Green Point Stadium

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Green Point Stadium
Location Cape Town, South Africa
Opened
Owner City of Cape Town
Operator To be announced
Surface Grass
Construction cost R2.85 billion
Architect GMP Architects, Louis Karol Architects, Point Architects
Tenants To be confirmed
Capacity
68,000 (FIFA) Overlay 55,000 (Legacy) (football)

Field dimensions 290m x 265 m x 48m

The Green Point Stadium in Cape Town, South Africa is a stadium under construction for the 2010 FIFA World Cup.[1] During the planning stage it was referred to by some as the African Renaissance Stadium.

Contents

[edit] The stadium and the World Cup

The stadium is to be located in Green Point, between Signal Hill and the Atlantic Ocean, close to the Cape Town city centre and to the Victoria & Alfred Waterfront, a popular tourist and shopping venue. The stadium will have a capacity of 68,000.[2] The stadium will be connected to the waterfront by a new road connection, Granger Bay Boulevard, and will be surrounded by a 60 hectare urban park.

In the World Cup, it will host five first round matches, one second round, one quarter-final and one semi-final.[3]

[edit] Previous stadium

The beginnings of the Old Green Point Stadium during the Second Boer War. The old Mouille Point Lighthouse is visible in the background.
The beginnings of the Old Green Point Stadium during the Second Boer War. The old Mouille Point Lighthouse is visible in the background.
Aerial view of the Old Green Point Stadium, which was demolished during 2007.
Aerial view of the Old Green Point Stadium, which was demolished during 2007.
A close up of the Green Point Lighthouse.
A close up of the Green Point Lighthouse.

The stadium replaces an 18,000 seat stadium of the same name.

The previous stadium, which was demolished in 2007, was a multi-purpose stadium used mainly for football matches, and was the home ground of Santos Football Club and Ajax Cape Town at different points. It also hosted music concerts including Michael Jackson, U2, Metallica, Paul Simon, and the 2003 46664 Concert for the benefit of AIDS victims.

[edit] Stadium design

The stadium will contain 68 000 seats for the World Cup. 55 000 Seats will remain permanent and 15 000 modular seats will be re-used in the deconstruction of the existing Green Point Stadium and other social investment opportunities, leaving opportunities for corporate suites to be retrofitted.

The stadium architecture focuses on the exterior appearance as well as on the user experience for the visitor once inside the stadium bowl. The exterior appearance is largely defined by a sweeping silhouette, not to be in competition with the horizontal datum line of Table Mountain, and the façade, made of a stretched fibre-glass mesh and designed as an articulated surface that makes the building appear almost scaleless.

The roof is designed as suspended roof plane. Tt focuses attention downwards onto the playing field. At the same time, the underside of the roof surface, hovering above the spectators, operates in a way similar to the façade. The translucent mesh skin under the steel cable and truss structure will act as a luminous disc during days of sunlight and will transmit the colour and atmosphere of the day into the stadium interior. The double skin design of the roof further makes it possible to accommodate (unsightly) services therein and, for example, avoid the use of pylons for the floodlighting. It fulfils an important function as far as noise attenuation is concerned. The roof structure is designed as an acoustic “body” with its own internal volume. The principle of utilising the air space inside the body of the roof as a noise buffer is one of the compelling simple and active design principles applied to the stadium. The key to this principle is the requirement that the “inner” (lower) and “outer” (upper) surface of the roof structure must have different densities and therefore display different acoustic performance characteristics.

The current design foresees and ETFE (fibreglass-like) cloth membrane, which is partly permeable. This “breathing” softer inner skin disperses sound waves and, since it is not a hard surface, absorbs sound into the body of the roof. The outer (top) skin is currently designed and budgeted as a fixed glass skin, which provides a hard resonant surface which reflects sound waves back into the body of the roof. Through the sloping surface of the roof, sound waves are diffracted back against the soft inner skin membrane, where they are further dispersed.


The stadium is organized into six principal levels, broadly containing the following functions and zones:

• Level 0 Sports team rooms, VVIP and VIP reception, lowest parking level, medical and police facilities, waste collection and compaction.

• Level 1 Media areas, TV and radio studios, FIFA offices and sports event staff offices, and upper parking level.

• Level 2: Public Plaza Main concourse pedestrian access down to lowest tier and up to second tier, disabled person’s seating, fan shop, VIP welcome zone, concession stands.

• Level 3 Lower level of business club, multi-purpose hall, security and police offices, operator’s storage spaces, smaller food kitchens.

• Level 4 Upper level of business club, larger food preparation kitchens, stadium administration (operator’s) offices.

• Level 5 VIP lounges and private corporate boxes. • Level 6 Upper concourse, concession stands and access onto third tier of seats.

• The roof Is located above the highest level of seats, and contains an accessible roof including the ‘Ring of Fire’ lighting and media zone, with catwalk access into and through the roof structure.

[edit] Possible use after the World Cup

Following the World Cup, the stadium will be used mostly for football and rugby union matches.

In mid 2006 it was reported that the Western Province Rugby Union may become tenants at the stadium post-2010. The chief reason for the move from the traditional rugby ground at Newlands Stadium is so the stadium has a sustainable base after the FIFA World Cup. The consultants to the City of Cape Town originally approached Western Province with the idea, as well as talking to local football teams Ajax Cape Town and Santos. It is possible that the Stormers may move in as well if the Western Province leaves Newlands, although no moves are yet confirmed.[4]

The City of Cape Town is still weighing up three bids which were received for the tender to run the Green Point Stadium and surrounding urban park following the 2010 FIFA World CupTM. The tender is for a 30-year lease, which has an estimated present-day value of R260-million.

Bidders need to convince the committee that they will be able to generate an income for that period, in order to sustain the stadium and the Green Point Urban Park, and not become a burden on ratepayers. The winning bidder would also need to engage with the community in order to run the stadium and park.

The three bidders submitted include seven entities. One bid came from a single company, the other from two and the third from four companies. It is now up to the tender evaluation committee to weigh them up.

Present zoning rights mean the stadium and park can be used as places of assembly, instruction or recreation.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Venues - Cape Town. FIFA. Retrieved on 2007-05-26.
  2. ^ African Renaissance Stadium. Retrieved on 2007-05-26.
  3. ^ SA 2010: frequent questions. southafrica.info. Retrieved on 2007-05-26.
  4. ^ Peters, Rob. "WP to leave Newlands?", iafrica.com, 17 July 2006. 

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 33°54′19″S, 18°24′31″E