Jagodina City Stadium

Coordinates: 43°58′7.86″N 21°16′6.28″E / 43.9688500°N 21.2684111°E / 43.9688500; 21.2684111
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Jagodina City Stadium
floodlights)
2013 (new seats for the south stand)
Expanded2009
Tenants
FK Jagodina, Tabane-Jagodina

Jagodina City Stadium (Serbian: Градски стадион у Јагодини / Gradski stadion u Jagodini), locally known as Stadion pod Đurđevim brdom (Serbian Cyrillic: Стадион под Ђурђевим брдом; Stadium under the Đurđev-Hill), is a multi-use all-seated stadium in Jagodina, Serbia. It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home ground of FK Jagodina. The stadium has a seating capacity for 9,977 people.[1]

History

The stadium is located in the very south of Jagodina and is part of the sports and leisure complex Đurđevo brdo. In the immediate vicinity of the stadium are another

football pitch, a modern water park and the Zoo Park Jagodina, a tennis court complex and a sports hall, as well as a kart racing track, a hotel and nature park
.

It was built in 1958 and had a capacity of up to 20,000 spectators, but has been completely renovated from 2007 to 2008, which significantly reduced the capacity.

VIP
rooms, while the roof of the north stand was completed 2009. In the north stand is also a smaller hotel located.

In 2009, the field was renovated and a new

floodlights with strength of 1,500 lux.[4]
Its installation cost was about 400,000 Euro. In 2013, the southern stand was also equipped with seats, so the stadium is owned by four seat grandstands.

At the stadium are planned more renovations or projects, such as the construction of living rooms under the north stand, which are intended for the club players, as well as the completion of the west stand. Other future projects include a new blue tartan track, the main color of the club, as well as further reconstruction on the east and south stand, including its roofing.

See also

References

  1. ^ Srpski fudbal - Stadion pod Đurđevim brdom
  2. ^ FK Jagodina Archived 2013-11-06 at the Wayback Machine at srpskistadioni.in.rs
  3. ^ fkjagodina.com - Blue Cafe
  4. ^ "Jagodina pod reflektorima" (in Serbian). By YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 7 December 2012.