Camp Nou in 1957. It was also the home of CD Condal for the club's entire history.
39-628: Les Corts may refer to: Camp de Les Corts , the former home ground of FC Barcelona Les Corts (district) , a district of Barcelona Les Corts (neighbourhood) , one of the 3 neighborhoods within the district of Les Corts, in Barcelona Les Corts (Barcelona Metro) , a station of the Barcelona metro in Les Corts district See also [ edit ] Corts (disambiguation) Topics referred to by
78-592: A crowd of 99,124, setting a new record for attendance at a domestic rugby union match. On 18 May 2019, the first Super League game in Spain was hosted Camp Nou. The Catalans Dragons defeated the Wigan Warriors 33–16. This match set the Super League attendance record for a non- Magic Weekend , regular season fixture, attracting 31,555 fans. In 2022, Barcelona had the largest known attendances for women's football since
117-465: A new press area, new markers and the construction of the third tier, which was smaller in height than the original design by 6 metres (46.60 metres compared to the original design of 52.50 metres). The expansion of the stadium added 22,150 new seats, taking the total seating capacity to 71,731, and the standing capacity was expanded by 16,500 to 49,670, taking the total stadium capacity (seated and standing combined) to 121,401. Barcelona's record attendance
156-625: A new stadium, the Camp Nou . The club moved to its new stadium upon its inauguration on 24 September 1957. After the closure of Les Corts, the club began a long, ultimately successful, process to rezone the property to allow for residential and commercial use. Demolition of the old stadium began on 2 February 1966. Of the 26,990 m (290,500 sq ft) property, 15,300 m (165,000 sq ft) were then rebuilt as parks and sports facilities (basketball and hockey courts, swimming pools, etc.). Residential and commercial buildings were erected on
195-565: A period of certain economic hardship, Finally, the head of state and of the Spanish government at the time, the dictator Francisco Franco , authorised the requalification of the land at Les Corts and put an end to the crisis of the Barcelona club. During the course of the Camp Nou construction work, La Masia served as a workshop for making the models and a workplace for architects and builders. The architects were Francesc Mitjans and Josep Soteras, with
234-482: Is also served by several TMB bus routes, an AMB line, and four Nitbus services. Apart from regular routes, there are two special lines to Mossèn Jacint Verdaguer Square and to Catalonia Square on days with matches. The stadium is located 13.7 kilometres (8.5 mi) from the El Prat International Airport . It is connected by L9 from the airport directly to Collblanc , which is a short walk from
273-459: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Camp de Les Corts Les Corts was built as a result of a long-term plan by the club president, Joan Gamper , to provide FC Barcelona with its own stadium. It replaced the Camp de la Indústria as the home of FC Barcelona. Inaugurated in 1922, the initial capacity was 20,000. The first game played at
312-473: Is serving as Barcelona's home ground. The construction of the Camp Nou started on 28 March 1954 as Barcelona's previous stadium, Camp de Les Corts , had no room for expansion. Although originally planned to be called the Estadi del FC Barcelona, the more popular name Camp Nou ("new field") was used. The June 1950 signing of László Kubala , regarded as one of Barcelona's greatest players, provided further impetus to
351-661: The 1971 Women's World Cup final, Mexico – Denmark (110,000), at the Azteca Stadium . Real Madrid and Wolfsburg were the visiting teams at Camp Nou in the Women's Champions League (91,553 and 91,648). The stadium is accessible from the Barcelona Metro with the closest stations to Camp Nou are Palau Reial , Maria Cristina and Les Corts , on L3 ; Badal on L5 and Collblanc on L5 or L9 . All are 500 to 1,000 metres (0.31 to 0.62 miles) from Camp Nou, depending on which of
390-432: The 1982 FIFA World Cup (including the opening game), half of the four matches at the 1964 European Nations' Cup , and the football tournament 's final at the 1992 Summer Olympics . Renovation of the stadium commenced after the end of the 2022–2023 season . Final completion of all renovations is scheduled for June 2026, although the club may return before that date. During the renovation, Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys
429-578: The 2015–16 Top 14 final would be held at the Camp Nou on 24 June 2016. The Top 14 final is traditionally held at the Stade de France in the Paris suburb of Saint-Denis . However, the scheduling of the 2015 Rugby World Cup caused the 2015–16 French season to be shifted by several weeks, in turn causing the Stade de France to be unavailable because it would be a major venue for UEFA Euro 2016 . The match ultimately drew
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#1732848517639468-500: The 2008 financial crisis, the sale of the training ground was postponed, and likewise the remodeling project. In May 2010, Sandro Rosell , then a candidate for president of Barcelona, dismissed the possibility of selling the Mini Estadi, saying it would be indefensible to "sell the crown jewels", and his election on 30 June 2010 effectively halted the plan to remodel the Camp Nou. In January 2014, Barcelona's board of directors rejected
507-517: The Camp Nou is home to the Catalan team . The stadium is frequently used for other football events. The European Cup final between Milan and Steaua București was held on 24 May 1989, with the Italian club winning 4–0. The Camp Nou hosted part of the football competition, including the final, in the 1992 Summer Olympics . In preparation for these matches, two additional tiers of seating were installed over
546-453: The Camp Nou. The plan included the addition of roughly 6,000 seats, for a maximum capacity of 105,000, at an estimated cost of €250 million. The Barcelona board approved the sale of their former training ground (the Mini Estadi ) against significant opposition in order to finance the remodeling. The project was planned to begin in 2009 and to be finished for the 2011–12 season. However, due to
585-569: The Cementiri and the Maternitat. The commission dedicated to the project recommended another location in February 1951. The official purchase took place two years later. The appointment of Francesc Miró-Sans as president of Barcelona, on 14 November 1953, was to relaunch the project. Invested in February of the following year, Miró-Sans decided in favour of the land acquired in 1950, and the first stone of
624-522: The King , performed by a visiting British Royal Marine band. The dictatorship of Primo de Rivera accused Joan Gamper of promoting Catalan nationalism . Les Corts was shut down and Gamper was expelled from Spain. The stadium was the home of FC Barcelona during two of its most successful eras. During the 1920s with coach Jack Greenwell and players such as Paulino Alcántara , Sagibarba , Ricardo Zamora , Josep Samitier , Félix Sesúmaga and Franz Platko ,
663-481: The club dominated the Campionat de Catalunya and emerged as one of the top clubs in Spain. The club built on that success and also won the first ever La Liga while based at Les Corts. By the late 1940s, FC Barcelona had outgrown Les Corts. The stadium had been extended on several occasions, reaching a final capacity of 60,000. However, there was no room for further expansion and in 1950 the club began to make plans for
702-530: The club entrusted the construction to the building company Ingar SA. The work was supposed to last eight months, but the costs were more than four times higher than expected, reaching 288 million pesetas. Through mortgages and loans, the club managed to finish the project, borrowing heavily for several years. The club hoped to cover the cost with the sale of the land at Les Corts , but the Barcelona City Council took five years to requalify it, giving rise to
741-505: The collaboration of Lorenzo García-Barbón. Finally, on 24 September 1957, the feast of La Mercè, the Camp Nou was inaugurated. A solemn mass presided over by the archbishop, who welcomed the finished stadium, preceded the Hallelujah from Handel's Messiah. Dignitaries of the Franco regime and of the city gathered in the presidential tribune, and some 90,000 people attended the opening ceremony in
780-485: The construction of a larger stadium. On 14 November 1950, the president Agustí Montal i Galobart obtained the favourable agreement of an assembly of members to acquire land for the construction of a new stadium, located in Hospitalet de Llobregat, which was later exchanged with the Barcelona City Council for other land in the neighbourhood of Les Corts. The stadium is located at the end of Travessera de les Corts, next to
819-592: The final match, which was played at Real Madrid's Santiago Bernabéu in Madrid. The Camp Nou also hosted the 1999 UEFA Champions League Final between Manchester United and Bayern Munich , with both teams in contention to complete league title/domestic cup/European Cup trebles. Bayern led early through Mario Basler 's goal in the sixth minute and kept the lead as the clock reached 90 minutes, but United came back to win with injury time goals from Teddy Sheringham and Ole Gunnar Solskjær . As well as hosting Barcelona,
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#1732848517639858-459: The gates (accesses) to Camp Nou are used. Usually metro services are increased when there is a match, which causes significant passenger congestion. A new station, named Avinguda de Xile / Camp Nou , is under construction and will be served by L9 and L10 . Approximately 680 metres (0.42 miles) from Camp Nou there is the Trambaix Avinguda de Xile station (lines T1, T2 and T3). Camp Nou
897-523: The ground was between FC Barcelona and St Mirren . On 13 May 1923, the stadium hosted the Copa del Rey final between Athletic Bilbao and CE Europa and on 21 December 1924 Les Corts hosted a game between Spain and Austria . On 24 June 1925, the stadium was the scene of an incident that saw it closed for six months. During a game, FC Barcelona fans jeered the Spanish national anthem and then applauded God Save
936-642: The home of La Liga club Barcelona since its opening in 1957. It is currently undergoing renovation, and with a planned increased seating capacity of 105,000 it will be the stadium with the largest capacity in Spain and Europe , and the second largest association football stadium in the world . Camp Nou has hosted two European Cup/Champions League finals in 1989 and 1999 , two European Cup Winners' Cup finals , four Inter-Cities Fairs Cup final games, five UEFA Super Cup games, four Copa del Rey finals, two Copa de la Liga finals, and twenty-one Supercopa de España finals. It also hosted five matches in
975-407: The main grandstand and new lighting and sound systems were completed in time for the 1998–99 season. During 1998–99, UEFA rated Camp Nou a five-star stadium for its services and functionalities. Although popularly called Camp Nou, the stadium's official name was actually “Estadi del FC Barcelona” since its completion, and it was not until the 2000–01 season that club members voted to officially rename
1014-445: The option of building a new stadium due to financial constraints, and instead opted to remodel the Camp Nou to bring the capacity up to 105,000. The project was expected to run from 2017 to early 2021, with a cost of around £495 million (€600 million), making it one of the most expensive expansions on a per-seat basis. A refined plan was released in May 2015 showing plans to add a canopy over
1053-471: The previous roof-line. The Camp Nou opened the FC Barcelona club museum in 1984. The stadium was renovated in 1993–94, in which the pitch was lowered by 2.5 metres (8 feet), the security gap that separated the lawn from the galleries was removed, and standing room was eliminated in favour of individual seating. A new press box, renovation of the presidential grandstand and boxes, new parking under
1092-525: The region . In 2022, music streaming service Spotify reached a deal with Barcelona to acquire the naming rights to the stadium for four years in a deal worth $ 310 million. The stadium was rebranded as Spotify Camp Nou in July 2022. The club issued an international tender to remodel the stadium as a celebration of the stadium's fiftieth anniversary. The objective was to make the facility an integrated and highly visible urban environment. The club sought to increase
1131-575: The rest of the site. 41°23′09″N 2°08′08″E / 41.38583°N 2.13556°E / 41.38583; 2.13556 This article about a Spanish sports venue is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Camp Nou Camp Nou ( Catalan pronunciation: [ˌkamˈnɔw] ), meaning New Field and often referred to in English as the Nou Camp , is a stadium in Barcelona and
1170-414: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Les Corts . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Les_Corts&oldid=971139852 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
1209-646: The seating capacity by 13,500, with at least half of the total seating to be under cover. The intention was to make it the third-largest stadium in the world in terms of seating capacity, after the Narendra Modi Stadium in India (132,000 capacity) and Rungrado 1st of May Stadium in North Korea (114,000 capacity). On 18 September 2007, the British architect Norman Foster and his company were selected to "restructure"
Les Corts - Misplaced Pages Continue
1248-537: The stadium to its popular nickname. The facilities now include a memorabilia shop, mini-pitches for training matches and a chapel for the players. The stadium also houses the second-most visited museum in Catalonia, the Barcelona Museum, which receives more than 1.2 million visitors per year. On 1 October 2017, Barcelona's league match against Las Palmas was played in an empty Camp Nou due to political turmoil in
1287-510: The stadium was laid on 28 March 1954. A procession of several thousands of people made the journey from the Camp de Les Corts to La Masia de Can Planes, where the ceremony of laying the first stone was held, a solemn ceremony in the presence of Miró-Sans, the head of the Civil Government of Barcelona and the archbishop of Barcelona, Gregorio Modrego. The project was completed one year later, when
1326-432: The stands and showing the plans for seating expansion in greater detail. Construction was planned in 2019 to begin in summer 2020 and to be completed in 2024. On 28 April 2022, the club confirmed that renovations would begin after the 2022–23 season . Renovation work on the stadium began on 1 June 2023. At that time, Barcelona president Joan Laporta stated that the club expected to return by December 2024, when most of
1365-505: The stands of the huge stadium. During the event, football clubs from all over Catalonia paraded on the field, as well as members of the different sections of Barça, the penyes and the different Barcelona teams. Like Santiago Bernabéu Stadium of Real Madrid , the stadium was inspired by De Kuip , home of Feyenoord Rotterdam , which was built in 1937, and featured oval rings around the pitch, resulting in continuous stands without open corners. The stadium's capacity has varied greatly over
1404-475: The traditional opening ceremonies took place (including the releasing of a dove). In front of 95,000, Belgium upset the defending champions Argentina 1–0 in that opening match. It then hosted three round-robin matches between the Soviet Union, Poland and Belgium, which Poland ended up winning and qualifying from to reach the semi-finals, where they played Italy at the Camp Nou, losing 2–0; Italy went on to win
1443-530: The work will be done. Final completion of all renovations is scheduled for June 2026. While the renovations are ongoing, Barcelona is playing home matches at Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys in Montjuïc. Camp Nou has been used for various purposes other than football, often hosting major concerts. Some notable high-profile appearances include: On 4 November 2014, Ligue Nationale de Rugby (LNR), which operates France's professional rugby union leagues, announced that
1482-416: The years, opening at 106,146, and growing to 121,401 for the 1982 FIFA World Cup . In May 1972, the Camp Nou hosted its first European Cup Winners' Cup final between Rangers and Dynamo Moscow . Rangers won the match with a score of 3–2. Electronic scoreboards were installed in 1975. The stadium underwent an expansion in 1980, in anticipation of the 1982 FIFA World Cup , which added boxes, VIP lounges,
1521-469: Was set on 5 March 1986 in the European Cup quarter-final against Juventus in front of 120,000 spectators, just 1,401 shy of the stadium's capacity. The Camp Nou was one of several stadiums used throughout the 1982 World Cup, hosting the inauguration ceremony on 13 June. It also hosted more matches in that tournament than any of the 16 other stadiums used all over Spain, including the opening match, where
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