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1 History  





2 List of games  





3 References  














Lena-Arena






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Coordinates: 51°1549.27N 6°4347.79E / 51.2636861°N 6.7299417°E / 51.2636861; 6.7299417
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Lena-Arena
Exterior view of the Lena-Arena
Map
LocationDüsseldorf, Germany
Coordinates51°15′49.27″N 6°43′47.79″E / 51.2636861°N 6.7299417°E / 51.2636861; 6.7299417
Capacity20,168
Record attendance20,100
Construction
BuiltJanuary–March 2011
Opened26 March 2011 (2011-03-26)
ClosedMay 2011
Demolished2011
Construction cost2.8 million
ArchitectNussli Group
Tenants
Fortuna Düsseldorf (April–May 2011)

The Lena-Arena, also known as the airberlin world for sponsorship purposes, was Fortuna Düsseldorf's temporary stadium during the hosting of the Eurovision Song Contest 2011 at Fortuna's ESPRIT Arena.

History[edit]

Following Lena Meyer-Landrut's, of whom the stadium would be named after, win representing Germany at the Eurovision Song Contest 2010, the 2011 edition of the contest was held in DüsseldorfinFortuna Düsseldorf's ESPRIT Arena. As a result of this, Fortuna's stadium was rendered unusable for football for the final three home games of the 2010–11 2. Bundesliga season. Moves to the neighbouring cities of Mönchengladbach, Köln, Bochum, and Leverkusen were ruled out, as well as an expansion Fortuna Düsseldorf's previous stadium, the Paul-Janes-Stadion, for security reasons. Constructed by the Swiss-based Nussli Group in under 50 days, construction began in January 2011 on a budget of 2.8 million on Fortuna's training ground.[1][2]

With a capacity of 20,168 and sponsored by Air Berlin and stylised as airberlin world,[3] the stadium hosted its first game on 26 March 2011, with Germany under-17 beating Ukraine U17 2–0.[4] Fortuna Düsseldorf won all three of their games hosted at the Lena-Arena, with Sascha Rösler scoring in every game hosted at the stadium. The club hold the unique record of winning every game in their home stadium. The stadium was dismantled at the end of May 2011.[1]

List of games[edit]

26 March 2011 2011 UEFA European U17 Championship elite round Germany U17 Germany 2–0 Ukraine Ukraine U17 Düsseldorf
14:00 Perrey 10'
Yeşil 31'
Report Stadium: Lena-Arena
Attendance: 6,300
Referee: Padraigh Sutton (Ireland)
15 April 2011 2. Bundesliga Fortuna Düsseldorf 3–0 1. FC Union Berlin Düsseldorf
17:00 Rösler 17'
Lambertz 36'
Ilsø 67'
Report Stadium: Lena-Arena
Attendance: 18,900
Referee: Christian Fischer
8 May 2011 2. Bundesliga Fortuna Düsseldorf 3–1 Alemannia Aachen Düsseldorf
12:30 Langeneke 14'
Rösler 22'
Beister 70'
Report Stehle 45' Stadium: Lena-Arena
Attendance: 20,100
Referee: Peter Sippel

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Als Fortuna in der Lena-Arena von Sieg zu Sieg eilte". Rheinische Post (in German). 24 April 2020. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  • ^ "Nun wird schon das Tribünen-Dach angeschraubt". Express (in German). 2 February 2011. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  • ^ "Düsseldorf – Bielefeld". Bild (in German). Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  • ^ "Lena Arena eröffnet". Der Westen (in German). 26 March 2011. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  • 51°15′49.27″N 6°43′47.79″E / 51.2636861°N 6.7299417°E / 51.2636861; 6.7299417


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lena-Arena&oldid=1142964383"

    Categories: 
    Fortuna Düsseldorf
    Air Berlin
    Defunct football venues in Germany
    Buildings and structures in Düsseldorf
    Sport in Düsseldorf
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    Sports venues completed in 2011
    2011 disestablishments in Germany
    2011 establishments in Germany
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    This page was last edited on 5 March 2023, at 06:24 (UTC).

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