BWT-Stadion am Hardtwald

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
BWT-Stadion am Hardtwald
Hardtwaldstadion.jpg
Hardtwaldstadion (2007)
Full nameBWT-Stadion am Hardtwald
Former namesHardtwaldstadion
LocationSandhausen, Germany
Coordinates49°19′55.5″N 8°38′51.6″E / 49.332083°N 8.647667°E / 49.332083; 8.647667Coordinates: 49°19′55.5″N 8°38′51.6″E / 49.332083°N 8.647667°E / 49.332083; 8.647667
OwnerSV Sandhausen
Capacity15,414 (9,806 standing)
Surfacegrass
Construction
Opened1951
Renovated2002, 2008
Expanded1987/88, 2012. 2014, 2016
Tenants
SV Sandhausen (1951–present)

BWT-Stadion am Hardtwald is a football stadium in Sandhausen, Germany. Situated in a small patch of forest near the Sandhausen town limits, it is the home stadium of local football team SV Sandhausen. The stadium is owned by the club.[1]

History[]

The stadium was opened in 1951 and was originally equipped with a clay pitch. A grass pitch was installed in 1961. The structure underwent expansion in 1987/88, when a roofed all-seater main stand was added. Further renovation works were conducted in 2001 with the addition of floodlights and in 2008 with several modifications to meet standards for the 3. Liga. These included adding a temporary stand with a capacity of 2,500, installation of a video scoreboard, expansion of press and police facilities and the building of a VIP house. Afterwards, Hardtwaldstadion could hold 10,231 spectators.

Due to the promotion of the team to 2. Bundesliga, the stadium received some more improvements during 2012 summer break. Among these were under-soil heating, a platform for TV-cameras as well as two new stands, which raised the capacity to about 12.100 spectators. If the team manages to establish itself in 2nd Liga, another two stands have to be added, backing the western goal area and the southern area, to extend the capacity to about 15.000.[2][3][4][5][1]

External links[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b Wendelin Hübner: Der Dorfclub. Spiegel Online, 3. August 2012, checked 20. August 2012. (german)
  2. ^ Christoph Moll: Das Hardtwaldstadion wird zur Fussballarena.[permanent dead link] Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung, 5. May 2012, checked 20. August 2012. (german)
  3. ^ Investition in Beine und Steine. Schwetzinger Zeitung, 15. May 2012, checked 20. August 2012. (german)
  4. ^ Claus Weber: Mit breiter Brust ins Pokalspiel Archived 2012-08-22 at the Wayback Machine. Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung, 18. August 2012, checked 20. August 2012. (german)
  5. ^ Galerie: Sandhausener Hardtwaldstadion wird ausgebaut Archived 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine. Stadionwelt.de, 4. June 2012, checked 20. August 2012. (german)
Retrieved from ""