Rungrado May Day Stadium

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Coordinates: 39°2′58.47″N, 125°46′30.79″E

Rungrado May Day Stadium
May Day Stadium
Location Pyongyang, North Korea
Opened May 1, 1989
Owner
Surface Grass
Tenants Parades/shows celebrating Kim Il-sung and North Korea.
Arirang Festival
North Korea national football team (some games)
Capacity 150,000
Field dimensions Main pitch- 22,500 m²
Total floor space- over 207,000 m²
Rungrado May Day Stadium
Chosŏn'gŭl 릉라도 5월1일경기장
Hancha 綾羅島 5月1日競技場
McCune-Reischauer Rŭngrado Owŏl Iril Kyŏnggijang
Revised Romanization Reungrado 5(o)-wol 1(ir)-il Gyeonggijang

The Rŭngrado May First Stadium, or May Day Stadium, is a stadium in Pyongyang, North Korea, completed on May 1, 1989. Its names come from Rungra Island in the Taedong River, upon which it is situated, and May Day, the international day celebrating labour and particularly celebrated among communists. Its scalloped roof features 16 arches arranged in a ring, and it is said to resemble a parachute or a magnolia blossom. It is not to be confused with the also large Kim Il-sung Stadium.

The stadium can seat 150,000[1][2] for events on a main pitch sprawling across over 22,500 m² (242,200 ft²). Its total floor space is over 207,000 m² (2.2 million ft²) across eight stories, and the lobes of its roof peak at more than 60 m (197 ft) from the ground.

While the stadium is used for sporting events, it is more famous as the site of massive parades and shows celebrating Kim Il-sung and the Korean nation. In May of 2002 it was the site of the colossal and meticulously choreographed "Arirang" gymnastic and artistic performance in honor of Kim Jong-il's 60th birthday. The extravaganza involved some 100,000 participants—double the number of spectators[3]— and was open to foreigners, a rare occurrence. Critics of the regime said the spectacle was an attempt to distract from the 2002 World Cup being co-hosted by South Korea shortly thereafter, and an effort to raise scarce hard currency.

It was also the venue in which Kim Jong-Il in 2000 entertained Madeleine Albright, the U.S. Secretary of State under President Bill Clinton and the highest ranking American official ever to visit North Korea.

At the end of the 1990s, a number of North Korean army generals were executed by being burned alive in the stadium.[4]

The largest crowd to attend a professional wrestling card (190,000 on April 29, 1995) was present at May Day stadium; the card was promoted by Japan-based New Japan Pro Wrestling circuit and also included Western wrestlers from the American World Championship Wrestling promotion.

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[edit] References

  1. ^ Rungrado May Day Stadium. WorldStadiums.com. Retrieved on 2008-05-16.
  2. ^ www.fussballtempel.net
  3. ^ Watts, Jonathan. "Despair, hunger and defiance at the heart of the greatest show on earth", The Guardian, 17 May 2002. 
  4. ^ Soukhorukov, Sergey. "Train blast was 'a plot to kill North Korea's leader'", The Daily Telegraph. 

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