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Westfalenstadion | ||
Full name | Signal Iduna Park | |
Owners | Borussia Dortmund | |
Location | Dortmund, Germany | |
Built | 1971–1974 | |
Opened | 2 April 1974 | |
Renovated | 1992, 1995–99, 2002–03, 2006 | |
Tenants | Borussia Dortmund | |
Capacity | 53,872 (1974–1992) 42,800 (1992–1996) 54,000 (1996–1999) 68,600 (1999–2003) 83,000 (2003–2005) 81,264 (2005–2006) 80,708 (2006–2008) 80,552 (2008–2010) 80,720 (2010–2012) 80,645 (2012–)(League Matches), 65,590 (International Matches) | |
Field dimensions | 105 m × 68 m | |
Highest attendance | 83,000 (Dortmund-Schalke, 30 January 2004) (Dortmund-Stuttgart, 6 March 2004) (Dortmund-Bayern, 17 April 2004) (Dortmund-Rostock, 1 May 2004) (Dortmund-Bayern, 18 September 2004) (Dortmund-Schalke, 5 December 2004) |
Germany |
1974 FIFA World Cup stadiums |
Olympiastadion · Westfalenstadion · Rheinstadion · Waldstadion · Parkstadion · Volksparkstadion · Niedersachsenstadion · Olympiastadion · Neckarstadion |