Brazil’s Once World’s Largest Stadium Gets Olympic Face-lift

Maracanã stadium in Rio, Brazil Nicknamed the Soccer Temple by Brazilians, Rio de Janeiro's Maracanã Stadium, which is due to stage the opening and closing ceremonies of the 2016 Olympics as well as the 2014 World Cup final, is to get a US$ 300 million, announced Marcia Lins, Rio's Secretary of Sports and Tourism.

The work on the iconic stadium, the largest in the world when it was inaugurated in 1950 for the World Cup, is planned to start in March of next year to be completed by December 2012.

Marcia Lins said: "The start of renovation work at the stadium is planned for March 2010 but it will only close completely in September. The concept of the Maracanã for 2014 is to become a city's great public park, allowing the fan to arrive earlier and take advantage of several services, such as bars, restaurants and shops."

The Maracanã is classified as a historic monument so the façade will be maintained but a roof will be added to the five-store oval stadium.

Originally built to hold 200,000, the present capacity will be reduced from 87,000 to 82,000 at the recommendation of FIFA, football's world governing body who is overseeing preparations for the 2014 World Cup.

Lins said: "Before, stadiums were practically just large pitches but today they are multi-disciplined arenas."

The renovation to the stadium, which will also host the finals of the Olympic football tournament in 2016, includes upgraded changing rooms, a new area for the media, new seats, toilets and restaurants while the northern area of the city has also been earmarked for regeneration.

The stadium, named after the region it is located in, was originally built in only two years after Brazil were awarded the 1950 World Cup, although several aspects were left uncompleted, including the toilet and press facilities.

The attendance for the final game of that tournament was officially 199,854, with the actual attendance estimated to be about 210,000.

Due to the schedule for that World Cup, there was no final match that year.

But Brazil faced Uruguay in the last match of the tournament, needing only a draw to finish top of the group, but Uruguay won the game 2-1, shocking the thousands who attended the game.

It is an event that remains deeply burnt into the psyche of many Brazilians.

The stadium was finally fully completed in 1965 and has continued to be the scene for several historic football moments, including the 1,000th goal of Pelé's career in November 19, 1969, several Soccer Brazilian Championship finals and some non-football ones, such as Paul McCartney playing to a world record crowd of 180,000 there in 1990.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

U.S. Control Over Internet Has to End, Says ECLAC, in Brazil

According to the secretary of the United Nations Economic Commission on Latin America and ...

25 de Março: Over a Century Later This Brazilian Street Is Still in Arab Hands

There were those who opened their doors in the late 19th century, others in ...

Ipiranga gas station in Brazil

Brazil’s Petrobras Buys Ipiranga Group for US$ 4 Billion

Government-controlled Brazilian oil giant Petrobras, Ultra group, in the gas, chemical and transport sector, ...

Lula Wants a Brazil-Nigeria Balanced Trade

Brazil is determined to balance its trade with Nigeria. In a speech this morning ...

Amrik, the Arab Life in Brazil and South America, Comes to NY

Photography show Amrik: The Arab Presence in South America, which was developed by the ...

Lula Washes Hands on Cuban Dissident’s Death and Is Called Accomplice of Torture

Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva denied on Wednesday, in Havana, that he ...

To Reach Today’s Japan Brazil Needs Annual 5.4% Growth till 2020

To reach 2020 with employment indices comparable to Japan’s current levels, Brazil must create ...

Follow the Leader

A Lula victory will allow Brazil, in alliance with some of the U.S.’s adversaries, ...

Brazilian CVRD’s Iron Ore Will Cost 19% More

Companhia Vale do Rio Doce (CVRD), the world’s largest iron ore producer, concluded the ...

Brazil Has 42 Million Volunteers

Brazil’s National Volunteer Day was commemorated yesterday, August 28. According to a study conducted ...