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Estádio da Luz

The Estádio da Luz (Portuguese pronunciation: [ɨˈʃtaðju ðɐ ˈluʃ]), officially named Estádio do Sport Lisboa e Benfica, is a multi-purpose stadium located in Lisbon, Portugal. It is used mostly for association football matches, hosting the home games of Portuguese club Benfica, its owner.

Estádio da Luz
Full nameEstádio do Sport Lisboa e Benfica
AddressAv. Eusébio da Silva Ferreira, 1500-313
LocationLisbon, Portugal
Coordinates38°45′10″N 9°11′05″W / 38.7527°N 9.1847°W / 38.7527; -9.1847
Public transit  Azul  at Alto dos Moinhos
 Azul  at Colégio Militar/Luz
OwnerS.L. Benfica
OperatorS.L. Benfica
Executive suites156
Capacity64,642
Record attendanceOfficial match: 64,591[2]
(13 May 2017)
All-time: 65,400
(25 October 2003)
Field size105 x 68 m
SurfaceGrass
ScoreboardYes
Construction
Broke ground2003
Opened25 October 2003
Construction cost€162 million[1]
ArchitectHOK Sport (now Populous)
Tenants
Benfica (2003–present)
Benfica B (2003–2006, 2012–2013)
Benfica women's (2018–present; selected matches)
Portugal national football team (selected matches)
Website
slbenfica.pt

Opened on 25 October 2003 with an exhibition match between Benfica and Uruguayan club Nacional, it replaced the original Estádio da Luz, which had 120,000 seats. The seating capacity of the new stadium is currently set at 64,642.[3] The stadium was designed by HOK Sport Venue Event and had a construction cost of €162 million.[1]

A UEFA category four stadium and one of the biggest stadiums by capacity in Europe (the biggest in Portugal), Estádio da Luz hosted several matches of the UEFA Euro 2004, including its final, as well as the 2014 and 2020 finals of the UEFA Champions League. It was elected the most beautiful stadium of Europe in a 2014 online poll by L'Équipe.[4][5][6] By its fifteenth birthday, Estádio do Sport Lisboa e Benfica Luz had welcomed more than 17 million spectators.[7] The stadium is one of the potential venues for the 2030 FIFA World Cup, which Portugal will co-host along with Morocco and Spain.

Naming edit

While the previous Benfica stadium was also officially named "Estádio do Sport Lisboa e Benfica", both the old and the new stadia are invariably referred to by their unofficial name, Estádio da Luz. Luz is the name of the neighborhood the stadium was built on, on the border between the parishes of Benfica and Carnide, which itself derives its name from the nearby Igreja de Nossa Senhora da Luz (Church of Our Lady of Light). This unofficial name caught on soon after the original stadium's construction;[8] the people of Lisbon used to simply call it a Luz ("the Light"). Therefore, the stadium's common name became "Estádio da Luz", which is usually anglicised to "Stadium of Light".[9] This translation, however, could be argued to be inaccurate, since Luz refers not to "light" but to the original address of the stadium: Estrada da Luz ("Road of Light").[10][11]

Characteristics edit

Architect Damon Lavelle,[12] from HOK Sport Venue Event (now Populous), designed the stadium to focus on light and transparency. Its polycarbonate roof allows the sunlight to penetrate the stadium in order to illuminate it. The roof, which is supported by tie-beams of four steel arches, seems to float on the underlying tribunes. The arches are 43 metres (141 feet) high and help define the look of the stadium, after having been shaped to be similar to the wavy profile of its three tiers. According to Lavelle, the seating capacity may be increased up to 80,000.[13]

 
A panorama of the Estádio da Luz on 30 July 2009

Notable matches edit

Opening game edit

Benfica  2–1  Nacional
Nuno Gomes   7', 47' Mello   11'
Attendance: 65,400

In the opening match, Benfica beat Uruguayan side Nacional 2–1 with goals from Nuno Gomes, who became the first ever scorer at the Estádio da Luz.

UEFA Euro 2004 Final edit

Portugal  0–1  Greece
Charisteas   57'
Attendance: 62,865
Referee: Markus Merk (Germany)

2014 UEFA Champions League Final edit

Real Madrid  4–1 (a.e.t.)  Atlético Madrid
Ramos   90+3'
Bale   110'
Marcelo   118'
Ronaldo   120' (pen.)
Report Godín   36'
Attendance: 60,976[14]

Highest attendance official match edit

Benfica  5–0  Vitória de Guimarães
Cervi   11'
Jiménez   16'
Pizzi   37'
Jonas   43', 67' (pen.)
Report
Attendance: 64,591
Referee: Jorge Sousa (Porto)

On round 33 of the 2016–17 Primeira Liga, in a match where Benfica were crowned national champions for a fourth consecutive season (a new achievement for them), Estádio da Luz recorded its best attendance in official matches.[2]

2019–20 UEFA Champions League edit

Quarter-finals

Barcelona  2–8  Bayern Munich
Report
Attendance: 0[15][a]

Final

Attendance: 0[a]

Portugal national football team matches edit

 
Entrance of the stadium during UEFA Euro 2004

The following national team matches were held in the stadium.

# Date Score Opponent Competition
1 16 June 2004 2–0   Russia Euro 2004 Group Stage
2 24 June 2004 2–2[16]   England Euro 2004 Quarter-Finals
3 4 July 2004 0–1   Greece Euro 2004 Final
4 4 June 2005 2–0   Slovakia 2006 World Cup qualification
5 8 September 2007 2–2   Poland Euro 2008 qualifying
6 10 October 2009 3–0   Hungary 2010 World Cup qualification
7 14 November 2009 1–0   Bosnia and Herzegovina 2010 World Cup UEFA play-offs
8 17 November 2010 4–0   Spain Friendly
9 4 June 2011 1–0   Norway Euro 2012 qualifying
10 15 November 2011 6–2   Bosnia and Herzegovina Euro 2012 qualifying play-offs
11 2 June 2012 1–3   Turkey Friendly
12 7 June 2013 1–0   Russia 2014 World Cup qualification
13 15 November 2013 1–0   Sweden 2014 World Cup UEFA play-offs
14 29 March 2015 2–1   Serbia Euro 2016 qualifying
15 8 June 2016 7–0   Estonia Friendly
16 25 March 2017 3–0   Hungary 2018 World Cup qualification
17 10 October 2017 2–0    Switzerland
18 7 June 2018 3–0   Algeria Friendly
19 10 September 2018 1–0   Italy 2018–19 UEFA Nations League
20 22 March 2019 0–0   Ukraine Euro 2020 qualifying
21 25 March 2019 1–1   Serbia
22 11 November 2020 7–0   Andorra Friendly
23 14 November 2020 0–1   France 2020–21 UEFA Nations League
24 14 November 2021 1–2   Serbia 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification
25 17 June 2023 3–0   Bosnia and Herzegovina UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying

Euro 2004 matches edit

Date Team #1 Result Team #2 Round
13 June 2004   France 2–1   England Group B
16 June 2004   Russia 0–2   Portugal Group A
21 June 2004   Croatia 2–4   England Group B
24 June 2004   Portugal 2–2 (6–5 on pen.) Quarter-finals
4 July 2004 0–1   Greece Final

Benfica matches in UEFA competitions edit

As of match played 8 March 2024
112 matches: 69 wins, 21 draws, 22 losses
190 goals scored, 98 goals conceded

Concerts edit

Date Artist/band Concert tour
1–2 June 2019 Ed Sheeran[17] ÷ Tour
26 June 2023 Rammstein[18] Rammstein Stadium Tour
24–25 May 2024 Taylor Swift[19] The Eras Tour

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b The match was played behind closed doors to comply with restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Vender jogadores para gerar receitas" [Selling players to generate revenue]. Record (in Portuguese). 29 April 2015. Retrieved 8 November 2018.
  2. ^ a b "History has been made". S.L. Benfica. 13 May 2017. Retrieved 29 April 2018.
  3. ^ (PDF). CMVM (in Portuguese). S.L. Benfica. 14 April 2016. pp. 81–82. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 November 2017. Retrieved 25 July 2016.
  4. ^ [Estádio da Luz is the most beautiful of Europe]. Record (in Portuguese). 22 October 2014. Archived from the original on 24 October 2014. Retrieved 18 June 2016.
  5. ^ "Luz considerado o estádio mais bonito" [Luz considered the most beautiful stadium]. SAPO Desporto (in Portuguese). 22 October 2014. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  6. ^ Tavares da Silva, Hugo (22 October 2014). "Estádio da Luz é o mais bonito da Europa" [Estádio da Luz is the most beautiful of Europe]. Observador (in Portuguese). Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  7. ^ [Da Luz welcomed more than 17 million spectators in 15 years]. A Bola (in Portuguese). 25 October 2018. Archived from the original on 26 October 2018. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  8. ^ Silveira, João Pedro. "Luz: a Catedral" [Luz: the Cathedral]. zerozero (in Portuguese). Retrieved 8 May 2019.
  9. ^ Lutz, Tom (20 March 2012). "Benfica's Stadium of Light to host 2014 Champions League final". The Guardian. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  10. ^ . Sport Lisboa e Benfica - Site Oficial. Archived from the original on 30 August 2017. Retrieved 20 April 2016.
  11. ^ Hunter, James (20 April 2017). "The Princess Diana Stadium? Sir Bob Murray reveals request to rename the Stadium of Light". ChronicleLive. Retrieved 28 December 2018.
  12. ^ . twelfthman blog. 10 December 2019. Archived from the original on 10 December 2019. Retrieved 10 December 2019.
  13. ^ "Arquiteto da Luz admite alargamento para 80 mil lugares" [Da Luz' architect admits enlargement to 80 thousand seats]. Bancada (in Portuguese). 29 October 2020. Retrieved 17 June 2023.
  14. ^ "Full-time report" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 24 May 2014. Retrieved 24 May 2014.
  15. ^ "Full Time Summary Quarter-finals – Barcelona v Bayern Munich" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 14 August 2020. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  16. ^ 6–5 after penalty shoot-out.
  17. ^ "As imagens do concerto de Ed Sheeran no estádio da Luz" [The pictures of Ed Sheeran's concert at Estádio da Luz]. Renascença (in Portuguese). 2 June 2019. Retrieved 28 June 2023.
  18. ^ "Rammstein: a Luz com labaredas (as fotos)" [Rammstein: Luz with flames (the photos)]. M80 (in Portuguese). 28 June 2023. Retrieved 28 June 2023.
  19. ^ "Taylor Swift The Eras Tour". taylorswift.com. Retrieved 5 July 2023.

External links edit

estádio, this, article, about, current, home, ground, benfica, previous, 1954, home, ground, sunderland, stadium, light, portuguese, pronunciation, ɨˈʃtaðju, ðɐ, ˈluʃ, officially, named, estádio, sport, lisboa, benfica, multi, purpose, stadium, located, lisbon. This article is about the current home ground of S L Benfica For the previous one see Estadio da Luz 1954 For the home ground of Sunderland A F C see Stadium of Light The Estadio da Luz Portuguese pronunciation ɨˈʃtadju dɐ ˈluʃ officially named Estadio do Sport Lisboa e Benfica is a multi purpose stadium located in Lisbon Portugal It is used mostly for association football matches hosting the home games of Portuguese club Benfica its owner Estadio da LuzUEFAFull nameEstadio do Sport Lisboa e BenficaAddressAv Eusebio da Silva Ferreira 1500 313LocationLisbon PortugalCoordinates38 45 10 N 9 11 05 W 38 7527 N 9 1847 W 38 7527 9 1847Public transit Azul at Alto dos Moinhos Azul at Colegio Militar LuzOwnerS L BenficaOperatorS L BenficaExecutive suites156Capacity64 642Record attendanceOfficial match 64 591 2 13 May 2017 All time 65 400 25 October 2003 Field size105 x 68 mSurfaceGrassScoreboardYesConstructionBroke ground2003Opened25 October 2003Construction cost 162 million 1 ArchitectHOK Sport now Populous TenantsBenfica 2003 present Benfica B 2003 2006 2012 2013 Benfica women s 2018 present selected matches Portugal national football team selected matches Websiteslbenfica ptOpened on 25 October 2003 with an exhibition match between Benfica and Uruguayan club Nacional it replaced the original Estadio da Luz which had 120 000 seats The seating capacity of the new stadium is currently set at 64 642 3 The stadium was designed by HOK Sport Venue Event and had a construction cost of 162 million 1 A UEFA category four stadium and one of the biggest stadiums by capacity in Europe the biggest in Portugal Estadio da Luz hosted several matches of the UEFA Euro 2004 including its final as well as the 2014 and 2020 finals of the UEFA Champions League It was elected the most beautiful stadium of Europe in a 2014 online poll by L Equipe 4 5 6 By its fifteenth birthday Estadio do Sport Lisboa e Benfica Luz had welcomed more than 17 million spectators 7 The stadium is one of the potential venues for the 2030 FIFA World Cup which Portugal will co host along with Morocco and Spain Contents 1 Naming 2 Characteristics 3 Notable matches 3 1 Opening game 3 2 UEFA Euro 2004 Final 3 3 2014 UEFA Champions League Final 3 4 Highest attendance official match 3 5 2019 20 UEFA Champions League 4 Portugal national football team matches 5 Euro 2004 matches 6 Benfica matches in UEFA competitions 7 Concerts 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksNaming editWhile the previous Benfica stadium was also officially named Estadio do Sport Lisboa e Benfica both the old and the new stadia are invariably referred to by their unofficial name Estadio da Luz Luz is the name of the neighborhood the stadium was built on on the border between the parishes of Benfica and Carnide which itself derives its name from the nearby Igreja de Nossa Senhora da Luz Church of Our Lady of Light This unofficial name caught on soon after the original stadium s construction 8 the people of Lisbon used to simply call it a Luz the Light Therefore the stadium s common name became Estadio da Luz which is usually anglicised to Stadium of Light 9 This translation however could be argued to be inaccurate since Luz refers not to light but to the original address of the stadium Estrada da Luz Road of Light 10 11 Characteristics editArchitect Damon Lavelle 12 from HOK Sport Venue Event now Populous designed the stadium to focus on light and transparency Its polycarbonate roof allows the sunlight to penetrate the stadium in order to illuminate it The roof which is supported by tie beams of four steel arches seems to float on the underlying tribunes The arches are 43 metres 141 feet high and help define the look of the stadium after having been shaped to be similar to the wavy profile of its three tiers According to Lavelle the seating capacity may be increased up to 80 000 13 nbsp A panorama of the Estadio da Luz on 30 July 2009Notable matches editOpening game edit 25 October 200321 05 WESTBenfica nbsp 2 1 nbsp NacionalNuno Gomes nbsp 7 47 Report Mello nbsp 11 Attendance 65 400Referee Pedro Proenca Portugal In the opening match Benfica beat Uruguayan side Nacional 2 1 with goals from Nuno Gomes who became the first ever scorer at the Estadio da Luz UEFA Euro 2004 Final edit Main article UEFA Euro 2004 Final 4 July 200419 45 WESTPortugal nbsp 0 1 nbsp GreeceReport Charisteas nbsp 57 Attendance 62 865Referee Markus Merk Germany 2014 UEFA Champions League Final edit Main article 2014 UEFA Champions League Final 24 May 201419 45 WESTReal Madrid nbsp 4 1 a e t nbsp Atletico MadridRamos nbsp 90 3 Bale nbsp 110 Marcelo nbsp 118 Ronaldo nbsp 120 pen Report Godin nbsp 36 Attendance 60 976 14 Referee Bjorn Kuipers Netherlands Highest attendance official match edit 13 May 201718 15 WEST UTC 01 00 Benfica nbsp 5 0 nbsp Vitoria de GuimaraesCervi nbsp 11 Jimenez nbsp 16 Pizzi nbsp 37 Jonas nbsp 43 67 pen ReportAttendance 64 591Referee Jorge Sousa Porto On round 33 of the 2016 17 Primeira Liga in a match where Benfica were crowned national champions for a fourth consecutive season a new achievement for them Estadio da Luz recorded its best attendance in official matches 2 2019 20 UEFA Champions League edit Quarter finals Main article FC Barcelona 2 8 FC Bayern Munich 14 August 2020 2020 08 14 20 00 WESTBarcelona nbsp 2 8 nbsp Bayern MunichAlaba nbsp 7 o g Suarez nbsp 57 Report Muller nbsp 4 31 Perisic nbsp 22 Gnabry nbsp 27 Kimmich nbsp 63 Lewandowski nbsp 82 Coutinho nbsp 85 89 Attendance 0 15 a Referee Damir Skomina Slovenia Final Main article 2020 UEFA Champions League Final 23 August 2020 2020 08 23 20 00 WESTParis Saint Germain nbsp 0 1 nbsp Bayern MunichReport Coman nbsp 59 Attendance 0 a Referee Daniele Orsato Italy Portugal national football team matches edit nbsp Entrance of the stadium during UEFA Euro 2004The following national team matches were held in the stadium Date Score Opponent Competition1 16 June 2004 2 0 nbsp Russia Euro 2004 Group Stage2 24 June 2004 2 2 16 nbsp England Euro 2004 Quarter Finals3 4 July 2004 0 1 nbsp Greece Euro 2004 Final4 4 June 2005 2 0 nbsp Slovakia 2006 World Cup qualification5 8 September 2007 2 2 nbsp Poland Euro 2008 qualifying6 10 October 2009 3 0 nbsp Hungary 2010 World Cup qualification7 14 November 2009 1 0 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina 2010 World Cup UEFA play offs8 17 November 2010 4 0 nbsp Spain Friendly9 4 June 2011 1 0 nbsp Norway Euro 2012 qualifying10 15 November 2011 6 2 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina Euro 2012 qualifying play offs11 2 June 2012 1 3 nbsp Turkey Friendly12 7 June 2013 1 0 nbsp Russia 2014 World Cup qualification13 15 November 2013 1 0 nbsp Sweden 2014 World Cup UEFA play offs14 29 March 2015 2 1 nbsp Serbia Euro 2016 qualifying15 8 June 2016 7 0 nbsp Estonia Friendly16 25 March 2017 3 0 nbsp Hungary 2018 World Cup qualification17 10 October 2017 2 0 nbsp Switzerland18 7 June 2018 3 0 nbsp Algeria Friendly19 10 September 2018 1 0 nbsp Italy 2018 19 UEFA Nations League20 22 March 2019 0 0 nbsp Ukraine Euro 2020 qualifying21 25 March 2019 1 1 nbsp Serbia22 11 November 2020 7 0 nbsp Andorra Friendly23 14 November 2020 0 1 nbsp France 2020 21 UEFA Nations League24 14 November 2021 1 2 nbsp Serbia 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification25 17 June 2023 3 0 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina UEFA Euro 2024 qualifyingEuro 2004 matches editDate Team 1 Result Team 2 Round13 June 2004 nbsp France 2 1 nbsp England Group B16 June 2004 nbsp Russia 0 2 nbsp Portugal Group A21 June 2004 nbsp Croatia 2 4 nbsp England Group B24 June 2004 nbsp Portugal 2 2 6 5 on pen Quarter finals4 July 2004 0 1 nbsp Greece FinalBenfica matches in UEFA competitions editFurther information S L Benfica in international football As of match played 8 March 20242003 04 UEFA Cup 3 1 Molde 1 0 Rosenborg 0 0 Inter Milan 2004 05 1 0 Anderlecht UEFA Champions League 2 0 Dukla Banska Bystrica UEFA Cup 4 2 Heerenveen 2 0 Dinamo Zagreb 1 1 CSKA Moscow 2005 06 UEFA Champions League 1 0 Lille 0 1 Villarreal 2 1 Manchester United 1 0 Liverpool 0 0 Barcelona 2006 07 3 0 Austria Wien UEFA Champions League 0 1 Manchester United 3 0 Celtic 3 1 Copenhagen 1 0 Dinamo București UEFA Cup 3 1 Paris Saint Germain 0 0 Espanyol 2007 08 2 1 Copenhagen UEFA Champions League 0 1 Shakhtar Donetsk 1 0 Celtic 1 1 Milan 1 0 Nurnberg UEFA Cup 1 2 Getafe 2008 09 UEFA Cup 2 0 Napoli 0 2 Galatasaray 0 1 Metalist Kharkiv 2009 10 UEFA Europa League 4 0 Vorskla 2 0 BATE Borisov 5 0 Everton 2 1 AEK Athens 4 0 Hertha Berlin 1 1 Marseille 2 1 Liverpool 2010 11 2 0 Hapoel UEFA Champions League 4 3 Lyon 1 2 Schalke 04 2 1 Stuttgart UEFA Europa League 2 1 Paris Saint Germain 4 1 PSV Eindhoven 2 1 Braga 2011 12 UEFA Champions League 2 0 Trabzonspor 3 1 Twente 1 1 Manchester United 1 1 Basel 1 0 Oțelul Galați 2 0 Zenit 0 1 Chelsea 2012 13 0 2 Barcelona UEFA Champions League 2 0 Spartak Moscow 2 1 Celtic 2 1 Bayer Leverkusen UEFA Europa League 1 0 Bordeaux 3 1 Newcastle United 3 1 Fenerbahce 2013 14 2 0 Anderlecht UEFA Champions League 1 1 Olympiakos 2 1 Paris Saint Germain 3 0 PAOK UEFA Europa League 2 2 Tottenham 2 0 AZ Alkmaar 2 1 Juventus 2014 15 UEFA Champions League 0 2 Zenit 1 0 Monaco 0 0 Bayer Leverkusen 2015 16 UEFA Champions League 2 0 Astana 2 1 Galatasaray 1 2 Atletico Madrid 1 0 Zenit 2 2 Bayern Munich 2016 17 UEFA Champions League 1 1 Besiktas 1 0 Dynamo Kyiv 1 2 Napoli 1 0 Borussia Dortmund 2017 18 UEFA Champions League 1 2 CSKA Moscow 0 1 Manchester United 0 2 Basel 2018 19 1 0 Fenerbahce UEFA Champions League 1 1 PAOK 0 2 Bayern Munich 1 1 Ajax 1 0 AEK Athens 0 0 Galatasaray UEFA Europa League 3 0 Dinamo Zagreb 4 2 Eintracht Frankfurt 2019 20 1 2 RB Leipzig UEFA Champions League 2 1 Lyon 3 0 Zenit 3 3 Shakhtar Donetsk UEFA Europa League 2020 21 UEFA Europa League 3 0 Standard Liege 3 3 Rangers 4 0 Lech Poznan 2021 22 UEFA Champions League 2 0 Spartak Moscow 2 1 PSV Eindhoven 3 0 Barcelona 0 4 Bayern Munich 2 0 Dynamo Kyiv 2 2 Ajax 1 3 Liverpool 2022 23 UEFA Champions League 4 1 Midtjylland 3 0 Dynamo Kyiv 1 0 Maccabi Haifa 1 1 Paris Saint Germain 4 3 Juventus 5 1 Club Brugge 0 2 Inter Milan 2023 24 0 2 Red Bull Salzburg UEFA Champions League 0 1 Real Sociedad 2 1 Toulouse UEFA Europa League 2 2 Rangers All time statistics112 matches 69 wins 21 draws 22 losses 190 goals scored 98 goals concededConcerts editDate Artist band Concert tour1 2 June 2019 Ed Sheeran 17 Tour26 June 2023 Rammstein 18 Rammstein Stadium Tour24 25 May 2024 Taylor Swift 19 The Eras TourSee also editList of football stadiums in PortugalNotes edit a b The match was played behind closed doors to comply with restrictions during the COVID 19 pandemic References edit a b Vender jogadores para gerar receitas Selling players to generate revenue Record in Portuguese 29 April 2015 Retrieved 8 November 2018 a b History has been made S L Benfica 13 May 2017 Retrieved 29 April 2018 fsd150611 pdf PDF CMVM in Portuguese S L Benfica 14 April 2016 pp 81 82 Archived from the original PDF on 18 November 2017 Retrieved 25 July 2016 Estadio da Luz e o mais bonito da Europa Estadio da Luz is the most beautiful of Europe Record in Portuguese 22 October 2014 Archived from the original on 24 October 2014 Retrieved 18 June 2016 Luz considerado o estadio mais bonito Luz considered the most beautiful stadium SAPO Desporto in Portuguese 22 October 2014 Retrieved 30 May 2017 Tavares da Silva Hugo 22 October 2014 Estadio da Luz e o mais bonito da Europa Estadio da Luz is the most beautiful of Europe Observador in Portuguese Retrieved 30 May 2017 Luz recebeu mais de 17 milhoes de espectadores em 15 anos Da Luz welcomed more than 17 million spectators in 15 years A Bola in Portuguese 25 October 2018 Archived from the original on 26 October 2018 Retrieved 26 October 2018 Silveira Joao Pedro Luz a Catedral Luz the Cathedral zerozero in Portuguese Retrieved 8 May 2019 Lutz Tom 20 March 2012 Benfica s Stadium of Light to host 2014 Champions League final The Guardian Retrieved 30 August 2017 Estadio do Sport Lisboa e Benfica Luz Sport Lisboa e Benfica Site Oficial Archived from the original on 30 August 2017 Retrieved 20 April 2016 Hunter James 20 April 2017 The Princess Diana Stadium Sir Bob Murray reveals request to rename the Stadium of Light ChronicleLive Retrieved 28 December 2018 15 Best Football Stadiums in the World twelfthman blog 10 December 2019 Archived from the original on 10 December 2019 Retrieved 10 December 2019 Arquiteto da Luz admite alargamento para 80 mil lugares Da Luz architect admits enlargement to 80 thousand seats Bancada in Portuguese 29 October 2020 Retrieved 17 June 2023 Full time report PDF UEFA com Union of European Football Associations 24 May 2014 Retrieved 24 May 2014 Full Time Summary Quarter finals Barcelona v Bayern Munich PDF UEFA com Union of European Football Associations 14 August 2020 Retrieved 14 August 2020 6 5 after penalty shoot out As imagens do concerto de Ed Sheeran no estadio da Luz The pictures of Ed Sheeran s concert at Estadio da Luz Renascenca in Portuguese 2 June 2019 Retrieved 28 June 2023 Rammstein a Luz com labaredas as fotos Rammstein Luz with flames the photos M80 in Portuguese 28 June 2023 Retrieved 28 June 2023 Taylor Swift The Eras Tour taylorswift com Retrieved 5 July 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Estadio da Luz Official website Estadio da Luz at StructuraePreceded byDe KuipRotterdam UEFA European ChampionshipFinal venue2004 Succeeded byErnst Happel StadionViennaPreceded byWembley StadiumLondon UEFA Champions LeagueFinal venue2014 Succeeded byOlympiastadionBerlinPreceded byMetropolitano Stadium Madrid UEFA Champions LeagueFinal venue2020 Succeeded byEstadio do DragaoPorto Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Estadio da Luz amp oldid 1214094135, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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