Floschenstadion
Floschenstadion | |
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Main stand with clubhouse | |
Data | |
place | Rosenstrasse 71063 Sindelfingen , Germany |
Coordinates | 48 ° 42 '39.3 " N , 8 ° 59' 36.7" E |
owner | City of Sindelfingen |
operator | Sindelfingen Sports and Bathing Authority |
start of building | 1951 |
opening | 1954 |
surface | Natural grass |
capacity | 5,000 seats |
Societies) | |
Events | |
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The Floschenstadion is a football stadium with athletics facility in Sindelfingen , which was built between 1951 and 1954.
Technical details
The stadium has a capacity of around 5,000 spectators and has a floodlight system . There are 800 covered and 600 uncovered seats. The stadium has a 400-meter running track with six circular tracks, a grass field, a hard court, two high jump facilities, two long jump facilities, a throwing meadow and an all-weather field. There is space for around 100 vehicles in the stadium's parking lot.
Reorganization of the sports facilities
According to plans by the city of Sindelfingen, the sports facilities around the Floschenstadion, the Sindelfingen Glass Palace and in the Unterrieden area in the Maichingen district are to be reorganized. There was also a demolition of the Floschenstadion and the adjacent area in favor of residential buildings. As a replacement for this, the Allmend Stadium including the athletics facility should be renovated. The footballers of VfL Sindelfingen would then move to a new place with a grandstand near the Glass Palace. The construction of an artificial turf field each at the Allmendstadion and at the Glaspalast has already been completed in 2012. The renovation of the Allmendstadion and the construction of an associated functional building for around € 1.1 million is being carried out in summer 2013. In 2016, the decision to demolish the stadium and build residential buildings on the stadium grounds was revoked. Instead, it was decided to renovate the building with a new function. The ancillary facility for footballers and track and field athletes was released in July 2018 after a year of construction.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Floschenstadion Sindelfingen. City of Sindelfingen, accessed on July 21, 2013 .
- ↑ a b c Floschenstadion Sindelfingen. VfL Sindelfingen 1862 eV Specialized sports department football men / juniors, accessed on July 21, 2013 .
- ↑ Jennifer Wilding-Heutzenröder, Heike Heutzenröder: VfL Sindelfingen - stadium. (No longer available online.) Jennifer Wilding-Heutzenröder, archived from the original on November 27, 2013 ; Retrieved July 21, 2013 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Sindelfingen has no money for a new stadium. Stuttgarter Nachrichten Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, March 10, 2010, accessed on July 21, 2013 .
- ^ City of Sindelfingen (ed.): Information event on urban development in the Unterrieden / Floschen area . Presentation of the sports facility building block. March 20, 2013 ( sindelfingen.de [PDF; accessed on July 21, 2013]).
- ↑ Sports facility construction Garten-Moser GmbH u. Co. KG (Ed.): Reference list for artificial turf pitches . S. 3 ( sportstaettenbau-gm.de [PDF; accessed on July 21, 2013]).
- ↑ Overview of the individual investment measures in 2013 in Maichingen: . In: Stadt Sindelfingen (ed.): Local council meeting of April 24, 2013 . April 24, 2013, p. 5 ( sindelfingen.de [PDF; accessed on July 21, 2013]).
- ↑ The Resurrection of the Floschenstadion. Retrieved July 19, 2016 .
- ↑ Rebecca Baumann: The athletes can get started. Stuttgarter Nachrichen, July 20, 2018, accessed November 26, 2018 .