Ciudad Deportiva

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Ciudad Deportiva is a term from Spanish which refers to a sports club's training center, usually for the football team. They are also, depending on the individual club, sometimes health and recreational facilities with members-only access, and facilities including housing for the club's youth development programs. When referred to in the definite singular, however, the term almost always refers to Real Madrid's former training complex located on the Paseo de la Castellana in Madrid.

[edit] Real Madrid

Completed under the presidency of Santiago Bernabéu Yeste in 1963, the Ciudad Deportiva was a novel concept at the time, located on the city's outskirts. It had training pitches for the first team and youth categories as well as facilities for club members, such as swimming pools and recreational rooms. At the time, Real Madrid also had sections devoted to other sports, such as tennis, and these athletes trained there as well.

The site also contained the Pabellón Raimundo Saporta, built in 1966, where Real Madrid's Basketball team played its home games for 38 years. Some of Europe's greatest players, including Drazen Petrovic and Arvydas Sabonis of later NBA fame, once called it home.

[edit] Controversy

By the end of the 20th century the land surrounding the Ciudad Deportiva was no longer on the outskirts of Madrid, but had become a transportation hub with the north of the city and a financial area. Its location along the Castellana further increased the land's value. With Real Madrid's debts mounting in the late 1990s, plans to re-zone and commercially develop the land were mooted several times, but it wasn't until the presidency of Florentino Pérez that these plans came to fruition.

Although commonly believed to be a direct transaction in which Real Madrid sold the land to the Madrid city council, this is not in fact what happened. In 2000 there was a motion proposed, voted on, and approved in the Madrid parliament to re-zone the area of the Ciudad Deportiva, which until then was zoned for non-commercial purposes. In this vote, the Partido Popular (People's Party) and the Izquierda Unida (United Left) voted in favor, the PSOE (Socialist Party) voting against.

The agreement between Real Madrid and the local government stipulated that in exchange for re-zoning the land Real Madrid would cede a portion of the land to the Government. Then, in public project bids, both Real Madrid and the Government sold their portions to four corporations, Repsol YPF, Mutua Automovilística de Madrid, Sacyr Vallehermoso and OHL, for which Real Madrid earned an estimated 480 million euros. These four corporations are, as of August 2006, constructing four skyscrapers on the site which will become their headquarters. The government also gained land which they sold in public bidding, and a large amount of greenspace.

Although un-named clubs requested that the European Union investigate the transaction, the EU found no wrongdoing or evidence of state subsidies.

[edit] Ciudad del Madrid

With a portion of the funds obtained from the Ciudad Deportiva, Real Madrid constructed new training facilities in Valdebebas, which like the Ciudad Deportiva in 1963, are currently on the outskirts of the city. The new facilities, named Ciudad Real Madrid and inaugurated in 2005, are extremely modern and at 1.2 square kilometres are ten times larger than the former facilities.