FC Bayern Campus

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FC Bayern Campus
The stadium of the FC Bayern Campus in May 2018
The stadium of the FC Bayern Campus in May 2018
Data
place Ingolstädter Str. 272 80939 Munich , Germany
GermanyGermany
Coordinates 48 ° 12 '44.9 "  N , 11 ° 35' 26.2"  E Coordinates: 48 ° 12 '44.9 "  N , 11 ° 35' 26.2"  E
owner FC Bayern Munich
operator FC Bayern Munich
start of building October 16, 2015
opening 0August 1, 2017 (commissioning)
August 21, 2017 (official)
First game August 12, 2017
FC Bayern Munich - SC Freiburg 2-1 ( U17 Bundesliga )
surface
Natural grass (stadium) Natural and artificial grass (the other pitches)
costs around 70 million euros
architect Albert Speer + Partner GmbH
Graduate engineer Joachim Bauer
capacity 2,500 seats (stadium)
Societies)
Events

The FC Bayern Campus is the youth training center (NLZ) of FC Bayern Munich . It is located in the Freimann district on Ingolstädter Strasse in the north of the Bavarian capital, Munich . The northern part of the area is already in the area of ​​the neighboring municipality of Oberschleißheim, which is adjacent to the north .

history

In the mid-2000s, the club acquired the 33-  hectare northern part of the Fürst-Wrede barracks from the Federal Republic of Germany to build new club premises for the amateur sports departments of the FCB. In May 2013, youth leader Wolfgang Dremmler announced the construction of a youth academy with a mini alliance arena in the next few years . The groundbreaking ceremony took place on October 16, 2015. The facility, which cost around 70 million euros , was opened and put into operation on August 1, 2017 after almost two years of construction. The design comes from the architectural office Albert Speer + Partner (AS + P) in cooperation with Joachim Bauer. The first league game was played by the U17 teams of FCB and SC Freiburg (2-1) at the start of the 2017/18 season . The official inauguration with the symbolic cutting of the ribbon took place on August 21, 2017 in the presence of u. a. Prime Minister Horst Seehofer , Lord Mayor Dieter Reiter and Rainer Koch , President of the Bavarian Football Association .

description

The site is a little more than two kilometers southwest of the Allianz Arena , and depending on the location, it can even be seen. 14 teams from the club, from U9 to U19, as well as the women's and girls' teams of the FCB, play and train in the academy. The former club president Karl Hopfner was responsible for the planning of the building . The head of the campus is Jochen Sauer. The sporting directors are Hermann Gerland ( amateur team , U19, U17 and U16) and Peter Wenninger (U15 to U9).

The FC Bayern Campus has eight numbered playing fields, some with natural grass , some with artificial turf . Field 1 is the venue designated stadium with 2,500 covered seats for spectators. There are seating stands on the long sides of the natural grass field, standing room is available on the south side and the changing wing is on the north side. The grandstands have a circumferential noise protection facade made of industrial glass with a height of eleven meters. The U19s and U17s play their home games in the venue , usually only the east stand is open to spectators. In the summer of 2018, the stadium, which was originally kept almost entirely in gray, was optically upgraded with red, analogous to the redesign measures in the Allianz Arena. Fields 2 and 3 to the south of the stadium are the only ones of the seven other fields to have some uncovered standing steps for spectators. Of the eight playing fields, only four are used for game operations, the other four are used exclusively as training facilities. A special feature is playing field 5, through which the city limits run, so that the southern part of the playing field is in the city of Munich and the northern part in the municipality of Oberschleißheim.

The Allianz FC Bayern Akademie building is located north of the stadium and connected to it by a bridge passage . In addition to the trainer and employee offices , it offers a 1000 m² athletics and rehabilitation area as well as 35 small apartments for talents who come from outside the greater Munich area. With an area of ​​around 30 hectares, the campus is four times the size of the club's premises on Säbener Straße. The so-called clubhouse with a bistro is located on the front part of the site , and there is also a triple sports hall for the basketball , handball and table tennis departments , two mini soccer fields and fields for beach soccer and beach volleyball . In addition, a small fitness park with a fitness hill was created for athletic and rehab training. There is also a biotope area in the extreme northeast of the site.

The FC Bayern Campus has its own bus stop on Ingolstädter Straße, which is served from Monday to Saturday. On the east side of the street, in the direction of travel out of town, the stop has a small waiting area, which is designed in the style of FC Bayern and has several red folding seats, as they are also used in the venue and the Allianz Arena.

In autumn 2019, the youth training center received a football simulator. It consists of a hexagonal mini-stadium about the size of half a soccer field. Game situations and corresponding tasks for the players are thrown onto the walls with video projectors . Fully automated ball machines can represent more than 50 different forms of training in five levels of difficulty. The simulator is intended to help measure and evaluate the football-specific performance of a player.

gallery

Web links

Commons : FC Bayern Campus  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ↑ Club grounds FC Bayern Munich eV, Munich, Germany, 2005–2013. In: as-p.de. Albert Speer + Partner GmbH, accessed on January 25, 2020 .
  2. ^ Munich: Bayern announces 'mini-Allianz Arena' in new youth complex. In: stadiumdb.com. Münchner Merkur , May 14, 2013, accessed on January 25, 2020 .
  3. New design: Is this a mini Allianz Arena? In: stadiumdb.com. October 21, 2015, accessed January 25, 2020 .
  4. NLZ opened! FC Bayern starts into the future. In: merkur.de. Münchner Merkur , August 1, 2017, accessed January 25, 2020 .
  5. Sports grounds with a youth performance center for FC Bayern München eV, Munich, Germany, 2014–2017. In: as-p.de. Albert Speer + Partner GmbH, accessed on January 25, 2020 .
  6. FC Bayern Campus starts operations. In: fcbayern.com. FC Bayern Munich , August 1, 2017, accessed January 25, 2020 .
  7. This is how the opening of the FC Bayern Campus went. In: fcbayern.com. FC Bayern Munich , August 21, 2017, accessed January 25, 2020 .
  8. Info & Contact. In: fcbayern.com. FC Bayern Munich , accessed January 25, 2020 .
  9. FC Bayern Campus. In: fcbayern.com. FC Bayern Munich , accessed January 25, 2020 .
  10. Skills.Lab is intended to create additional training bases. In: fcbayern.com. FC Bayern Munich , October 15, 2019, accessed January 25, 2020 .