Rudolf Harbig Stadium
Rudolf Harbig Stadium | |
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Reopening of the newly built Rudolf Harbig Stadium on September 15, 2009 | |
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Data | |
place | Lennéstraße 12 01069 Dresden , Germany |
Coordinates | 51 ° 2 '27 " N , 13 ° 44' 52.9" E |
owner | City of Dresden |
operator | Stadium Dresden Projektgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG |
start of building | December 21, 1922 |
opening |
Ilgen-Kampfbahn : May 16, 1923 Harbig Stadium (I) : September 23, 1951 Harbig Stadium (II) : September 15, 2009 |
Renovations | 1951, 1992, 2009 (new building) |
demolition | November 12, 2007 |
surface | Natural grass |
costs | 500,000 RM 46 million € (new building) |
architect | Beyer + Partner Architects |
capacity | 32,123 seats |
Capacity (internat.) | 27,190 seats |
playing area | 105 m × 68 m |
Societies) | |
Events | |
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The Rudolf Harbig Stadium is the venue for the Dynamo Dresden soccer club . The football stadium is located at Lennéstraße 12, in the immediate vicinity of the Great Garden and is named after the athlete Rudolf Harbig . The stadium is owned by the City of Dresden .
capacity
The maximum capacity of the stadium was 38,500 spectators at the time of the GDR Oberliga . The attendance record, however, was (unofficially) 44,000 viewers during the UEFA Cup game on September 24, 1979 between Dynamo Dresden and VfB Stuttgart .
The stadium, which was newly built from 2007 to 2009, currently offers 32,066 spectators in fully covered stands (19,502 seats, 400 of which are for guest fans, and 11,055 standing places, of which 2,000 are for guest fans, as well as 1,170 VIP seats, 18 boxes, 56 wheelchair spaces, 71 press spaces) . However, on a game day of Dynamo Dresden, the stadium is already sold out with fewer than 30,000 tickets sold, as, depending on the security rating, up to 2,700 seats adjacent to the guest sector must remain free as a buffer zone.
history
In 1896 a sports facility was first mentioned on what is now the stadium area. It was built on the Güntzwiesen , which was located between the Great Garden and the later so called Blüherpark . The first soccer team to play on Güntzwiesen was the Dresden English Football Club . In 1910, the Dresdensia club founded its football department here.
Ilgen-Kampfbahn (1923-1945)
On December 21, 1922, Privy Councilor Hermann Ilgen began building a stadium, which was inaugurated on May 16, 1923 as the Dresden arena with a capacity of around 24,000 seats. This happened as part of the annual show for German work , play and sport . The facility was named in 1937 after its founder, Ilgen-Kampfbahn , and also served as the home of Dresdensia Dresden .
Rudolf Harbig Stadium / Dynamo Stadium (1951-2007)
After the Second World War, the badly damaged area was rebuilt and re-inaugurated on September 23, 1951 under the name Rudolf Harbig Stadium . The namesake Rudolf Harbig was a Dresden athlete who set several world records as a middle-distance runner. He joined the NSDAP in 1937 and held the rank of SA storm man. Since Harbig's biography did not fit into the ideal athlete in the GDR, the name of the sports facility was changed to Dynamo Stadium in the summer of 1971 . The stadium carried this name until 1990. It is still often called that today.
A floodlight system was built in the summer of 1969 and inaugurated on September 3 of the same year with a game between Dynamo Dresden and a GDR team. The construction of the floodlight system was designed by Manfred Mortensen , the architect Günter Schöneberg and the engineer Friedrich Schmidt and set up by PGH Elektrobau Dresden . The system consisted of four individual steel masts that were erected directly on the ground. Because of their appearance, they were also known colloquially as "giraffes". They had to be built on the ground because the stands did not have a canopy on which to attach the floodlights. The structures were 62 meters high, weighed 60.5 tons and had an angle of inclination of 20 degrees. The total of 104 lamps in the system had a total output of 208 kilowatts and a luminosity of initially 570 lux (later 700 lux). In order for a game to take place properly, 450 lux are required. This equipment was the best in Germany at the time.
In the summer of 1979 an electronic display board was set up, which consisted of a total of 4,333 light bulbs and was controlled by a computer. It was first put into operation on June 6, 1979 in a game between Dynamo Dresden and 1. FC Magdeburg .
After the political change in the GDR, the stadium was modernized in order to meet the standards of the DFB and FIFA . This included improving safety for players and referees. The then Bundesliga club Dynamo Dresden raised around two million DM for this. The city of Dresden also had the existing benches replaced by separate seat shells by the summer of 1992 and the playing area equipped with new lawn - the first time since 1956. The renewal of the playground alone cost around 750,000 DM.
On July 17th, 1999, a concert with pop singer Wolfgang Petry took place in the Rudolf Harbig Stadium . This event was attended by around 5000 people. Also in the 1990s, the stadium hosted several congresses of Jehovah's Witnesses .
New stadium construction (2007-2009)
The previous stadium construction was considered obsolete, as only the most necessary renovation measures were carried out after the fall of the Wall . Therefore, on January 6, 2006, the city council decided to enter into negotiations with a bidder for the new stadium. Negotiations were then carried out with HBM Stadion- und Sportstätten GmbH , a subsidiary of BAM Deutschland AG , who placed third out of four participants in the final round of the Dresden City Competition for a new Rudolf Harbig Stadium. This was to build a football stadium with a capacity of 32,296 spectators at the old location . The construction group had already built the new Ostseestadion in Rostock as well as the World Cup stadiums in Gelsenkirchen and Hanover . After several years of discussions, the city council of the state capital Dresden decided on May 18, 2006 with 46 against 20 votes to build the new stadium with the partner HBM Stadien- und Sportstätten GmbH at the current location on Lennéstraße . The regional council Dresden then approved the financing on 28 February, 2007.
In November 2007, the planned start of construction of the new stadium was in danger again. The construction company Hochtief , which was unsuccessful in the tendering process, and its partners had submitted a review request to the procurement chamber in Leipzig. After the club's supporters protested, the company withdrew the application. The HBM stadium and sports venues GmbH demanded due to higher planning costs a day after the withdrawal of Hochtief protest an increase in order volume to two million euros. Due to the delayed start of construction, material and labor costs had increased. On April 17, 2008, after several discussions, the association announced that HBM had waived the cost increase of two million euros and removed this obstacle to the new building.
On May 4, 2007, the contract for the new construction of the Rudolf Harbig Stadium was signed. The contractually agreed construction time was two years. Approval planning for the stadium began in July 2007 and the formal building application was submitted to the City of Dresden in October 2007. The building permit was granted on December 20, 2007. On October 22, 2007, HBM announced that after the game against Wuppertaler SV on November 10, 2007, with preparatory work for the demolition of the stands in the fan and bath curve and the Hornbach stand (blocks F, G, H, I, J, K1 and K2). The day after the Wuppertal game, setting up the construction site began and fans were able to remove the seat shells of the Rudolf Harbig Stadium themselves for a donation. The demolition had actually begun. On November 19, 2007, the demolition officially began with the corresponding large equipment.
During the renovation phase, the pitch was reduced by four meters with the approval of the DFB. During the dismantling of the floodlights in December 2007, a construction worker had a serious accident. The west stand was inaugurated on August 9, 2008 with a friendly match against Dutch first division club Willem II Tilburg . Three days earlier, a delegation from the Organizing Committee for the 2011 Women's World Cup had visited the stadium. Dresden had previously applied as one of eleven cities as a venue and was officially selected for this on September 30, 2008.
The new stadium was opened on September 15, 2009 with a friendly against FC Schalke 04 (final score 1: 2).
Glücksgas-Stadion (2010-2014)
On December 10, 2010, it was announced that the naming rights had been sold to the Bavarian energy distribution company Glücksgas and that the stadium would be renamed “Glücksgas stadium”. The naming rights should initially run until 2015. The sale of the naming rights was very controversial among the fans. During the 2011 Women's World Cup, FIFA used the original name “Rudolf-Harbig-Stadion”, since a stadium cannot be named after a sponsor at a World Cup.
The agreed annual rent of 4.75 million euros cannot be raised by the Dynamo Dresden association in the current situation despite the sale of the naming rights and is therefore the subject of negotiations with the city administration. The club refers to the lower average rents of the direct league competitors, while the city criticizes the economic management of the club and calls for reforms. In March 2011 the Dresden city council decided to increase the annual subsidy for the stadium rental by one million euros.
The Dresden Football Museum has also been housed in the stadium since November 2011 . Especially outside of the football season, the stadium is used for home games by the Dresden Monarchs American football team .
From May 21 to 22, 2012, the 2012 DFL fan representative assembly took place in the stadium . After the coaches' benches had meanwhile been moved from the west to the east, they came back to their old location in 2012 for the home game of SG Dynamo Dresden against TSV 1860 Munich. The fans welcomed the decision as there is more space for the block flag culture. At the home game against Energie Cottbus , the old “Kulti” fan bar was reopened after five years of planning. It's right behind the K block.
During the Elbe floods in 2013 , the stadium served as a flood relief center where donations in kind could be made. Since the 2013/14 season, places with a live radio have been available for the visually impaired. There are up to ten seats on the former media stand, which must be reserved before each home game.
Dresden Stadium (2014-2016)
In the summer of 2014, the contract with the energy sales company Glücksgas ended prematurely and the stadium was officially renamed the Dresden Stadium at the beginning of July .
In May 2015 it became known that the city of Dresden is threatened with a back payment in the millions, as bills have not yet been paid due to disputes regarding the construction costs.
DDV Stadium (2016-2018)
On February 25, 2016 it was announced that the DDV media group had acquired the stadium's naming rights by June 30, 2020, and the stadium was renamed DDV-Stadion .
Rudolf Harbig Stadium (since 2018)
In August 2018, Konsum Dresden eG and DREWAG - Stadtwerke Dresden GmbH jointly acquired the naming rights to the stadium until 2021. Until August 31st at 12 noon, fans could vote on the future name of the venue on the Internet. The previous names Dynamo Stadium and Rudolf Harbig Stadium were available . The new (old) name should be announced before the home game on September 1, 2018 against Hamburger SV . After the game was canceled, he was announced at the catch-up game on September 18. 29,512 people took part in the vote, of which 16,036 (54.33 percent) voted for the name Rudolf-Harbig-Stadion , so that the stadium has had this name again since September 18, 2018.
Facts and architecture
Data
The stadium was built as a classic single-tier stadium. It is 195 meters long and 160 meters wide and the whole area has an area of 72,000 m². The reinforced concrete building is decorated on the outer side of the main stand with a 2000 m² glass facade. Directly below is the 300 m² fan shop. The roof, made of trapezoidal sheet metal and plastic covering, covers 19,000 m². The seats are mainly yellow, but individual black seats result in the word "DRESDEN" and red and white seats the logo of the Dynamo sports association . There are around 184 floodlights that are almost twice as powerful as the former floodlight construction. The Dresden stadium has two video boards with an area of 42 m² each.
blocks
The stadium has 20 blocks labeled A to T. These are further divided into smaller blocks, making a total of 57 blocks. The blocks D1 to D4 result in the savings bank family block . This is a family-friendly, smoke-free area that is sponsored by the Ostsächsische Sparkasse Dresden . The K-Block consists purely of standing room; 9,055 of the 11,055 standing places are here. The Ultras from Dynamo Dresden have their regular place there and regularly perform choreographies. Since the renovation, there have been VIP boxes on the main grandstand in the east.
In the old Rudolf Harbig Stadium there was also the Badkurve and the Hornbach grandstand. These consisted of the old blocks F to K (K1 and K2). The Hornbach grandstand was only intended as a short-term extension of blocks H and I due to the insufficient capacity at the European Cup match between Dynamo and Ajax Amsterdam on September 15, 1971. The two blocks were then raised by a steel frame. When the demolition work was imminent, fans of the club were able to remove seat shells for € 11.11 per shell.
Giraffes
The stadium's former floodlight masts were called “giraffes”. They were built in 1969 and demolished in late 2007. With a height of 62 meters, they towered over large parts of the Dresden cityscape. The 60.5 tonne white steel structures had an incline of 20 degrees. The same construction stood in the Jena Ernst-Abbe-Sportfeld , but it was built five years later and had no incline. Manfred Mortensen, Günter Schöneberg, Friedrich Schmidt and PGH Elektrobau Dresden designed one of the best constructions at the time with 570 to 700 lux . There were 104 lamps, which were distributed on six levels each. There were 26 emitters per "giraffe".
The masts had to give way in 2007 because the city decided to move the stadium by 20 meters. This was necessary in order not to shadow the Georg-Arnhold-Bad . HBM Stadion- und Sportstätten GmbH, the builder of the stadium, initially planned the old construction. Fans wanted to put the floodlights under monument protection and later had plans to receive at least one floodlight. The Dresden city council rejected this, however.
Stone house
The stone house is a two-storey building at the Rudolf Harbig Stadium. For the opening of the stadium in 1923, a simple half-timbered building was erected on Blüherstrasse, which included changing rooms and storage space for sports equipment and equipment. In 1926, the building was completely rebuilt from brick masonry and offered functional rooms, washrooms, changing rooms and offices on approx. 800 square meters of usable space. The stone house was destroyed in February 1945 during the bombing of Dresden . After the end of the war, a two-story stone house with a cellar was built according to plans by the architects Emil Leibold and G. Gebauer, which was opened in 1951. Now around 2000 square meters of usable space were available. In 1976 the roof was re-covered, two years later the sanitary facilities were replaced. The empty stone house was unused after 2009, plans for a new use were not implemented until 2020.
Stadium tour
As in other stadiums, the club as well as various private individuals and institutions offer the opportunity to tour the stadium as part of a guided tour (also thematically oriented).
Stadium booklet
The stadium booklet is the so-called "Dynamo-Kreisel". Since 1997 he has appeared officially at the home games of SG Dynamo Dresden. The approximately 64-page magazine publishes information about the club, the team and the current opponent as well as an interview with players or employees of Dynamo Dresden. The proceeds go entirely to the club's junior performance center. The program was honored by stadionheft.de in cooperation with the “Deutsche Programmammler Vereinigung” (DPV) as the best stadium magazine in the third division in the 2009/2010 season and in the following season . In the 2012/13 season of the 2nd Bundesliga , it was named the second best magazine.
Special sporting events
2010 Women's U-20 World Cup
Tuesday, July 20, 2010, 11:30 a.m. in Dresden Group A | |||
Costa Rica | - | Colombia | 0: 3 (0: 2) |
Tuesday, July 20, 2010, 2:30 p.m. in Dresden Group B | |||
New Zealand | - | Brazil | 1: 4 (0: 1) |
Wednesday, July 14, 2010, 6:00 p.m. in Dresden Group D | |||
United States | - | Ghana | 1: 1 (0: 1) |
Wednesday, July 14, 2010, 3 p.m. in Dresden Group D | |||
Switzerland | - | South Korea | 0: 4 (0: 2) |
Saturday, July 17th, 2010, 6:00 p.m. in Dresden Group D | |||
United States | - | Switzerland | 5: 0 (3: 0) |
Saturday, July 17, 2010, 3:00 p.m. in Dresden Group D | |||
Ghana | - | South Korea | 2: 4 (1: 1) |
Sunday, July 25, 2010, 6:30 p.m. in Dresden quarter-finals | |||
Mexico | - | South Korea | 1: 3 (0: 2) |
Football Women's World Cup 2011
The stadium was called the Rudolf Harbig Stadium again during the World Cup.
Tuesday, July 5, 2011, 8:45 p.m. in Dresden Group A | |||
Canada | - | Nigeria | 0: 1 (0: 0) |
Friday, July 1, 2011, 6:15 p.m. in Dresden Group B | |||
New Zealand | - | England | 1: 2 (1: 0) |
Tuesday, June 28, 2011, 6:15 p.m. in Dresden Group C | |||
United States | - | North Korea | 2: 0 (0: 0) |
Sunday, July 10, 2011, 5:30 p.m. in Dresden quarter-finals | |||
Brazil | - | United States | 2: 2 n.v. (1: 1, 0: 1), 3: 5 i. E. |
International matches
The following international matches were also played in this stadium or its predecessor:
Men
date | home | guest | Result | spectator |
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Oct 14, 1962 | German Democratic Republic | Romania | 3: 2 (1: 0) | 30,000 |
Nov 11, 1970 | German Democratic Republic | Netherlands | 1: 0 (0: 0) | 35,000 |
Oct 7, 1972 | German Democratic Republic | Finland | 5: 0 (0: 0) | 16,000 |
27 Mar 1974 | German Democratic Republic | Czechoslovakia | 1: 0 (1: 0) | 13,000 |
Nov 17, 1976 | German Democratic Republic | Turkey | 1: 1 (1: 1) | 18,000 |
Feb 23, 1983 | German Democratic Republic | Greece | 2: 1 (2: 1) | 8,000 |
22 Mar 1989 | German Democratic Republic | Finland | 1: 1 (0: 1) | 14,000 |
Oct 14, 1992 | Germany | Mexico | 1: 1 (0: 0) | 27,000 |
Women
date | home | guest | Result | spectator |
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Sep 15 2010 | Germany | Canada | 5: 0 (1: 0) | 20,431 |
U-19 juniors
date | home | guest | Result | spectator |
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Nov 17, 2010 | Germany | Czech Republic | 1: 1 (1: 0) | not known |
In contrast to the DFB women, further games of the men's selection are not planned, as the stadium does not have the required minimum capacity of 40,000 seats.
FDGB cup final
Playtime | date | spectator | winner | finalist | Result |
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1968/69 | June 1, 1969 | 20,000 | 1. FC Magdeburg | FC Karl-Marx-Stadt | 4-0 |
1969/70 | June 13, 1970 | 12,000 | FC Forward Berlin | 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig | 4: 2 |
Other games
In 2011 there was a benefit game organized by Laureus . The “Sons Dresden” team, which consisted of former players such as Ulf Kirsten and other celebrities, beat the “Laureus Allstar Team” 10: 9 after a penalty shoot-out. Around 10,000 viewers raised, among other things, a sum of 100,000 euros. In 2012 the Laureus charity match , which has been played four times so far, was a guest in the stadium. Again the “Sons of Dresden” won against the “World Cup Heroes” 6: 4.
Dynamo Dresden had to play a ghost game in the stadium in 2012 . It was unofficially sold out due to the sale of “ghost tickets”.
On July 31, 2013 there was a game in favor of the victims of the flood disaster in June. It was under the motto "Two cities, two clubs - one river, one friendship". Dynamo Dresden won against Hamburger SV 4-0. The game raised proceeds of 80,000 euros. Of this, 40,000 euros go to the “Dresdner help Dresdners” foundation and the other 40,000 euros went to the “Lichtblicke” foundation.
American football
The Dresden Monarchs from the German Football League play one home game per season, a total of eleven games since 2010, in the large Dresden stadium. Before the new stadium was built, Dynamo Dresden and the Dresden Monarchs shared the venue. The home game in the football arena against the New York Lions from Braunschweig is scheduled for the end of May 2020 .
The Monarchs played their only home game so far at the highest European level, the Big6 European Football League, in the Harbig Stadium. In the preliminary round match on May 3, 2014 against the Braunschweig Lions, Dresden lost 10:17 and missed the finals despite an away win against the Vienna Vikings .
DEL2 Event Game
On January 9, 2016, the first DEL2 Event Game took place in the stadium . The game was played under the name “Winter Derby Dresden” between the Dresden Ice Lions and the Lausitzer Füchsen . The Eislöwen won the game 4-3 in extra time in front of 31,853 spectators. The game set a new attendance record for the stadium and was one of the most popular outdoor ice hockey games in Europe.
On January 4, 2020, the fourth DEL2 Event Game under the name "Hockey Open Air" took place in the Rudolf Harbig Stadium in Dresden in front of 32,009 spectators. In the new edition of the winter derby of 2016, the Dresden Ice Lions met the Lausitzer Füchse again, the Dresden Ice Lions won the game with 5: 3. In addition, for the first time a game of the Czech Extraliga was played as a league game between HC Verva Litvínov and HC Sparta Prague abroad, this league game ended with a 3-2 win for HC Sparta Prague under head coach Uwe Krupp .
photos
Old stadium
New building
Seats in the form of the Dynamo Dresden logo
panorama
Others
- The statue "The Ball Thrower", which has been standing in front of the German Hygiene Museum since 1983 , was previously located in front of the Ilgen arena.
- A memorial stone for the most successful dynamo trainer Walter Fritzsch stood on the site . After it was housed in the foyer of the new building until SG Dynamo Dresden's 65th birthday , it is now freely accessible next to the parking lot at the stadium.
- The former "Badkurve" is named after the nearby Georg-Arnhold-Bad .
- The former "Hornbach Grandstand" was named after the advertising posters from the Hornbach hardware store that were placed there.
- The stadium is the second largest (after the Tivoli in Aachen ) and the steepest single-tier stadium in Germany.
- The game for the 20th anniversary of the Dresden Monarchs took place in the stadium. The team also plays other special games there.
- At the Women's U-20 World Cup, it was the largest of the four stadiums.
- Ten incendiary bombs were found when it was demolished in 2008 .
- Weddings have been possible in the stadium since 2013. It is the fifth stadium in Germany with this right.
See also
Web links
- Official website of the Rudolf Harbig Stadium
- Dynamo Dresden - users of the stadium
- Extensive information about the stadium at www.dynamostadion.de
- Extensive information about the stadium www.das-neue-dresden.de
- Pictures of the old and new Rudolf Harbig Stadium on www.erlebnis-stadion.de
- Visitor report from 2010 on groundhopping.de
Individual evidence
- ^ SG Dynamo Dresden e. V. (Hrsg.): City finally gives the green light for the new construction of the Harbig Stadium. December 21, 2007, archived from the original on July 9, 2009 ; Retrieved June 13, 2011 .
- ^ Team Challenge Dresden
- ^ SG Dynamo Dresden e. V. (Ed.): DDV Stadium. 2015, accessed May 27, 2016 .
- ↑ Almost 8000 tickets for promotion game. In: Saxon newspaper . May 18, 2011, archived from the original on February 12, 2013 ; Retrieved April 26, 2013 .
- ↑ Juliane Richter: Tickets for Dynamo games are running out. In: Saxon newspaper . August 29, 2011, accessed on May 5, 2012 (collection of press reports on dynamostadion.de).
- ↑ das-neue-dresden.de: Rudolf-Harbig Stadium - Progressive Architecture for the FC "Dynamo Dresden". Retrieved June 13, 2011 .
- ↑ a b c d dynamostadion.de: The history of the stadium at the Great Garden. December 2010, accessed June 13, 2011 .
- ^ SG Dynamo Dresden e. V. (Ed.): Accident during the demolition work. December 11, 2007, archived from the original on February 20, 2009 ; Retrieved June 13, 2011 .
- ↑ focus.de: Women's World Cup 2011 - venues have been determined. September 30, 2008, accessed June 13, 2011 .
- ↑ kicker.de: Dresden loses in the new arena - Schalke wins at the opening. September 6, 2009, accessed June 13, 2011 .
- ^ SG Dynamo Dresden e. V. (Ed.): Dynamo is now playing in the "Glücksgas Stadium". December 10, 2010, archived from the original on December 13, 2010 ; Retrieved June 13, 2011 .
- ↑ Glücksgas-Stadion: Chronicle of a stadium ( memento from February 11, 2013 in the web archive archive.today ).
- ↑ Dresden Rudolf Harbig Stadium is renamed
- ↑ dynamo-dresden.de: The support is still missing. November 12, 2013, accessed March 28, 2014 .
- ↑ Thilo Alexe: Dynamo wants cheaper rent. In: Sächsische.de . September 27, 2010, accessed on June 13, 2011 ( online in the m 2 Immobilien weblog ).
- ↑ Questions and Answers in the Stadium Debate. SG Dynamo Dresden e. V., February 23, 2010, archived from the original on February 27, 2010 ; Retrieved June 13, 2011 .
- ↑ Thilo Alexe: Dresden is adding another two million for the stadium. In: Saxon newspaper. March 25, 2011, accessed March 27, 2011 .
- ↑ The Dresden Monarchs season opener in the Glücksgas Stadium ( memento from August 1, 2012 in the web archive archive.today ), gluecksgas-stadion.de, April 18, 2011.
- ^ SG Dynamo Dresden e. V. (Hrsg.): Dresden welcomes the DFL Fan Commissioner General Assembly 2012. May 21, 2012, archived from the original on May 24, 2012 ; Retrieved June 12, 2012 .
- ↑ Dominik Brüggemann: Dynamo Dresden: Black and yellow bar "Kulti" opens in the stadium. In: Dresdner Latest News . April 21, 2013, accessed April 26, 2013 .
- ↑ Flood relief center set up in the "Glücksgas stadium". SG Dynamo Dresden e. V., June 10, 2013, accessed July 25, 2013 .
- ↑ Dynamo introduces “radio for the blind”. SG Dynamo Dresden e. V., June 10, 2013, accessed July 19, 2013 .
- ↑ stadionwelt.de: Dynamo now at home in the Dresden Stadium , article from July 15, 2014.
- ↑ Juliane Richter: City threatens to pay millions in arrears for Dynamo Stadium , Saxon newspaper from May 20, 2015.
- ↑ DDV is named after the stadium. DDV Mediengruppe , February 25, 2016, accessed on February 25, 2016 .
- ^ Tino Meyer: Fans decide on new stadium names. In: Sächsische Zeitung /wirtschaft-in-sachsen.de. DDV Mediengruppe , August 23, 2018, accessed on August 25, 2018 .
- ↑ Marcel Bohnensteffen, Christopher Mallmann: Cancellation Dresden - Hamburger SV! Police emergency because of the Chemnitz demo - HSV angry about late game cancellation. In: sport1.de . SID , August 31, 2018, accessed September 1, 2018 .
- ↑ The stadium will get its new name on Tuesday. In: dynamo-dresden.de. Dynamo Dresden , September 12, 2018, accessed on September 15, 2018 .
- ↑ SGD is now playing in the Rudolf Harbig Stadium. In: dynamo-dresden.de. September 18, 2018, accessed September 18, 2018 .
- ↑ Facts and History. Stadion Dresden Projektgesellschaft, 2015, accessed on May 27, 2016 .
- ^ Stadionwelt.de: Dynamo fans start renovating the stadium. November 12, 2007, accessed June 26, 2012 .
- ^ Hornbach grandstand. In: sgd-Fanforum.de. Retrieved May 27, 2016 .
- ^ Rudolf Harbig Stadium - Progressive architecture for FC "Dynamo Dresden". In: das-neue-dresden.de. Retrieved June 24, 2012 .
- ^ History of the City of Dresden. Volume 3. From the founding of the empire to the present. Stuttgart 2006, pp. 301-304.
- ^ Walter May, Werner Pampel, Hans Konrad, Architectural Guide GDR District Dresden, Verlag für Bauwesen Berlin 1979, 1st edition, license number VLN 152.905 / 57 / 79.P2 / 79; P. 46.
- ↑ Lars Kühl: Dynamo and his fans force stone house plans ; Sächsische Zeitung of February 3, 2016, p. 15
- ^ Football results T-Online (Ed.): The games of the German national team. Archived from the original on April 7, 2012 ; Retrieved June 22, 2012 .
- ↑ DFB official website (ed.): The national team's games since 1908. Accessed on May 27, 2016 .
- ↑ rsssf.com: East Germany - International Results 1952–1990 Retrieved on September 18, 2012 (English).
- ↑ Sold out ghost game in Dresden. Stadionwelt® Thomas Krämer, March 12, 2012, accessed on August 23, 2013 .
- ↑ The SGD surprises the HSV. SG Dynamo Dresden e. V., July 31, 2013, accessed on August 23, 2013 .
- ↑ "The second largest football event in Germany". In: stadionwelt.de. March 4, 2020, accessed March 4, 2020 .
- ↑ Berthold Neumann: Ice lions win the winter derby. In: Sächsische.de. January 9, 2016, accessed January 14, 2016 .
- ↑ Getting married in the stadium. Stadion Dresden Projektgesellschaft, accessed on May 27, 2016 .