Name
Parc des Princes
Alternate: Stade Vélodrome du Parc des Princes

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Next Event
Paris SG vs Lyon
Sun 15 Dec 2024 19:45

Established
1967 (57 years old)

Capacity
48,229

Build Cost
€179 million in 2022

Architect
Roger Taillibert

Country
France

Location
Paris, France

Timezone
UTC-01:00

Coordinates
48°50′29″N 2°15′11″E



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15 Dec Paris SG home team badge - Away Team Badge Lyon
05 Jan Paris SG home team badge - Away Team Badge Monaco
12 Jan Paris SG home team badge - Away Team Badge St Etienne
22 Jan Paris SG home team badge - Away Team Badge Manchester C
26 Jan Paris SG home team badge - Away Team Badge Stade de Rei
09 Feb Paris SG home team badge - Away Team Badge Monaco
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Past Events
30 Nov Paris SG home team badge 1 - 1home team badge Nantes
22 Nov Paris SG home team badge 3 - 0home team badge Toulouse
06 Nov Paris SG home team badge 1 - 2home team badge Atletico Mad
02 Nov Paris SG home team badge 1 - 0home team badge Lens
22 Oct Paris SG home team badge 1 - 1home team badge PSV Eindhove
19 Oct Paris SG home team badge 4 - 2home team badge Strasbourg
27 Sep Paris SG home team badge 3 - 1home team badge Rennes


Description
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The Parc des Princes (literally "Park of the Princes" or "Princes' Park" in English) is an all-seater football stadium located in the southwest of Paris, France. The venue, with a seating capacity of 48,712 spectators, has been the home of French football club Paris Saint-Germain since 1973. The current Parc des Princes was inaugurated on 4 June 1972, endowed with very avant-garde architecture for the period. Comfort and visibility were the key words of project architects Roger Taillibert and Siavash Teimouri. PSG became the resident club of the new stadium in June 1973 and its image and history has since been associated to Le Parc. Named after the Monarch's hunting grounds that it sits on, it was initially opened as a multi-purpose venue on 18 July 1897.

The Parc des Princes is the fourth largest football stadium in France. Originally a velodrome, it was the finish line of the Tour de France from the first event in 1903 until General Charles de Gaulle ordered the track demolished in the late 1960s. He decided in 1967 that the Parc des Princes should be dedicated to football and rugby games with a capacity of under 60,000 seats. The Parc des Princes was the national stadium of the France football team and the France rugby union team until the construction of the Stade de France for the 1998 FIFA World Cup. The stadium and grounds are owned by the Paris city council and the Société d’Exploitation Sports-Evénements (SESE) holds the concession to the Parc des Princes since 1990.

Initially a multi-task sports venue at first, it has hosted many major sports events. Le Parc was an Olympic site in the 1900 Games of the II Olympiad and hosted games in two FIFA World Cups. The stadium has also been the venue for two Euro finals, three UEFA Champions League finals, two UEFA Cup finals, one UEFA Cup Winners' Cup final, two Latin Cup finals, four USFSA championship finals, one Coupe Sheriff Dewar final, 33 French Cup finals, three League Cup finals, 30 Tournoi de Paris editions and 31 Top 14 finals. The ground has also hosted 128 football matches for the French national team, 59 Five Nations Championships games, one UCI Track Cycling World Championships and 54 Tour de France finishes. The stadium also witnessed the first live sports report in France and has even hosted boxing championships and music concerts. In recent times, the Parc des Princes has refocused on more medium-sized events as compared to the larger Stade de France.
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