Stade Pierre-Mauroy

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Stade Pierre-Mauroy
Logo Stade Pierre Mauroy.png
Grand Stade Lille Métropole LOSC first match.JPG
UEFA 4/4 stars
Former namesGrand Stade Lille Métropole (2012–2013)
Location261 boulevard de Tournai, 59650 Villeneuve-d'Ascq, Nord, France
Coordinates50°36′43″N 3°07′49″E / 50.6119°N 3.1304°E / 50.6119; 3.1304
Owner Eiffage Lille Stadium Arena (until 2043)
Métropole Européenne de Lille (from 2043)
Capacity50,186
Record attendance49,712 (LOSC Lille vs PSG, 14 April 2019)
SurfaceAirFibr hybrid grass
Construction
Broke ground2009
Built2012
Opened17 August 2012
Construction cost324 million
ArchitectValode & Pistre
Pierre Ferret
Tenants
LOSC Lille (2012–present)
France national football team (selected matches)
Website
Official Website

The Stade Pierre-Mauroy is a multi-use retractable roof stadium in Villeneuve-d'Ascq (Métropole Européenne de Lille), France, that opened in August 2012. It has a seating capacity of 50,186 and is the home stadium of LOSC Lille. Initially named Grand Stade Lille Métropole, the stadium was renamed on 21 June 2013, just after the death of the former Mayor of Lille and former Prime Minister of France Pierre Mauroy.[1]

History[]

Before the Grand Stade[]

In 1975, LOSC Lille began playing at the Stade Grimonprez-Jooris, a 21,128-seat facility. When the club began to play European Competitions, the venue did not match UEFA standards, prompting the club to play its UEFA Champions League games at the Stade Félix-Bollaert, home of rival RC Lens, in 2001. Plans were soon made to build a new stadium which would match UEFA demands, but the project was postponed and finally cancelled due to struggle with preservationists who stated that the location chosen for the new stadium was too close to the 17th Century Citadel.

The club, left without a place to play, moved to the Stadium Nord which was smaller than Grimonprez-Jooris (18,154 seats) and did not fulfill UEFA demands. This situation forced the team, who had qualified for 2005–06 UEFA Champions League, to play at the Stade de France for its European matches. This solution was abandoned after two young LOSC fans lost their lives when they got hit by an incoming train after a game against Olympique Lyonnais.

New administration, new project[]

While LOSC was struggling with its stadium problems, the administrative landscape of the Lille area changed. The city was now included in a vast association with its enclosed neighbours, forming the Urban Community of Lille Métropole. The new administration, now in charge of the whole area, decided to launch a new stadium project. On 5 December 2006, an industrial bid for a 50,000-seat multi-purpose stadium, able to receive sport competitions, cultural shows and hold seminars, was launched.
The following January, three worldwide construction companies answered the call, each one with ambitious projects:

  • Eiffage: a 50,000-seat capacity multi-purpose stadium, Meeting HQE standards with a retractable roof. The stadium has also a particularity: it can become a fully functional arena of 30,000 seats in only one hour: the Boite à spectacle.
  • Bouygues: The project proposed by the company was highly effective in energy saving. The structure was geothermic and most of its power was produced by Renewable energy. The stadium would have a 50,127-seat capacity.
  • Vinci: The project proposed by Vinci was the largest of the competition with a 50,921-seat capacity and a retractable roof. It would have been powered by 8000 m² of Solar panels

On February 2008, Eiffage was selected during a general meeting to build the stadium. The contract was officially signed between the two parties on October of the same year. Eiffage was given 45 months to complete the project

Stadium construction[]

On 10 July 2009, Eiffage received the building permit and authorisation to start preparatory works for the construction at the Borne de l'Espoir location in Villeneuve-d'Ascq. In December 2009, the final two cities of the Lille Métropole who had yet to sign the building permit joined the project and gave their authorisation. In February 2010, France officially became a candidate to organize the UEFA Euro 2016. The Grand Stade become the symbol of the candidature, boosting its public support.[2] In March 2010, construction of access infrastructure (Subway, Highway, parking lots) began followed one week after by the beginning of the construction of the arena itself. On 28 May 2010, France was officially chosen to organize the Euro 2016. Martine Aubry, who succeeded Pierre Mauroy at the head of LCMU and a big supporter of LOSC and the Grand Stade, expressed her wish to see the Grand Stade given a prominent amount of competition for the upcoming competition.[3] Construction accelerated, with the first brick laid by the Eiffage CEO in September 2010. In 2011, the structure supporting the roof was put in place and constructions of the northern stand was completed by the end of that year. In 2012, the retractable roof, constructed in one piece, was successfully put in place in one day. Despite some legal delays, the stadium was delivered on schedule during the summer of 2012, in time for the 2012–13 LOSC season.

The stadium[]

Cost and financing[]

The total cost of the Eiffage project was €618 million, including €282 million for the stadium, €42 million for additional development such as parking, hotels, and restaurants, and €96 million to ensure seismic standards were met. This latter requirement was introduced in 2011, following a new law passed in the wake of the massive Japan earthquake and tsunami. The cost was spread between the city of Lille (€24.7 million annually for 31 years), the LOSC (€7.5 million annually) and the Nord-Pas-de-Calais regional council (€45 million).

The cost of the project spurred considerable controversy. On one hand, Martine Aubry and her First Deputy Pierre de Saintignon, in charge of the project, highlighted the Grand Stade as "a splendid ambassador of the technologies of our region, and a great tool of attractivity". On the other hand, opponents pointed to a lack of long term viability, since part of the public investments were bound to sporting events, whose results are of random nature. This could lead to some new kind of toxic loans.[4]

Multiple floor features[]

Stade Pierre-Mauroy during the FIBA EuroBasket 2015

Stade Pierre-Mauroy has two floors or main levels. The full stadium level or Grand Stade reaches a height of 31 m (101 feet) and has a total capacity of 50,186 seats including 4,965 business seats, 1,842 luxury-box seats, 448 protocol seats and 326 reserved for the press.[citation needed]

The stadium has also a peculiarity: half of the Grand Stade field is situated on hydraulics lift and massive tracks that raise and slide it above the other half of the field in three hours. This creates a second lower level floor plan and surrounding seats called Boîte à Spectacles, where basketball, tennis or music shows can take place. The Boîte à Spectacles can be configured to have a variable capacity, from 6,900 to 30,000 seats. In November 2014, it hosted the 2014 Davis Cup finals between France and Switzerland, where an attendance record was broken for the highest-ever officially sanctioned competition tennis match. In 2017 it hosted the Davis Cup final again.[citation needed]

Stade Pierre-Mauroy during the 2017 Davis Cup final

In addition, Stade Pierre-Mauroy has a retractable roof which opens and shuts in 15 minutes. The stadium is also recognised as a HQE Building with solar panels and two windmills to provide as electrical supply. The stadium is fully accessible by metro stations and road and includes 7,000 parking spaces.[citation needed]

Tenants[]

The Grand Stade received a five-star UEFA ranking. It is expected to significantly increase the revenue streams of Lille OSC, its tenant club.

The stadium hosted its first rugby union Test match on 17 November 2012 during the 2012 Autumn Internationals, when France defeated Argentina 39–22.[5]

The stadium will host handball at the 2024 Olympic Games.[6]

EuroBasket 2015 matches[]

The knock-out phase of EuroBasket 2015 was held at the Stade Pierre-Mauroy from 12–20 September 2015, including the Final. The indoor configuration of the stadium has a capacity of 27,000.

Date Time (CET) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
12 September 2015 12:00  Latvia 73–66  Slovenia Round of 16 10,023
14:30  Greece 75–54  Belgium 13,672
18:30  Spain 80–66  Poland 21,302
21:00  France 76–53  Turkey 26,135
13 September 2015 12:00  Croatia 59–80  Czech Republic 12,070
14:30  Serbia 94–81  Finland 12,128
18:30  Israel 52–82  Italy 14,742
21:00  Lithuania 85–81  Georgia 16,953
15 September 2015 18:30  Spain 73–71  Greece Quarter-finals 17,864
21:00  France 84–70  Latvia 22,076
16 September 2015 18:30  Serbia 89–75  Czech Republic 8,726
21:00  Italy 85–95 (OT)  Lithuania 13,173
17 September 2015 16:00  Greece 97–90  Latvia Olympic qualifying playoff games
18:30  Czech Republic 70–85  Italy 15,004
21:00  Spain 80–75 (OT)  France Semi-final 26,922
18 September 2015 18:30  Latvia 70–97  Czech Republic Olympic qualifying playoff games 11,362
21:00  Serbia 64–67  Lithuania Semi-final 20,042
20 September 2015 14:00  France 81–68  Serbia Third place game 24,092
19:00  Spain 80–63  Lithuania Final 27,372

UEFA Euro 2016 matches[]

The stadium during the UEFA Euro 2016.

The stadium was one of the venues of the UEFA Euro 2016, and held the following matches:

Date Time (CET) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
12 June 2016 21:00  Germany 2–0  Ukraine Group C 43,035
15 June 2016 15:00  Russia 1–2  Slovakia Group B 38,989
19 June 2016 21:00   Switzerland 0–0  France Group A 45,616
22 June 2016 21:00  Italy 0–1  Republic of Ireland Group E 44,268
26 June 2016 18:00  Germany 3–0  Slovakia Round of 16 44,312
1 July 2016 21:00  Wales 3–1  Belgium Quarter-final 45,936

Concerts[]

Concerts at Stade Pierre-Mauroy
Date Artist Tour Attendance
20 July 2013 Rihanna Diamonds World Tour 27,294
23 July 2016 Anti World Tour 34,000
31 March 2017 Bruno Mars 24K Magic World Tour 28,262
29 May 2017 Depeche Mode Global Spirit Tour 26,113
24 June 2017 Justin Bieber Purpose World Tour
1 July 2017 Celine Dion Celine Dion Live 2017 51,355
2 July 2017
16 June 2018 Roger Waters Us + Them 23,649
18 June 2019 Elton John Farewell Yellow Brick Road 26,517
22 June 2019 Indochine 13 Tour
23 June 2019

References[]

  1. ^ "Ce sera le stade Pierre-Mauroy". L’Equipe (in French). 21 June 2013. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  2. ^ "Nord-Pas-de-Calais. Le grand Stade de Lille, locomotive de la candidature à l'Euro 2016". La Gazette des Communes (in French). 15 May 2009. Retrieved 6 December 2019.
  3. ^ "Euro-2016: Martine Aubry veut huit matches au Grand stade". Le Parisien (in French). 27 September 2010. Retrieved 6 December 2019.
  4. ^ "Le vrai coût du grand stade de Lille". L’Express (in French). 23 October 2012. Retrieved 7 December 2019.
  5. ^ "France (24) 39 - 22 (13) Argentina (FT)". ESPN. Retrieved 7 December 2019.
  6. ^ "Sound stewardship supporting spectacular Games in Paris 2024".

External links[]

Events and tenants
Preceded by

Kombank Arena, Belgrade
Arena Zagreb, Zagreb
Davis Cup
Final Venue

2014
2017, 2018
Succeeded by

Flanders Expo, Ghent
Caja Mágica, Madrid
Preceded by
Arena Stožice
Ljubljana
FIBA EuroBasket
Final Venue

2015
Succeeded by
Sinan Erdem Dome
Istanbul
Preceded by
Arena da Baixada
Curitiba
(as FIVB Volleyball World League Final Venue)
FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League
Final Venue

2018
Succeeded by
Credit Union 1 Arena
Chicago

Coordinates: 50°36′43″N 3°07′49″E / 50.6119°N 3.1304°E / 50.6119; 3.1304

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