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Cape Town Stadium

The Cape Town Stadium (Afrikaans: Kaapstad-stadion; Xhosa: Inkundla yezemidlalo yaseKapa;[2] known until 2025 as the DHL Stadium for sponsorship reasons) is an association football (soccer) and rugby union stadium in Cape Town, South Africa, that was built for the 2010 FIFA World Cup.[3] During the planning stage, it was known as the Green Point Stadium, which was the name of the older stadium on an adjacent site, and this name was also used frequently during World Cup media coverage. It is the home ground of WP Rugby and the DHL Stormers (since 2021), Premier Soccer League clubs Cape Town Spurs (since 2010) and Cape Town City (since 2016). It has also hosted the South Africa Sevens rugby tournament since 2015 and hosted the Rugby 7s World Cup in 2022.

DHL Stadium (Cape Town Stadium)
Full nameDHL Stadium
LocationFritz Sonnenberg Road, Green Point, Cape Town, South Africa
Coordinates33°54′12″S 18°24′40″E / 33.90333°S 18.41111°E / -33.90333; 18.41111
OwnerCity of Cape Town
Capacity58,310
Field size125m x 68m[1]
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Broke ground26 March 2007
Built2007–2009
Opened14 December 2009
Construction costR 4.4 billion
(USD $ 600 million
£ 415 million)
ArchitectGMP Architects, Louis Karol Architects, Point Architects
General contractorMurray & Roberts/ WBHO
Tenants
Cape Town Spurs F.C. (2010–2021)
Cape Town City F.C. (2016–present)
WP Rugby Union (2021–present)
Stormers (2021–present)

The stadium is located in Green Point, between Signal Hill and the Atlantic Ocean, close to the Cape Town city center and to the Victoria & Alfred Waterfront, a popular tourist and shopping venue. The stadium had a seating capacity of 64,100 during the 2010 World Cup,[4] later reduced to 58,309.[5] The stadium is connected to the waterfront by a new road connection, Granger Bay Boulevard. Cape Town Stadium is the fifth biggest stadium in South Africa and the biggest in Cape Town.

Naming edit

 
 
Green Point Stadium
class=notpageimage|
Location of the stadium in the Cape Town metropolitan area

During construction, Cape Town Stadium was unofficially known as Green Point Stadium, the name of an older stadium adjacent to it that was partially demolished and rebuilt into the Green Point Athletics Stadium. During October 2009, the city asked for the public to propose names for the new stadium and the name Cape Town Stadium was chosen.[2]

With effect from June 2021, the City of Cape Town as owner of the stadium, through a municipal entity, concluded a multi-year sponsorship agreement with DHL for a period of four years, from 2021 to 2025.[6] It included renaming the stadium to the DHL Stadium.[7]

In this regard, Mr Peter-John Veldhuizen, chairperson of the Board of the Cape Town Stadium (RF) Soc Ltd said: "DHL’s contribution as our naming rights partner has certainly made a significant impact on the bottom line of the business"[8](p.4). As a result, in 2022-2022 the revenue target was exceeded by 30% and the grant funding from the City of Cape Town was reduced from R61m to R42m.[6](p.16).

Previous stadium edit

The old stadium
 
The beginnings of the former Green Point Stadium during the Second Boer War
 
Aerial view of the old Green Point Stadium, which was partly demolished and rebuilt during 2007

The stadium is adjacent to the site of the original 18,000 seater stadium Green Point Stadium. It replaces a portion of the Metropolitan Golf Club site which has now been realigned.

The previous stadium, originally constructed in 1897 and which was partly demolished in 2007 and rebuilt in 2013 as the Green Point Athletics Stadium, was a multi-purpose stadium used for cycling, athletics, cricket and soccer. Later used mainly for soccer matches, it was the home ground of Santos Football Club and Ajax Cape Town at different points. It also hosted music concerts, including the November 2003 46664 Concert for the benefit of AIDS victims.[9] The section of the old stadium that remained was redeveloped into the Green Point Athletics Stadium, which opened in 2015 with a seating capacity of 4500.[10]

Design edit

Construction of the Cape Town Stadium, located on the Green Point Common, began in March 2007.

In 33 months, joint venture contractors Murray & Roberts, now known as Concor and WBHO completed the project at a cost of R4.4billion – or approximately US$600million.

The project architects were an association between GMP Architects of Germany and two local firms, Louis Karol and Associates and Point Architects.

The structural engineers comprised a joint venture between BKS, Henry Fagan & Partners, KFD Wilkinson, Goba, Iliso and Arcus Gibb.[11]

Handing over edit

Cape Town Stadium was officially handed over to the City of Cape Town on schedule on 14 December 2009. At a ceremony in front of over 200 invited guests and the media representatives from around the world, Cape Town Executive Mayor Alderman Dan Plato, received the keys to the stadium officially confirming the opening of Cape Town Stadium.[12]

After the World Cup edit

A consortium consisting of South Africa's Sail Group and French-based Stade de France were awarded the service contract to operate the stadium and ensure that it remains a sustainable multi-purpose venue after the 2010 FIFA World Cup. The consortium, called Business Venture Investments 1317, was involved in the management of the stadium from January 2009 onwards. The city municipality paid the consortium to manage the stadium up to and during the World Cup, after which the consortium will lease the stadium from the city for a period of not less than 10 years and not more than 30 years.[13]

However, in December 2010 the Sail/Stade de France consortium cancelled the lease. Reports in the media at the time said that the consortium considered the agreement as non-viable. The City subsequently took over management of the stadium.[14]

Following the World Cup, temporary rows of seating on either side on the top tier were replaced by events suites and clubrooms, reducing the stadium's capacity to 58,300.[15] The stadium features corporate hospitality suites, medical, training, and conferencing and banqueting facilities. The consortium will operate the stadium as well as manage and maintain the defined areas of the surrounding urban park and sport precinct on the 85-hectare Greenpoint Common from stadium revenue.[16]

Ajax Cape Town have used the stadium as their home ground from the 2010-11 Premier Soccer League (PSL) season onwards.[17] Due to the stadium's ongoing financial problems, the City of Cape Town had sought to acquire Western Province rugby as an "anchor tenant". After four years of talks, Western Province announced in December 2014 that they had decided to remain at Newlands Stadium.[18] In March 2015, the South African Rugby Union announced that the South Africa Sevens tournament would be staged at Cape Town Stadium for four years, beginning in December 2015.[19]

In June 2016, it was announced that new PSL club Cape Town City would also play at Cape Town Stadium.[20]

In late 2020, Western Province RFU announced that they were selling their longtime home of Newlands Stadium to developers, who planned to demolish the ground and convert it to a mixed-use development. From 2021 onwards, franchise rugby team Stormers and Currie Cup side WP will call Cape Town Stadium home, as will international rugby tests played in Cape Town.

Cape Town Stadium (RF) SOC Ltd edit

The Cape Town Stadium (RF) SOC Ltd, a municipal entity of the City of Cape Town, was formed in 2018 to provide various operational services to the stadium.[8](p.46).

In 2021 the Entity entered into a sponsorships agreement with DHL, granting naming rights to the company. Since then the stadium has officially been known as the DHL Stadium.

Inaugural games edit

The first game to be hosted at the new Cape Town Stadium was a Cape Town derby between Ajax Cape Town and Santos on 23 January 2010 as part of the official inauguration of the stadium. Only 20,000 tickets were made available for the event and were sold out by Friday 15 January 2010. The Soccer Festival had entertainment from local band Freshlyground and a Vuvuzela orchestra performance during half time.

Date Time (SAST) Team 1 Res. Team 2 Attendance
23 January 2010 16:00   Ajax Cape Town 0–0
(5–6 pen.)
  Santos 20,000

The second of three 'dry runs' at the new Cape Town Stadium was another Cape Town derby. Local Cape Town rugby teams, The Vodacom Stormers and the Boland Inv. XV battled it out at the Cape Town Rugby Festival that took place on 6 February 2010. The Rugby Festival had entertainment from local band Flat Stanley. Only 40,000 tickets were made available for the event. This was double the amount that attended the Soccer Festival.

Date Time (SAST) Team 1 Res. Team 2 Attendance
6 February 2010 16:15   Vodacom Stormers 47–13   Boland Inv. XV 40,000

Cape Town Stadium hosted its third test event on Monday 22 March, during which all 55,000 permanent seats were available for the first time. A total of 52,000 tickets were sold.

‘Cape Town For Jesus', a religious gathering addressed by South African evangelist Angus Buchan, was the first major non-sporting event hosted at the stadium, and gave the stadium operators another chance to test their readiness ahead of the 2010 FIFA World Cup.

Date Time (SAST) Event Capacity Attendance
22 March 2010 13:00 Cape Town For Jesus 55,000 52,000

Cape Town Stadium hosted its fourth and final test event on Saturday 10 April. This was the first time that the stadium was utilised at night, for the International Under-20 Soccer Challenge between South Africa, Brazil, Nigeria and Ghana. About 40,000 attended the event that tested the stadium's readiness for the 2010 FIFA World Cup.

Date Time (SAST) Team 1 Res. Team 2 Attendance
10 April 2010 18:00   Ghana U-20 0–1   Brazil U-20 40,000
20:30   South Africa U-20 1–3   Nigeria U-20

Sporting and events edit

2010 FIFA World Cup edit

In the 2010 FIFA World Cup, Cape Town Stadium hosted five first round matches, one second round, one quarter-final, and one semi-final.[21] During the World Cup, all FIFA media referred to the stadium as 'Green Point Stadium'.

Matches edit

Date Time (SAST) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
11 June 2010 20:30   Uruguay 0–0   France Group A 64,100
14 June 2010 20:30   Italy 1–1   Paraguay Group F 62,869
18 June 2010 20:30   England 0–0   Algeria Group C 64,100
21 June 2010 13:30   Portugal 7–0   North Korea Group G 63,644
24 June 2010 20:30   Cameroon 1–2   Netherlands Group E 63,093
29 June 2010 20:30   Spain 1–0   Portugal Round of 16 62,955
3 July 2010 16:00   Argentina 0–4   Germany Quarter-finals 64,100
6 July 2010 20:30   Uruguay 2–3   Netherlands Semi-finals 62,479

International friendlies edit

On 17 November 2010, the Cape Town Stadium hosted its first international friendly. The match was between South Africa and the USA, where they played for the Nelson Mandela Challenge Trophy.

Date Time (SAST) Team 1 Result Team 2 Attendance
17 November 2010 21:30   South Africa 0–1   United States 52,000
19 January 2011 17:00   Botswana 1–2   Sweden 2,000
21 July 2012 15:00   Ajax Cape Town 1–1   Manchester United 53,000
8 January 2012 20.15   South Africa 0–1   Norway
21 January 2013 16:00   Jomo Cosmos 0–4   Grasshopper Club Zürich 100
26 January 2013 16:00   Ajax Cape Town 2–1 200
23 March 2013 20:15   South Africa 2–0   Central African Republic 36,740

Rugby Union edit

DHL Stadium hosts numerous rugby matches each year. Prior to 2021, the stadium hosted several Stormers matches when they couldn't play at their previous home ground in Newlands. Beginning in 2021, Western Province Rugby and the DHL Stormers announced that they would use DHL Stadium as their home ground for both the domestic Currie Cup and international URC competitions. During their first season at their new home, the Stormers defeated their South African rivals, the Vodacom Bulls, to win the URC Final at DHL Stadium. The Stormer's success in the URC qualified the team to compete in the European Rugby Championship during the 2022/23 season with several matches being hosted at the DHL Stadium, in addition to those for the Currie Cup and URC. DHL Stadium also played host to the Stormers' URC playoff matches during the 2022/23 season after they won home field advantage, including the URC Final scheduled for May 27, 2023.

DHL Stadium has also hosted international rugby union matches played by South Africa's Springboks. In July 2022, the Springboks defeated Wales at DHL Stadium in what was South African prop Eben Etzebeth's 100th test for the national team.

Date Time (SAST) Team 1 Score Team 2 Attendance
9 February 2013 14.45   Vodacom Stormers   Boland Inv. XV
3 February 2019 17.00   DHL Stormers 33–28   Vodacom Bulls 50,000

World Rugby Sevens Series edit

See also World Rugby Sevens Series

The World Rugby Sevens Series hosts a tournament each year in Cape Town, traditionally in December. It was played annually from 2015 to 2019. However, no tournaments took place during 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the competition returned to Cape Town during the 2022–23 season.

Date Event Year Winner
12–13 December 2015 2015 South Africa Sevens   South Africa
10–11 December 2016 2016 South Africa Sevens   England
9–10 December 2017 2017 South Africa Sevens   New Zealand
8–9 December 2018 2018 South Africa Sevens   Fiji
13–15 December 2019 2019 South Africa Sevens   New Zealand
9-11 December 2022 2022 South Africa Sevens   Samoa

2022 Rugby World Cup Sevens edit

In September 2022, DHL Stadium played host to the Rugby World Cup Sevens. The men's tournament was won by Fiji, who defeated New Zealand in the Final. The women's competition was won by Australia over their cross-Tasmine rivals New Zealand.

Tennis edit

The Cape Town Stadium hosted the sixth edition of Roger Federer's Matches for Africa, a series of charity tennis matches. It took place on 7 February 2020 and featured Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal. Federer confirmed the date, location, and opponent during the 2019 edition of Wimbledon. Federer said he had pursued Nadal's participation for two years before a date as agreed upon. South Africa is the birth country of Federer's mother and the focus of his charitable foundation. The doubles match consisted Roger Federer and American tycoon Bill Gates versus Rafael Nadal and South African entertainer Trevor Noah. Federer and Gates won the match 6–4. In singles, Federer beat Nadal with the score 6–4, 3–6, 6–3. The event was attended by 51,954 people (the highest attendance ever recorded at a tennis match) and more than $3.5 million was raised in aid of children's education in Africa.[22]

Match in Africa 6 Doubles
1   Roger Federer
  Bill Gates
6
2   Rafael Nadal
  Trevor Noah
3
Match in Africa 6 Singles
1   Rafael Nadal 4 6 3
2   Roger Federer 6 3 6

Concerts edit

Year Date Artist Tour Name Attendance
2011 18 February U2 U2 360° Tour 72,532[23]
11 April Neil Diamond -
5 October Coldplay Mylo Xyloto Tour 46,670[24][25][26]
26 October Kings of Leon Come Around Sundown World Tour 40,000+[27]
2012 7 November Linkin Park Living Things World Tour 55,000[28]
3 December Lady Gaga The Born This Way Ball Tour 39,527
2013 5 February Red Hot Chili Peppers I'm With You World Tour -
7 May Bon Jovi Because We Can - The Tour 35,407[29]
8 May Justin Bieber Believe Tour 65,000[30]
16 October Rihanna Diamonds World Tour 39,616
2014 26 February Eminem Rapture Tour 37,825[31][32]
10 December Foo Fighters Sonic Highways World Tour
2015 15 March Michael Bublé To Be Loved Tour 22,060
1 April One Direction On the Road Again Tour 51,060
2016 18 February Lionel Richie 'All the Hits all Night Long’ Global Tour [33]
2016 26 April Mariah Carey The Sweet Sweet Fantasy Tour 35,000
2017 24 February Dash Berlin, David Guetta, KSHMR, Martin Garrix, DJ Snake, etc. Ultra South Africa
2017 17 May Justin Bieber Purpose World Tour 39,706
2017 25 November The Bellamy Brothers
2018 9 February Afrojack, Armin Van Buuren, Axwell /\ Ingrosso, Hardwell, etc. Ultra South Africa
2018 11 April Santana
2019 27–28 March Ed Sheeran ÷ Tour 96,915 (both nights)
2022 October Justin Bieber Cancelled
2023 1 February Imagine Dragons Mercury World Tour 55,000
2024 31 January
Calabash South Africa

Popular culture edit

Cape Town Stadium was featured in the film Safe House (2012). The stadium also features in many local advertising and print media campaigns.[34] It was also featured as a motorsport venue in the video game Dirt 5.[35]

Incidents edit

On 7 November 2012, shortly before the U.S. rock band Linkin Park was set to perform at the sold-out stadium, gusts of wind caused advertising scaffolding outside the stadium to collapse onto a crowd of people injuring 19 and killing 1; of the 19 injured, 12 were taken to hospital for further treatment.[36]

Calls for demolition edit

Prior to 2021, several individuals and groups called for the stadium to be demolished due to its under-utilization after the World Cup. Effective utilization and use of the stadium was a political issue in the city.[37][38][39] However, beginning in 2021, use of Cape Town Stadium increased significantly when it became the home ground of Western Province Rugby and the DHL Stormers. This move resulted in DHL sponsoring the naming rights to the stadium and significant renovations.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ https://dhlstadium.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Level-00-Hardened-Surface-Area-pdf.jpg [bare URL image file]
  2. ^ a b Pollack, Martin (30 October 2009). . City of Cape Town. Archived from the original on 27 July 2011. Retrieved 21 May 2010.
  3. ^ . Shine 2010. 17 December 2009. Archived from the original on 29 January 2011. Retrieved 17 December 2009.
  4. ^ . FIFA. Archived from the original on 12 December 2010. Retrieved 2 December 2011.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 21 July 2019. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  6. ^ a b "Cape Town Stadium (CTS) (Municipal Entity) Business Plan 2023/24 to 2027/28 page 26". City of Cape Town. May 2023. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  7. ^ "Cape Town Stadium welcomes name change to become DHL Stadium, following multi-year naming rights partnership with DHL". DHL. 29 September 2021. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  8. ^ a b "Cape Town Stadium (RFf) Soc Limited integrated annual report 2021–2022" (PDF). City of Cape Town. January 2023. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  9. ^ . South African Broadcasting Corporation. 21 June 2011. Archived from the original on 18 April 2016. Retrieved 4 April 2016.
  10. ^ Anel Lewis (19 February 2015). "Green Point Athletics Stadium opens". Retrieved 4 April 2016.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 February 2010. Retrieved 9 January 2010.
  12. ^ . City of Cape Town. Archived from the original on 16 February 2010. Retrieved 9 January 2010.
  13. ^ Warby, Vivian (1 December 2008). "Greenpoint stadium operator chosen". Retrieved 11 April 2011.
  14. ^ Johnson, Thomas (7 July 2016). "A World Cup White Elephant". Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  15. ^ "Green Point Stadium by GMP Architekten". 8 June 2010. Retrieved 2 April 2016.
  16. ^ "Greenpoint stadium operator chosen". SouthAfrica.info. 1 December 2008. Retrieved 9 January 2010.
  17. ^ "Chiefs to use Rand Stadium this season". KickOff Magazine. 30 June 2010. Retrieved 8 July 2010.
  18. ^ Lewis, Anel (19 December 2014). "WP says no to Cape Town Stadium". IOL Sport. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  19. ^ "Green Point becomes new Sevens heaven". SuperSport. 20 March 2015. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  20. ^ Said, Nick (29 June 2016). "PSL newcomers Cape Town City FC finally launched in the Mother City". Times Live. Retrieved 30 June 2016.
  21. ^ "2010 Fifa World Cup: success stories". SouthAfrica.info. Retrieved 26 May 2007.
  22. ^ "Match in Africa a great success, breaks tennis attendance records". SABC News - Breaking news, special reports, world, business, sport coverage of all South African current events. Africa's news leader. 8 February 2020. Retrieved 10 February 2020.
  23. ^ "Boxscore Concert Grosses". Billboard. Lynne Segall. 12 March 2011. p. 11. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
  24. ^ "Coldplay rocks Cape Town". Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  25. ^ "Coldplay fans enjoy a sold-out concert at Cape Town Stadium". Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  26. ^ . 8 May 2012. Archived from the original on 8 May 2012. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 May 2015. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 November 2012. Retrieved 20 June 2013.
  29. ^ "Current Boxscore". Billboard. Retrieved 5 June 2013.
  30. ^ "Justin Bieber sends Cape Town into hysteria". Channel24. Retrieved 12 May 2013.
  31. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 April 2015. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  32. ^ . City of Cape Town. 21 June 2015. Archived from the original on 24 April 2014. Retrieved 2015-06-21.
  33. ^ "Lionel Richie seals SA tour with a promise". Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  34. ^ "Safe House: How one film put Cape Town's movie industry on the map". The Independent. 14 June 2012. Retrieved 7 April 2016.
  35. ^ "Cape Town stadium to feature in latest Dirt racing game". News24. 26 October 2020. Retrieved 19 February 2024.
  36. ^ "One Dead And Several Injured at Linkin Park Show in Cape Town - Music News @ Ultimate-Guitar.Com". Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  37. ^ "'Tear down Cape Town Stadium' | IOL". IOL. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
  38. ^ "Cape Town Stadium: icon or albatross | IOL". IOL. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
  39. ^ "Why Cape Town stadium should be demolished - OPINION | Politicsweb". www.politicsweb.co.za. Retrieved 18 April 2016.

External links edit

  • City of Cape Town FIFA 2010 website
  • Cape Town Tourism website
  • Photos of Stadiums in South Africa at cafe.daum.net/stade
  • 360 degree Virtual Tour (5 locations) 31 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine 360SouthAfrica


cape, town, stadium, afrikaans, kaapstad, stadion, xhosa, inkundla, yezemidlalo, yasekapa, known, until, 2025, stadium, sponsorship, reasons, association, football, soccer, rugby, union, stadium, cape, town, south, africa, that, built, 2010, fifa, world, durin. The Cape Town Stadium Afrikaans Kaapstad stadion Xhosa Inkundla yezemidlalo yaseKapa 2 known until 2025 as the DHL Stadium for sponsorship reasons is an association football soccer and rugby union stadium in Cape Town South Africa that was built for the 2010 FIFA World Cup 3 During the planning stage it was known as the Green Point Stadium which was the name of the older stadium on an adjacent site and this name was also used frequently during World Cup media coverage It is the home ground of WP Rugby and the DHL Stormers since 2021 Premier Soccer League clubs Cape Town Spurs since 2010 and Cape Town City since 2016 It has also hosted the South Africa Sevens rugby tournament since 2015 and hosted the Rugby 7s World Cup in 2022 DHL Stadium Cape Town Stadium Full nameDHL StadiumLocationFritz Sonnenberg Road Green Point Cape Town South AfricaCoordinates33 54 12 S 18 24 40 E 33 90333 S 18 41111 E 33 90333 18 41111OwnerCity of Cape TownCapacity58 310Field size125m x 68m 1 SurfaceGrassConstructionBroke ground26 March 2007Built2007 2009Opened14 December 2009Construction costR 4 4 billion USD 600 million 415 million ArchitectGMP Architects Louis Karol Architects Point ArchitectsGeneral contractorMurray amp Roberts WBHOTenantsCape Town Spurs F C 2010 2021 Cape Town City F C 2016 present WP Rugby Union 2021 present Stormers 2021 present The stadium is located in Green Point between Signal Hill and the Atlantic Ocean close to the Cape Town city center and to the Victoria amp Alfred Waterfront a popular tourist and shopping venue The stadium had a seating capacity of 64 100 during the 2010 World Cup 4 later reduced to 58 309 5 The stadium is connected to the waterfront by a new road connection Granger Bay Boulevard Cape Town Stadium is the fifth biggest stadium in South Africa and the biggest in Cape Town Contents 1 Naming 2 Previous stadium 3 Design 4 Handing over 5 After the World Cup 6 Cape Town Stadium RF SOC Ltd 7 Inaugural games 8 Sporting and events 8 1 2010 FIFA World Cup 8 2 Matches 8 3 International friendlies 8 4 Rugby Union 8 5 World Rugby Sevens Series 8 6 2022 Rugby World Cup Sevens 8 7 Tennis 8 8 Concerts 8 9 Popular culture 9 Incidents 10 Calls for demolition 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksNaming edit nbsp nbsp Green Point Stadiumclass notpageimage Location of the stadium in the Cape Town metropolitan area During construction Cape Town Stadium was unofficially known as Green Point Stadium the name of an older stadium adjacent to it that was partially demolished and rebuilt into the Green Point Athletics Stadium During October 2009 the city asked for the public to propose names for the new stadium and the name Cape Town Stadium was chosen 2 With effect from June 2021 the City of Cape Town as owner of the stadium through a municipal entity concluded a multi year sponsorship agreement with DHL for a period of four years from 2021 to 2025 6 It included renaming the stadium to the DHL Stadium 7 In this regard Mr Peter John Veldhuizen chairperson of the Board of the Cape Town Stadium RF Soc Ltd said DHL s contribution as our naming rights partner has certainly made a significant impact on the bottom line of the business 8 p 4 As a result in 2022 2022 the revenue target was exceeded by 30 and the grant funding from the City of Cape Town was reduced from R61m to R42m 6 p 16 Previous stadium editThe old stadium nbsp The beginnings of the former Green Point Stadium during the Second Boer War nbsp Aerial view of the old Green Point Stadium which was partly demolished and rebuilt during 2007 The stadium is adjacent to the site of the original 18 000 seater stadium Green Point Stadium It replaces a portion of the Metropolitan Golf Club site which has now been realigned The previous stadium originally constructed in 1897 and which was partly demolished in 2007 and rebuilt in 2013 as the Green Point Athletics Stadium was a multi purpose stadium used for cycling athletics cricket and soccer Later used mainly for soccer matches it was the home ground of Santos Football Club and Ajax Cape Town at different points It also hosted music concerts including the November 2003 46664 Concert for the benefit of AIDS victims 9 The section of the old stadium that remained was redeveloped into the Green Point Athletics Stadium which opened in 2015 with a seating capacity of 4500 10 Design editConstruction of the Cape Town Stadium located on the Green Point Common began in March 2007 In 33 months joint venture contractors Murray amp Roberts now known as Concor and WBHO completed the project at a cost of R4 4billion or approximately US 600million The project architects were an association between GMP Architects of Germany and two local firms Louis Karol and Associates and Point Architects The structural engineers comprised a joint venture between BKS Henry Fagan amp Partners KFD Wilkinson Goba Iliso and Arcus Gibb 11 Handing over editCape Town Stadium was officially handed over to the City of Cape Town on schedule on 14 December 2009 At a ceremony in front of over 200 invited guests and the media representatives from around the world Cape Town Executive Mayor Alderman Dan Plato received the keys to the stadium officially confirming the opening of Cape Town Stadium 12 After the World Cup editA consortium consisting of South Africa s Sail Group and French based Stade de France were awarded the service contract to operate the stadium and ensure that it remains a sustainable multi purpose venue after the 2010 FIFA World Cup The consortium called Business Venture Investments 1317 was involved in the management of the stadium from January 2009 onwards The city municipality paid the consortium to manage the stadium up to and during the World Cup after which the consortium will lease the stadium from the city for a period of not less than 10 years and not more than 30 years 13 However in December 2010 the Sail Stade de France consortium cancelled the lease Reports in the media at the time said that the consortium considered the agreement as non viable The City subsequently took over management of the stadium 14 Following the World Cup temporary rows of seating on either side on the top tier were replaced by events suites and clubrooms reducing the stadium s capacity to 58 300 15 The stadium features corporate hospitality suites medical training and conferencing and banqueting facilities The consortium will operate the stadium as well as manage and maintain the defined areas of the surrounding urban park and sport precinct on the 85 hectare Greenpoint Common from stadium revenue 16 Ajax Cape Town have used the stadium as their home ground from the 2010 11 Premier Soccer League PSL season onwards 17 Due to the stadium s ongoing financial problems the City of Cape Town had sought to acquire Western Province rugby as an anchor tenant After four years of talks Western Province announced in December 2014 that they had decided to remain at Newlands Stadium 18 In March 2015 the South African Rugby Union announced that the South Africa Sevens tournament would be staged at Cape Town Stadium for four years beginning in December 2015 19 In June 2016 it was announced that new PSL club Cape Town City would also play at Cape Town Stadium 20 In late 2020 Western Province RFU announced that they were selling their longtime home of Newlands Stadium to developers who planned to demolish the ground and convert it to a mixed use development From 2021 onwards franchise rugby team Stormers and Currie Cup side WP will call Cape Town Stadium home as will international rugby tests played in Cape Town Cape Town Stadium RF SOC Ltd editThe Cape Town Stadium RF SOC Ltd a municipal entity of the City of Cape Town was formed in 2018 to provide various operational services to the stadium 8 p 46 In 2021 the Entity entered into a sponsorships agreement with DHL granting naming rights to the company Since then the stadium has officially been known as the DHL Stadium Inaugural games editThe first game to be hosted at the new Cape Town Stadium was a Cape Town derby between Ajax Cape Town and Santos on 23 January 2010 as part of the official inauguration of the stadium Only 20 000 tickets were made available for the event and were sold out by Friday 15 January 2010 The Soccer Festival had entertainment from local band Freshlyground and a Vuvuzela orchestra performance during half time Date Time SAST Team 1 Res Team 2 Attendance23 January 2010 16 00 nbsp Ajax Cape Town 0 0 5 6 pen nbsp Santos 20 000The second of three dry runs at the new Cape Town Stadium was another Cape Town derby Local Cape Town rugby teams The Vodacom Stormers and the Boland Inv XV battled it out at the Cape Town Rugby Festival that took place on 6 February 2010 The Rugby Festival had entertainment from local band Flat Stanley Only 40 000 tickets were made available for the event This was double the amount that attended the Soccer Festival Date Time SAST Team 1 Res Team 2 Attendance6 February 2010 16 15 nbsp Vodacom Stormers 47 13 nbsp Boland Inv XV 40 000Cape Town Stadium hosted its third test event on Monday 22 March during which all 55 000 permanent seats were available for the first time A total of 52 000 tickets were sold Cape Town For Jesus a religious gathering addressed by South African evangelist Angus Buchan was the first major non sporting event hosted at the stadium and gave the stadium operators another chance to test their readiness ahead of the 2010 FIFA World Cup Date Time SAST Event Capacity Attendance22 March 2010 13 00 Cape Town For Jesus 55 000 52 000Cape Town Stadium hosted its fourth and final test event on Saturday 10 April This was the first time that the stadium was utilised at night for the International Under 20 Soccer Challenge between South Africa Brazil Nigeria and Ghana About 40 000 attended the event that tested the stadium s readiness for the 2010 FIFA World Cup Date Time SAST Team 1 Res Team 2 Attendance10 April 2010 18 00 nbsp Ghana U 20 0 1 nbsp Brazil U 20 40 00020 30 nbsp South Africa U 20 1 3 nbsp Nigeria U 20Sporting and events edit2010 FIFA World Cup edit In the 2010 FIFA World Cup Cape Town Stadium hosted five first round matches one second round one quarter final and one semi final 21 During the World Cup all FIFA media referred to the stadium as Green Point Stadium Matches edit Date Time SAST Team 1 Result Team 2 Round Attendance11 June 2010 20 30 nbsp Uruguay 0 0 nbsp France Group A 64 10014 June 2010 20 30 nbsp Italy 1 1 nbsp Paraguay Group F 62 86918 June 2010 20 30 nbsp England 0 0 nbsp Algeria Group C 64 10021 June 2010 13 30 nbsp Portugal 7 0 nbsp North Korea Group G 63 64424 June 2010 20 30 nbsp Cameroon 1 2 nbsp Netherlands Group E 63 09329 June 2010 20 30 nbsp Spain 1 0 nbsp Portugal Round of 16 62 9553 July 2010 16 00 nbsp Argentina 0 4 nbsp Germany Quarter finals 64 1006 July 2010 20 30 nbsp Uruguay 2 3 nbsp Netherlands Semi finals 62 479International friendlies edit On 17 November 2010 the Cape Town Stadium hosted its first international friendly The match was between South Africa and the USA where they played for the Nelson Mandela Challenge Trophy Date Time SAST Team 1 Result Team 2 Attendance17 November 2010 21 30 nbsp South Africa 0 1 nbsp United States 52 00019 January 2011 17 00 nbsp Botswana 1 2 nbsp Sweden 2 00021 July 2012 15 00 nbsp Ajax Cape Town 1 1 nbsp Manchester United 53 0008 January 2012 20 15 nbsp South Africa 0 1 nbsp Norway21 January 2013 16 00 nbsp Jomo Cosmos 0 4 nbsp Grasshopper Club Zurich 10026 January 2013 16 00 nbsp Ajax Cape Town 2 1 20023 March 2013 20 15 nbsp South Africa 2 0 nbsp Central African Republic 36 740Rugby Union edit DHL Stadium hosts numerous rugby matches each year Prior to 2021 the stadium hosted several Stormers matches when they couldn t play at their previous home ground in Newlands Beginning in 2021 Western Province Rugby and the DHL Stormers announced that they would use DHL Stadium as their home ground for both the domestic Currie Cup and international URC competitions During their first season at their new home the Stormers defeated their South African rivals the Vodacom Bulls to win the URC Final at DHL Stadium The Stormer s success in the URC qualified the team to compete in the European Rugby Championship during the 2022 23 season with several matches being hosted at the DHL Stadium in addition to those for the Currie Cup and URC DHL Stadium also played host to the Stormers URC playoff matches during the 2022 23 season after they won home field advantage including the URC Final scheduled for May 27 2023 DHL Stadium has also hosted international rugby union matches played by South Africa s Springboks In July 2022 the Springboks defeated Wales at DHL Stadium in what was South African prop Eben Etzebeth s 100th test for the national team Date Time SAST Team 1 Score Team 2 Attendance9 February 2013 14 45 nbsp Vodacom Stormers nbsp Boland Inv XV3 February 2019 17 00 nbsp DHL Stormers 33 28 nbsp Vodacom Bulls 50 000World Rugby Sevens Series edit See also World Rugby Sevens SeriesThe World Rugby Sevens Series hosts a tournament each year in Cape Town traditionally in December It was played annually from 2015 to 2019 However no tournaments took place during 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID 19 pandemic However the competition returned to Cape Town during the 2022 23 season Date Event Year Winner12 13 December 2015 2015 South Africa Sevens nbsp South Africa10 11 December 2016 2016 South Africa Sevens nbsp England9 10 December 2017 2017 South Africa Sevens nbsp New Zealand8 9 December 2018 2018 South Africa Sevens nbsp Fiji13 15 December 2019 2019 South Africa Sevens nbsp New Zealand9 11 December 2022 2022 South Africa Sevens nbsp Samoa2022 Rugby World Cup Sevens edit In September 2022 DHL Stadium played host to the Rugby World Cup Sevens The men s tournament was won by Fiji who defeated New Zealand in the Final The women s competition was won by Australia over their cross Tasmine rivals New Zealand Tennis edit Main article Match for Africa The Cape Town Stadium hosted the sixth edition of Roger Federer s Matches for Africa a series of charity tennis matches It took place on 7 February 2020 and featured Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal Federer confirmed the date location and opponent during the 2019 edition of Wimbledon Federer said he had pursued Nadal s participation for two years before a date as agreed upon South Africa is the birth country of Federer s mother and the focus of his charitable foundation The doubles match consisted Roger Federer and American tycoon Bill Gates versus Rafael Nadal and South African entertainer Trevor Noah Federer and Gates won the match 6 4 In singles Federer beat Nadal with the score 6 4 3 6 6 3 The event was attended by 51 954 people the highest attendance ever recorded at a tennis match and more than 3 5 million was raised in aid of children s education in Africa 22 Match in Africa 6 Doubles1 nbsp Roger Federer nbsp Bill Gates62 nbsp Rafael Nadal nbsp Trevor Noah3Match in Africa 6 Singles1 nbsp Rafael Nadal4632 nbsp Roger Federer636Concerts edit Year Date Artist Tour Name Attendance2011 18 February U2 U2 360 Tour 72 532 23 11 April Neil Diamond 5 October Coldplay Mylo Xyloto Tour 46 670 24 25 26 26 October Kings of Leon Come Around Sundown World Tour 40 000 27 2012 7 November Linkin Park Living Things World Tour 55 000 28 3 December Lady Gaga The Born This Way Ball Tour 39 5272013 5 February Red Hot Chili Peppers I m With You World Tour 7 May Bon Jovi Because We Can The Tour 35 407 29 8 May Justin Bieber Believe Tour 65 000 30 16 October Rihanna Diamonds World Tour 39 6162014 26 February Eminem Rapture Tour 37 825 31 32 10 December Foo Fighters Sonic Highways World Tour2015 15 March Michael Buble To Be Loved Tour 22 0601 April One Direction On the Road Again Tour 51 0602016 18 February Lionel Richie All the Hits all Night Long Global Tour 33 2016 26 April Mariah Carey The Sweet Sweet Fantasy Tour 35 0002017 24 February Dash Berlin David Guetta KSHMR Martin Garrix DJ Snake etc Ultra South Africa2017 17 May Justin Bieber Purpose World Tour 39 7062017 25 November The Bellamy Brothers2018 9 February Afrojack Armin Van Buuren Axwell Ingrosso Hardwell etc Ultra South Africa2018 11 April Santana2019 27 28 March Ed Sheeran Tour 96 915 both nights 2022 October Justin Bieber Cancelled2023 1 February Imagine Dragons Mercury World Tour 55 0002024 31 January Ava Max Keane Lloyiso Maroon 5 Meduza Will Linley Calabash South AfricaPopular culture edit Cape Town Stadium was featured in the film Safe House 2012 The stadium also features in many local advertising and print media campaigns 34 It was also featured as a motorsport venue in the video game Dirt 5 35 Incidents editOn 7 November 2012 shortly before the U S rock band Linkin Park was set to perform at the sold out stadium gusts of wind caused advertising scaffolding outside the stadium to collapse onto a crowd of people injuring 19 and killing 1 of the 19 injured 12 were taken to hospital for further treatment 36 Calls for demolition editPrior to 2021 several individuals and groups called for the stadium to be demolished due to its under utilization after the World Cup Effective utilization and use of the stadium was a political issue in the city 37 38 39 However beginning in 2021 use of Cape Town Stadium increased significantly when it became the home ground of Western Province Rugby and the DHL Stormers This move resulted in DHL sponsoring the naming rights to the stadium and significant renovations See also editLists of stadiumsReferences edit https dhlstadium co za wp content uploads 2018 11 Level 00 Hardened Surface Area pdf jpg bare URL image file a b Pollack Martin 30 October 2009 The city s 2010 FIFA World Cup stadium has a new name Cape Town Stadium City of Cape Town Archived from the original on 27 July 2011 Retrieved 21 May 2010 Stadium Complete Shine 2010 17 December 2009 Archived from the original on 29 January 2011 Retrieved 17 December 2009 Cape Town Stadium FIFA Archived from the original on 12 December 2010 Retrieved 2 December 2011 worldstadiums com Stadiums in South Africa Archived from the original on 21 July 2019 Retrieved 16 September 2014 a b Cape Town Stadium CTS Municipal Entity Business Plan 2023 24 to 2027 28 page 26 City of Cape Town May 2023 Retrieved 6 March 2024 Cape Town Stadium welcomes name change to become DHL Stadium following multi year naming rights partnership with DHL DHL 29 September 2021 Retrieved 6 March 2024 a b Cape Town Stadium RFf Soc Limited integrated annual report 2021 2022 PDF City of Cape Town January 2023 Retrieved 6 March 2024 The 46664 campaign South African Broadcasting Corporation 21 June 2011 Archived from the original on 18 April 2016 Retrieved 4 April 2016 Anel Lewis 19 February 2015 Green Point Athletics Stadium opens Retrieved 4 April 2016 CT Stadium Construction Information Archived from the original on 13 February 2010 Retrieved 9 January 2010 Cape Town Stadium Opening City of Cape Town Archived from the original on 16 February 2010 Retrieved 9 January 2010 Warby Vivian 1 December 2008 Greenpoint stadium operator chosen Retrieved 11 April 2011 Johnson Thomas 7 July 2016 A World Cup White Elephant Retrieved 6 March 2024 Green Point Stadium by GMP Architekten 8 June 2010 Retrieved 2 April 2016 Greenpoint stadium operator chosen SouthAfrica info 1 December 2008 Retrieved 9 January 2010 Chiefs to use Rand Stadium this season KickOff Magazine 30 June 2010 Retrieved 8 July 2010 Lewis Anel 19 December 2014 WP says no to Cape Town Stadium IOL Sport Retrieved 12 August 2015 Green Point becomes new Sevens heaven SuperSport 20 March 2015 Retrieved 12 August 2015 Said Nick 29 June 2016 PSL newcomers Cape Town City FC finally launched in the Mother City Times Live Retrieved 30 June 2016 2010 Fifa World Cup success stories SouthAfrica info Retrieved 26 May 2007 Match in Africa a great success breaks tennis attendance records SABC News Breaking news special reports world business sport coverage of all South African current events Africa s news leader 8 February 2020 Retrieved 10 February 2020 Boxscore Concert Grosses Billboard Lynne Segall 12 March 2011 p 11 Retrieved 5 April 2016 Coldplay rocks Cape Town Retrieved 21 June 2013 Coldplay fans enjoy a sold out concert at Cape Town Stadium Retrieved 21 June 2013 Coldplay News The Parlotones interview 8 May 2012 Archived from the original on 8 May 2012 Retrieved 10 February 2023 Kings of Leon play to forty thousand fans Cape Town Archived from the original on 6 May 2015 Retrieved 21 June 2013 Linkin Park Living Things Tour Cape Town Concert Archived from the original on 15 November 2012 Retrieved 20 June 2013 Current Boxscore Billboard Retrieved 5 June 2013 Justin Bieber sends Cape Town into hysteria Channel24 Retrieved 12 May 2013 Eminem s advice to SA men You have to be f g romantic man Archived from the original on 12 April 2015 Retrieved 8 April 2015 Descriptive title reflecting the content of the source City of Cape Town 21 June 2015 Archived from the original on 24 April 2014 Retrieved 2015 06 21 Lionel Richie seals SA tour with a promise Retrieved 3 April 2016 Safe House How one film put Cape Town s movie industry on the map The Independent 14 June 2012 Retrieved 7 April 2016 Cape Town stadium to feature in latest Dirt racing game News24 26 October 2020 Retrieved 19 February 2024 One Dead And Several Injured at Linkin Park Show in Cape Town Music News Ultimate Guitar Com Retrieved 16 September 2014 Tear down Cape Town Stadium IOL IOL Retrieved 18 April 2016 Cape Town Stadium icon or albatross IOL IOL Retrieved 18 April 2016 Why Cape Town stadium should be demolished OPINION Politicsweb www politicsweb co za Retrieved 18 April 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cape Town Stadium Cape Town Stadium Cape Town Stadium City of Cape Town FIFA 2010 website Cape Town Stadium Cape Town Tourism website Photos of Stadiums in South Africa at cafe daum net stade 360 View 360 degree Virtual Tour 5 locations Archived 31 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine 360SouthAfrica Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cape Town Stadium amp oldid 1217727001, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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