Mokdong Stadium
Location | 914 Mok-dong, Yangcheon-gu, Seoul, South Korea |
---|---|
Operator | Seoul Facilities Management Corporation |
Capacity | 15,511 |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 9 December 1987 |
Opened | 14 November 1989 |
Construction cost | 8.5 billion won |
Tenants | |
Bucheon SK (1996–2000) Anyang LG Cheetahs (2001) Seoul WFC (2020–2021) Seoul E-Land (2022–present) |
The Mokdong Stadium (Korean: 목동주경기장; Hanja: 木洞運動場) is a South Korean sports complex located in Mok-dong, Yangcheon-gu, Seoul. It consists of a multi-purpose stadium, a baseball stadium, and an artificial ice rink. It was opened on 14 November 1989. The main stadium hosted K League football matches from 1996 to 2001.
Facilities[]
Mokdong Stadium[]
It is a multi-purpose stadium and currently used mostly for association football and athletics and was the home stadium of Bucheon SK between 1996 and 2000. The stadium holds 25,000 spectators (15,511 seated) and opened in 1989.
Mokdong Baseball Stadium[]
- For details, see Mokdong Baseball Stadium.
Mokdong Ice Rink[]
- Mokdong Ice Rink was used as the filming location for Seoul Broadcasting System (SBS)'s drama Lovers in Paris, where Ki-joo, played by Park Shin-yang, and Soo-hyuk, played by Lee Dong-gun, played ice hockey.[1] The venue was also used by the Asia League Ice Hockey teams Daemyung Sangmu and Daemyung Killer Whales.
See also[]
- Mokdong Baseball Stadium
- Seoul Olympic Stadium
- Hyochang Stadium
- Dongdaemun Stadium
- Seoul World Cup Stadium
References[]
- ^ "Korean TV Drama: Lovers in Paris". Korea Tourism Organization. Retrieved 16 June 2012.
- The stadium of dreams in K-League : 제 3탄 목동 운동장 ① [permanent dead link] (in Korean)
- The stadium of dreams in K-League : 제 3탄 목동 운동장 ② [permanent dead link] (in Korean)
External links[]
- Seoul Sports Facilities Management Center (in Korean)
- Mokdong Sports Stadium : Official Seoul City Tourism (in English)
- World Stadiums
Coordinates: 37°31′49.72″N 126°52′59.30″E / 37.5304778°N 126.8831389°E
Categories:
- Football venues in South Korea
- Sports venues completed in 1989
- Sports venues in Seoul
- Multi-purpose stadiums in South Korea
- K League 1 stadiums
- K League 2 stadiums
- Buildings and structures in Yangcheon District
- South Korean sports venue stubs
- Asian baseball venue stubs