Neo Química Arena - Biblioteka.sk

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Neo Química Arena
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Neo Química Arena
Neo Química Arena
Map
Former namesArena Corinthians (2014–2020)
Arena de São Paulo (during the 2014 FIFA World Cup)
LocationAvenida Miguel Ignácio Curi, 111
São Paulo, Brazil[1]
Coordinates23°32′42.9″S 46°28′27.4″W / 23.545250°S 46.474278°W / -23.545250; -46.474278
Public transit Corinthians-Itaquera
OwnerCorinthians
OperatorCorinthians
TypeStadium
Genre(s)Sporting Events
Executive suites89[1]
Capacity47,252[12][13]
68,727 (FIFA World Cup 2014)[14]
Record attendance63,267 (Netherlands – Argentina, 9 July 2014)[15]
Field size105 by 68 metres (115 by 74 yd)[16]
Field shaperectangular
SurfacePerennial Ryegrass with Artificial Fibres (Desso GrassMaster)[4]
ScoreboardFour high-resolution 30 by 7.5 metres (32.8 by 8.2 yd) LED screens[5]
Construction
Broke ground30 May 2011[2]
Built30 May 2011 – 15 April 2014[3]
Opened10 May 2014
Construction cost
ArchitectAníbal Coutinho,[7] Gensler[8]
Project managerAndrés Sánchez[9]
Structural engineerWerner Sobek[10]
Services engineerFrederico Barbosa[11]
Main contractorsOdebrecht
Tenants
Corinthians (2014–present)
Brazil national football team (selected matches)
Website
neoquimicaarena.com.br

Arena Corinthians, also known as the Neo Química Arena for sponsorship reasons, is a sports stadium located in São Paulo, Brazil. It is owned, operated, and used by Corinthians. It has a seating capacity of 47,252,[12][17] making it the fifth-largest stadium used by teams in the top tier of the Brazilian League and 14th-largest stadium in Brazil.

It hosted six matches during the 2014 FIFA World Cup, including the opening match on 12 June 2014.[18] Because of a requirement for it to have at least 65,000 seats for the World Cup opening match, temporary seats were added to the stadium for the tournament.[19][20][21] The temporary seats started to be removed shortly after its last World Cup match.[22][23]

History

Background

In 1980, Corinthians was planning to build a new 201,304-capacity stadium, as their own Alfredo Schürig Stadium, also known as Parque São Jorge, held fewer than 14,000 people and the city's Pacaembu Stadium had to be shared with other teams.[24] Plans to build a new stadium required a large area. The club's president Vicente Matheus asked for a concession from São Paulo's mayor Olavo Setúbal in the Itaquera region, east of the city centre. The mayor accepted the request 10 November 1978[25] and a concession for 90 years was granted on 26 December 1978 for a 197,000 square metres (49 acres) property.[26] The area was owned at the time by COHAB, an agency for public housing controlled by the São Paulo City government.[26][27] The original plan was to build the stadium in three to five years.[25] The concession was renewed in 1988 for 90 years, with the condition that any construction made in the area would revert to the city at no cost.[28] However, funding was not obtained and other alternatives were considered, such as a concession for the Pacaembu Stadium[29] and demolishing the Alfredo Schürig Stadium making room for another.[30][31][32]

On 31 August 2010, Corinthians announced the construction of the stadium with an estimated cost of R$335 million and an expected gross revenue of R$100 million per year.[33] The original plans allow for an expansion to 70,000 seats.[34] The club expected to get financing from BNDES and sell the naming rights for the stadium to pay for the construction costs.[35] The main architect of the project was Aníbal Coutinho; he was assisted by Antônio Paulo Cordeiro[1] from Coutinho, Diegues, Cordeiro (DDG),[36] partnering with Werner Sobek, who rendered structural engineering services.[37] The stadium was planned to be completed by March 2013.[38]

FIFA World Cup 2014 hosting

Accenture estimated that the World Cup opening would bring R$30.75 Billion over 10 years to the city's economy; the study's results encouraged Brazil to site the opening match in São Paulo.[39][40] A study from Fundação Getúlio Vargas estimated R$1 Billion in revenue during the World Cup, as 290 thousand tourists were expected for the event.[41] After Morumbi Stadium was deemed unsuitable by FIFA, the Local World Cup Committee looked for alternatives and set on offering Arena Corinthians to host the opening game; FIFA accepted the suggestion and confirmed the decision on 10 October 2011.[42] Hosting the opening game required modifications to the project that raised the cost from the original R$335 million to R$1.07 billion to accommodate FIFA's requirements. Cuts in equipment, furniture and construction costs reduced the cost.[43] Because of FIFA's agreements with Brazil, none of the construction work related to the World Cup was taxed by the Federal Government; the final price agreed upon was R$820 million.[44]

A new contract was signed on 19 July 2011 with Odebrecht; R$400 million of the total would be financed by BNDES and the remaining R$420 million would come from tax credits granted by the city.[45] A 2007 law stated the tax credits could be used by any company that established itself in the Eastern region of the city, providing a credit of R$0.60 per R$1.00 invested.[46] A new law was passed by the city legislature to deal specifically with this stadium and reduce the incentives, linking the concession of the credits to hosting the World Cup opening match and limiting the total amount of credits to R$420 million.[47] The concession was justified by the expectation that the stadium will generate R$950 million in city taxes during the six years after its opening. R$530 million in excess of the tax credits were given.[39] The financing contract with BNDES was signed on 29 November 2013, under their ProCopas Arenas World Cup program. Caixa Econômica Federal is the distributing agent.[48]

The estimated construction cost did not include the R$38.1 million required for adding temporary bleachers,[49][50] which were removed after the World Cup was over.[22] They were set on one of the sides and on the north and south ends.[51] The addition of the bleachers would raise the stadium's capacity up to 72,000 seats, but would necessitate the relocation of VIP areas and television equipment[51] reducing capacity.[52] Corinthians paid for additional temporary infrastructure required exclusively for the World Cup, which was estimated to cost between R$60 million and 100 million.[6]

The World Cup brought more than 500,000 tourists and an estimated R$1 billion in revenue to the city.[53]

Project costs and revenue

The stadium eventually cost R$965 million, 15% more than originally estimated. The two-year delay in receiving BNDES funds caused an increase of R$108 million to the cost because of the difference in interest between loans taken from regular banks and from the government agency. Temporary structures were included in the total cost, currently estimated to be R$77 million. After the sale of the tax credits received, Corinthians will have to pay between R$700 and R$750 million spread over 12 years.[6] Aníbal Coutinho projected the stadium to generate R$150 million per year.[54] Andres Sanchez expects revenue to reach R$200 million per year and expenses to be up to R$35 million per year. Revenue will come from ticket sales and commercial properties in the arena, especially corporate conventions, fairs and events.[6] On 25 August 2013, Andres said that out of 16 naming rights properties, he had already secured seven buyers, although no deals had yet been formalised.[55] The club plans to sell the stadium naming rights for R$400 million for 20 years.[6]

Construction

The stadium under construction in December 2012

The stadium was delivered to Corinthians on 15 April 2014. Modifications for hosting the World Cup were still underway until the club handed the arena to FIFA for the competition on 20 May 2014.[3] The peak number of workers on site was 2,300, recorded in November 2012.[11] The enterprise generated 26 thousand jobs during its construction.[56]

Renovations

After the World Cup, Corinthians formally moved into the stadium; it was 92% ready for their use just after the tournament,[57] and was completely retrofitted by February 2015.[58] The estimated cost of the renovations was R$20 million.[59] One of the largest changes was the construction of large balconies and the installation of scoreboards behind the goals where the temporary seating was installed for the World Cup.[60]

Landscaping

The west side has a large, tree-lined, pedestrian mall with a reflecting pool and new illumination.[61] The reflecting pools also work as a performance fountain, providing splash and spectacle at programmed moments during stadium events.[62] Around the complex, granite flooring have stripes evocative of the club's second uniform, in synchronisation with the external illumination. There are benches and large gardens; the media centre is housed in one of them.[61] The landscaping was designed by John Loomis, who headed the Burj Khalifa project. Lighting was projected by the American firm T. Kondos.[61]

Stadium firsts

Rivellino (between Vampeta and Alessandro) scored the first goal at the inaugural match at Arena Corinthians

The first event held in the arena was an Ivete Sangalo show for 3,000, celebrating the club's 103rd anniversary on 29 September 2013.[63] The first public football matches at the stadium consisted of friendlies between former Corinthians players on 10 May 2014. More than 100 players played at the event.[64]

The first goal at the new stadium was scored by Rivellino from a penalty kick conceded by Palhinha. Rivellino shot at his own goal because all the players on the pitch insisted that the first goal at the Arena was his. The kick went past Ronaldo.[64] The first competitive game was a 2014 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A match between Corinthians and Figueirense on 18 May 2014, when hosts Corinthians lost to Figueirense 0–1.[65] The first international match was the opening match for the 2014 FIFA World Cup between Brazil and Croatia on 12 June 2014.[66]

International events

2014 FIFA World Cup

Temporary seating and scoreboard on the South End for the World Cup

The stadium was one of the venues for the 2014 FIFA World Cup. Because of FIFA rules, it was called Arena de São Paulo during the tournament. The stadium hosted the opening ceremony followed by the opening match between Brazil and Croatia, three other group stage matches, a Round 16 match and a semi-final. Because of the request of at least 65,000 seats for the World Cup opening match, temporary seats were added to the stadium for the tournament, although the final usable capacity only reached 62,200 for the opening match.[19][20]

As the original screens were too large to be used with the temporary seating installed, temporary screens were rented specially for the World Cup.[67][68][69] FIFA requires screens smaller than the originally projected, with a 90 square metres (970 sq ft) area.[70] Because subsequent matches had lower VIP and press demands, 4,000 more seats were added, raising the usable capacity to 66,200.[52]

FIFA World Cup 2014 Opening Ceremony
Date Time (UTC-03) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
12 June 2014 17:00  Brazil 3–1  Croatia Group A (Opening Match) 62,103[66]
19 June 2014 16:00  Uruguay 2–1  England Group D 62,575[71]
23 June 2014 13:00  Netherlands 2–0  Chile Group B 62,996[72]
26 June 2014 17:00  South Korea 0–1  Belgium Group H 61,397[73]
1 July 2014 13:00  Argentina 1–0 (a.e.t)   Switzerland Round of 16 63,255[74]
9 July 2014 17:00  Netherlands 0–0 (a.e.t) (2–4 p)  Argentina Semi-Finals 63,267[15]

2016 Summer Olympics

Arena Corinthians was one of the venues of the 2016 Summer Olympics football tournament.[75] It was chosen instead of competitors Morumbi Stadium—the chosen venue before Arena Corinthians was built—[76] and Allianz Parque.[77] Sixteen games were played in the stadium from 3 to 16 August 2016; they were divided equally between men's and women's tournaments. Two matches were played at 17:00 and 21:30 hours on competition days.[78][79]

Women's tournament

Date Time (UTC-03) Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round Attendance
3 August 2016 15:00  Canada 2–0  Australia Group F 20,521
18:00  Zimbabwe 1–6  Germany
6 August 2016 15:00  Canada 3–1  Zimbabwe 30,295
18:00  Germany 2–2  Australia 37,475
12 August 2016 19:00  Canada 1–0  France Quarterfinal 38,688
19 August 2016 13:00  Brazil 1–2  Canada Bronze Medal Match 39,718

Men's tournament

Date Time (UTC-03) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
10 August 2016 19:00  Colombia 2–0  Nigeria Group B 36,702
22:00  South Africa 1–1  Iraq Group A 37,742
13 August 2016 22:00  Brazil 2–0  Colombia Quarterfinal 41,560
17 August 2016 16:00  Nigeria 0–2  Germany Semifinal 35,562

2019 Copa América

Arena Corinthians was one of the venues of the 2019 Copa América.[80]

Date Time (UTC-03) Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round Attendance
22 June 2019 16:00  Peru 0–5  Brazil Group A 42,317
28 June 2019 20:20  Colombia 0–0 (4–5 pen.)  Chile Quarter-finals 44,062
6 July 2019 16:00  Argentina 2–1 Third place match 44,269

NFL International Series

In November 2023, the National Football League announced it would play its first game in South America at Arena Corinthians during the 2024 season.[81] The league announced in February 2024 that the Philadelphia Eagles would host the Green Bay Packers during the first week of the regular season on 6 September 2024.[82]

Year Date Designated

visitor

Score Designated

home team

Score Attendance
2024 September 6 Green Bay Packers Philadelphia Eagles

Names

The stadium was called Estádio do Corinthians by Corinthians when it was announced.[33] The name being used on the club's official website is Arena Corinthians.[83] The Brazilian Football Confederation uses the name Arena Corinthians.[65] FIFA referred to the stadium as Arena de São Paulo during the World Cup, but also recognises the name Arena Corinthians.[84] The largest media company in Brazil, Rede Globo, uses Arena Corinthians[85] like sports diary Lance![86] Local media have tried to give it nicknames. For example, newspaper Folha[87] refer to Arena Corinthians as Itaquerão; O Estado de S. Paulo uses both the neighbourhood-based nickname and the official name.[88] Rede Record uses Fielzão.[89]

The club planned to sell the stadium naming rights for R$400 million for 20 years.[6] A study by Brunoro Sports Business estimated that the value should be R$21 million per year.[90] Companies Petrobras,[91] Ambev,[92] Grupo Petrópolis,[93] Etihad Airways,[94] Qatar Foundation,[94] Caixa Econômica Federal,[95] Emirates Airlines,[96] Bradesco,[97] Telefonica,[98] BMG,[99] Itaú Unibanco,[97] Santander Group,[100] Kalunga[101] and Zurich Insurance Group[102] have all been named as possible buyers, but no deal had been announced yet.[citation needed]

On 1 September 2020 (Corinthians' 110th anniversary) a special event live from the stadium was held to announce the Arena's new name. It was officially renamed Neo Química Arena, part of a 20-year partnership with Hypera Pharma, Brazil's largest pharmaceutical company. Neo Química is Hypera's generic drugs division, which already served as Corinthians' main sponsor during the 2010 and 2011 seasons. The full contract is expected to be around R$300–320 million.[103]

Architecture

Aníbal Coutinho designed the stadium to be one "that would help the supporters, that would help the team to win matches, I wanted to make the supporters get on the pitch".[89] Aníbal led a team of 25 architects.[55] The complex is in a 197,095 square metres (48.703 acres) property.[26] The built up area is 189,000 square metres (47 acres)[1] with 17,500 cubic metres (620,000 cu ft) of concrete.[37] 80% of the structural construction is made of precast elements, 40% manufactured on a 7,500 square metres (81,000 sq ft) plant on-site.[11][104]

The rectangular, 267 by 228 metres (876 by 748 ft), 43 metres (141 ft) tall stadium has two buildings; the main building on the west side and another on the east side.[36] When measurements are taken from the pitch, the east side height is 51 metres (167 ft), the west side is 57 metres (187 ft) and the north and south ends are 15 metres (49 ft) tall. The pitch sits at exactly 777 metres (2,549 ft); Aníbal Coutinho said, "The number 77 is considered lucky for the club. The club is located at 777 São Jorge St. and it brings to mind the 1977 that they won one of their most celebrated championships of all time." (the Campeonato Paulista of 1977).[105]

West and east sectors

West Side of the Stadium

The west side has a 6,200 square metres (67,000 sq ft) façade.[1] VIP seats, television crew equipment, press and most box seats are in the west building.[36] The glass has been designed with a curvature intended to simulate the visual effect of a ball hitting the net. Special, seamless, 26 metres (85 ft) beams have been developed to support the structure.[106] The geometry consulting company Evolute GmbH developed panelling that rationalised the 5,400 square metres (58,000 sq ft) double-curved freeform glass surface into 855 planar and cylindrical panels, all in hot bent toughened glass.[107] This solution allowed for minimising the number of shapes necessary by 93%, reducing costs considerably.[108] The photo-voltaic glass powers the air conditioning.[109] The complete glass structure is 6,900 square metres (74,000 sq ft) counting the sides; the façade width is 220 metres (720 ft) by 24 metres (79 ft) tall.[110]

The east side of the stadium houses one of the largest video screens of the world,[111] 170 by 20 metres (558 by 66 ft)—3,400 square metres (37,000 sq ft). It has 210,000 individual LEDs; 1,320 custom made luminaires are fitted in 4 metres (13 ft) long glass sheets.[5][106] The screen is manufactured by Osram Traxon and is controlled by an E:cue lighting control.[5] Glass for both façades were provided by Italian company Sunglass SRL,[112] using Asahi Glass Co.'s Planibel Clear glass.[113]

LED video screen on the East Side

External walls are covered by 12,000 square metres (130,000 sq ft)[114] of white Levantina Techlam ceramic tiles,[115][116] A 12 metres (39 ft) Corinthians symbol, constructed from stainless steel and backlighting, will be mounted on the south wall of the east side.[36]

The public circulates using 10 escalators, 15 lifts,[1] two ramps and 13 staircases.[105] 59 concession stands are available,[1] as is an auditorium for 360 people[55] and a 25,000 square metres (270,000 sq ft) convention center under the west building.[89] A museum dedicated to Corinthians will be set up in the east building.[117]

Interior design is designed by Gensler.[118] There are six changing rooms. Home team changing rooms occupy 1,300 square metres (14,000 sq ft), with Jacuzzis, cryotherapy and a private area for the coach. The warm-up area has seating for 86 VIP ticket holders, and is separated by soundproof glass.[55][119] All the public areas have air conditioning and are finished in marble, granite or top tier ceramic tile.[119]

Seating

There are 49,205 seats.[120] The stadium has 6,000 second tier covered seating and 10,000 VIP seats.[121] 89 luxury boxes accommodate 1,414 spectators. Distributed on the West building's 5th and 6th floors, 87% have 12 seats, 10% between 21 and 33 seats and 4 units more than 70 seats.[122] The largest units will cover more than 470 square metres (5,100 sq ft).[123] The lowest ring of bleachers encircle the entire arena. It holds 10,500 seats on each side, 6,000 behind the south goal and 9,000 behind the north goal for a total of 35,000+ places.[124]

The distance between the first row of seating and the field is 9 metres (30 ft) on all sides.[36] General seating is provided by Bluecube³ using an exclusive design based on the Integra model.[125] There are four different finishes, ranging from straight chairs without arms to stuffed chairs in leather. Most seats are white. Business level and box seats are finished in black leather and made by Poltrona Frau.[126] The 600 seats have laser-engraved club crests.[127]

Roof

The underside of the roof is lined by a membrane.

Werner Sobek designed the roof,[37] which is held in place by 48 75 metres (246 ft)-long trusses.[128] The west and east sides are joined by two identical structures that have a free span of 170 metres (560 ft).[129] The total east–west roof length is 245.75 metres (806.3 ft).[130] Aníbal Coutinho intended to bring a paulistano flair to the construction using structures that resemble the São Paulo Museum of Art, a symbol of the city.[123] The height of the roof and weight of the trusses required the use of the largest crawler crane available in Latin America.[131] The steel beams together weigh 4,000 tons.[132]

The roof has four layers. On the underside is a layer of corrugated steel sheets. Above them, thermal and acoustic insulation is provided by Polyisocyanurate sheets. A layer of plasterboard is above it.[133] Finally, the entire roof is covered with 40,000 square metres (430,000 sq ft)[134] of Firestone Ultraply TPO.[135] On the underside, a flexible membrane covers the structure.[136] This final layer helps to collect rainwater for reuse in other areas of the stadium.[133]

The structure was redesigned to duplicate the current noise level supporters create during games. Measurements taken on Pacaembu show that sound levels reach a peak of 113dB when goals are scored.[137] 4,500 square metres (48,000 sq ft) of glass will be installed on the end closest to the pitch of the west and east roofing.[138] The entire structure measures 32,300 square metres (348,000 sq ft)[139] and weights 6,500 tons.[130]

Scoreboards

Osram installed four scoreboards in the stadium, on the north and south ends, above the bleachers.[140] They are set in pairs, with one facing the pitch and one facing outside. Each screen is 225 square metres (2,420 sq ft) and measures 30 by 7.5 metres (98 by 25 ft).[106] The inside-facing screen has a 7mm dot pitch and the outside-facing screens will have a 20mm dot pitch.[141] 3,500 flat panel televisions are installed throughout the stadium, individually or as video walls,[142] comprising 3,100 stations.[140]

Lighting

The pitch lighting is going to use 352 Osram Siteco 2000-Watt Metal-halide[5] 6000K multivapour lamps, guaranteeing over 90% colour fidelity.[143] The 5,000 lux lighting is completely uniform and is 50% brighter than FIFA's recommendation.[138] Osram provides lighting for the entire complex.[5]

Pitchedit

The field has recommended FIFA dimensions[144] of 105 by 68 metres (115 by 74 yd).[16] It was prepared by World Sports in partnership with Desso.[145] The field is made up of Perennial Ryegrass, which is grown directly at the site. The original idea was to use black grass to avoid the colours of Palmeiras—Corinthians' biggest rivals—but it was proved to be technically impossible and the club chose to use grass with a darker hue.[146] To improve fixation, the grass is intertwined with 22 million artificial fibres.[147] Ultraviolet lights are used nightly to ensure that all parts of the pitch will receive equal lighting;[148] the field is exposed to only two hours of direct sunlight per day.[149]

World Sports uses a blend of three cultivars from DLF-Trifolium, Ph.D. Ryegrass Perenne,[150] from Oregon, US.[151] DLF states that this grass has strong cold and wear tolerance and is disease resistant, combined with fast growth rate. The hue is 8.7 on a scale of 1 to 9, where 9 is dark green.[152] The choice of using ryegrass instead of the most common and usually recommended Bermuda brought advantages like having longitudinal roots, avoiding the cleats to tangle with them, and resistance to yellowing. It also brought challenges; ryegrass is native to cooler climates and needs temperatures of 23 °C (73 °F) for optimum growth. Because the temperature in São Paulo rarely falls below 14 °C (57 °F), a heating system is not used.[153] A cooling systempushes cold water through 40,000 metres (130,000 ft) of drainage pipes, reducing the grass roots temperature to 6 °C (43 °F).[151][154] The grass is mowed to between 2.2 centimetres (0.87 in) and 2.5 centimetres (0.98 in).[149]

The drainage system has two operating modes; gravitational and vacuum-enhanced (Subair System).[153] The vacuum draining system can handle up to 400,000 litres (88,000 imp gal) per hour, improving oxygen levels in the rooting system and cooling the pitch, even during matches.[155] This is equivalent to 56 millimetres (2.2 in) of rain drained in one hour.[156] The irrigation system has individual sprinkler controls,[157] which are controlled by a computerised system. The system comprises 48 sprinklers—twice the minimum FIFA recommendation.[153]

Information technology and communicationsedit

The stadium has wifi and 4G LTE in all its sectors.[158] Spectators are able to access game statistics and watch replays that are published on a website maintained by the stadium crew.[159] Supporters are monitored by hundreds of security cameras. All services are contracted with Sonda IT.[159]

Hospitality and storesedit

There are for 75 bars—including 13 in the VIP areas—two restaurants and two sports bars in the stadium. All the restaurants and bars are managed by Diverti Arena on a 10-year contract. Diverti invested R$40 million in the stadium; all the properties were fully operational in 2015.[160] Other commercial properties inside the stadium complex are two clothing stores.[160]

Receptionedit

Average Série A attendances
Season Stadium capacity Average attendance Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Neo_Química_Arena
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