[go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

Estadio Cuscatlán

Coordinates: 13°40′52″N 89°13′21″W / 13.68111°N 89.22250°W / 13.68111; -89.22250
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Estadio Cuscatlán
El Coloso de Monserrat
"The Colossus of Monserrat"
Map
Full nameMonumental Estadio Cuscatlan
LocationSan Salvador, El Salvador
Coordinates13°40′52″N 89°13′21″W / 13.68111°N 89.22250°W / 13.68111; -89.22250
OwnerEDESSA
OperatorEDESSA
Capacity44,836
Record attendance55,000
Field size107 x 68.5
Field shapeLawn and French drain
SurfaceLawn
Scoreboarddigital and electronic
Construction
Broke ground24 March 1971
Built19 October 1975
Opened24 July 1976
Renovated2007–2011
Construction costSV₡4,800,000
ArchitectLópez Muñoz and Architects.
Project managerEDESSA
Structural engineerLópez Muñoz and Architects.
Services engineerSimán S. A.
General contractorSimán S. A.
Main contractorsTechnical Construction, Investment and Securities S.A.
Tenants
El Salvador national football team (1976–2023)
Alianza F.C. (2002–2012, 2013–2014, 2015–present)
C.D. Atlético Marte (2017–present)
San Salvador F.C. (2002–2008)

The Estadio Cuscatlán is a football stadium located in the city of San Salvador, El Salvador. It was inaugurated in 1976. It can hold 53,400 spectators, making it the Association Football stadium with the largest spectator capacity in Central America and the Caribbean. The stadium has undergone several renovations, including in 1997; 2007; 2008; 2015, with the change of colors alluding to the country's flag (blue and white); and the most recent in 2020, with the installation of a new screen 100m² 4K LED and 54 new 1,500-watt metal halide luminaires with a capacity of 1,000 luxes, and an automated irrigation system.

History

[edit]

Cuscatlán stadium was first developed as a replacement to what at the time was El Salvador's largest stadium, Estadio Nacional de la Flor Blanca (now known as Estadio Jorge "Mágico" González). Its creation was made possible by EDESSA (Estadios Deportivos de El Salvador) who in 1969 first proposed the idea of a new national stadium.

Construction began on 24 March 1971, with then-president of El Salvador General Fidel Sánchez Hernández laying the first stone. After 5 years of building, the stadium was opened and held its first game on 24 July 1976. This day saw German Bundesliga champions Borussia Mönchengladbach play the El Salvador national team, with the match ending 2–0 to the German side.

On 25 May 1978, EDESSA agreed to and signed a 599-year lease of the stadium to CLIMA (Asociación de Clubes de Liga Mayor A'). As a result, CLIMA is now the operator of the stadium, and controls what events are held there.

The stadium

[edit]
The playing field of the stadium

The stadium, with a capacity of 53,400 is the largest football venue in El Salvador and Central America.

It was announced on 16 November 2007 that Estadio Cuscatlán would become the first football stadium in Central America and Caribbean to have a large LED screen where the supporters can view the action. The screen is 40 meters in height and width and was completed in March 2008.[1]

The modernization also extends to the pitch, which includes:

  • French drainage system to allow water to flow off the grounds when it rains excessively
  • Six sprinkler systems to self water the grounds
  • Dugouts for both home and away teams, each with its own lavatory
  • Imported high quality grass
  • Various V.I.P. boxes

Facilities and capacity

[edit]

The stadium's capacity has been the topic of much dispute, with many saying that its official capacity is not accurate. As the stadium only has seats available in certain sections, it is difficult to estimate the maximum capacity when determining how many spectators could fit into the sections without seats. The seating capacity is estimated to be between 45,000 and 53,400 people. FIFA regulates the capacity, setting a maximum of about 45,000.

The stadium has the following distribution on its premises:

Localidad Color FIFA EDESSA
Platea Sky Blue 2,013 3,000
Northern Tribune Brown 1,672 2,500
South Tribune Blue 1,709 2,500
North Shadow Green 4,900 5,000
South Shadow Yellow 2,500 4,000
North Preference Sun Black 4,220 5,200
South Preference Sun Orange 6,044 7,800
General Sun Vermilion 16,278 18,000
Box White 3,400 3,400
Extras Walls 2,000 2,000
TOTAL 44,836 53,400

Cuscatlán Stadium is the only stadium nationwide that meets FIFA requirements for international matches.

The grounds

[edit]

The stadium itself sits on an area of land roughly 15 square blocks (30 hectares) in size. Not only does it accommodate the stadium itself, with its parking lot (8,500 cars capacity), but also two other football pitches. One of these is used for training by club sides to limit damage to the stadium ground itself. The other ground is used for junior football.

Events

[edit]

Although Cuscatlán Stadium was primarily built to be just a football stadium, it is also used for other events. Apart from football, it is used for concerts, cultural events, religious events, and political rallies. In 2005, Colgate broke the World Record of most people brushing their teeth at the same time in this stadium.[2]

Disaster

[edit]

In 2023, during a game between Alianza F.C. and C.D. FAS in the Primera División de Fútbol de El Salvador an incident occurred which resulted in a crowd crush of fans in the stadium.

According to reports, fans had been sold fake tickets for the game and angry fans attempted to pull down the barricades at the stadiums at the entrance. Twelve people were killed and dozens of others injured.

Authorities were looking at pressing charges against those responsible for the event and the Salvadoran Soccer Federation suspended all the following day's matches in the country.[3]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Article on new LED screen (in Spanish) Archived 5 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 9 December 2006.
  2. ^ "Most people brushing their teeth" Archived 17 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine (Guinness World Records)
  3. ^ "El Salvador stadium crush leaves at least twelve dead". BBC News. 21 May 2023. Archived from the original on 21 May 2023. Retrieved 21 May 2023.
[edit]

Media related to Estadio Cuscatlán at Wikimedia Commons