Manahan Stadium
Full nameManahan Stadium
Stadion Manahan
LocationAdi Sucipto Street, Manahan, Surakarta, Central Java
Coordinates7°33′20″S 110°48′23″E / 7.55556°S 110.80639°E / -7.55556; 110.80639
Public transitBus rapid transit Batik Solo Trans:
Corridor 4, Corridor 5 (Stadion Manahan)
OperatorGovernment of Surakarta
Capacity20,000
SurfaceBermuda grass
Construction
Opened21 February 1998 (1998-02-21)
Renovated2018–2019
Closed2018–2019
Reopened15 February 2020 (2020-02-15)
Tenants
Persis Solo (2006–2017, 2020–present)

Manahan Stadium (Indonesian: Stadion Manahan) is a multi-purpose stadium in Surakarta, Central Java, Indonesia. Manahan is the first stadium in Indonesia which hosts the biggest disabled sporting event in Southeast Asia, the 2011 ASEAN Para Games. The stadium was opened on 21 February 1998. It is currently used mostly for association football matches and is used as the home venue for Persis Solo. This stadium now holds 20,000 spectators after the renovation, which saw.

Judging from the geographical location, the location of Manahan Stadium in Solo is fairly strategic. Stands majestically in the middle of the city center, adjacent to airports, hotels, highways and shopping malls make Manahan Stadium as one of the most representative in the organization of sporting events of national and international scale. The stadium is located in the center of the city of Solo, precisely at Jalan Adi Sucipto, Manahan, Banjarsari, Solo. It is 9 km away from the Adisumarmo International Airport.[1]

Manahan Stadium was subsequently chosen to host the 2022 ASEAN Para Games and the 2023 FIFA U-17 World Cup matches, including the semi-finals and final.[2]

History

Manahan Stadium was built in 1989 using land area of 170,000 m2 and a building area of 33,300 m2. On 21 February 1998, the stadium was inaugurated by the then-Indonesian president Suharto.

Facilities

Facilities into one building stadiums with tracks including the track Manahan / international-standard athletics, dressing room, heating room, health room, a secretariat, a journalist and a press conference room, other facilities are located in the stadium track long jump, table tennis, judo training, fight training degrees, etc..

While at Manahan's own complex, sports facilities are available even somewhat more complete and varied as there are tennis courts, baseball field, cycling (Velodrome), volleyball court, basketball court, badminton court, table tennis room, billiard room, 3 football pitches and gymnasium Multipurpose (GOR).

Further development

Revitalization of the stadium was in September, 2019. After renovation, it is expected to transform into a mini Bung Karno Stadium (GBK). Seating arrangement is single which reduced the capacity of spectators to 20,000. The stadium is equipped with a standard broadcast lighting system of 2,200 to 2,400 lux. Sophisticated CCTV installed to support security with emergency conditions also be designed to be emptied within 15 minutes.[3]

Sporting events

International matches

Date Team #1 Score Team #2 Competition
22 August 2011 Indonesia4–1 PalestineFriendly
14 August 2013 Indonesia2–0 Philippines
6 September 2016 Indonesia3–0 Malaysia

2023 FIFA U-17 World Cup

Date Team #1 Score Team #2 Attendance
10 November 2023 Mali3–0 Uzbekistan3,014
 Spain2–0 Canada6,613
13 November 2023 Spain1–0 Mali4,723
 Uzbekistan3–0 Canada6,919
16 November 2023 Uzbekistan2–2 Spain5,554
 Ecuador1–1 Panama7,956
20 November 2023 Ecuador1–3 Brazil3,580
 Spain2–1 Japan8,587
25 November 2023 France1–0 Uzbekistan5,201
 Mali1–0 Morocco8,589
28 November 2023 Argentina3–3 (2–4 p) Germany8,525
 France2–1 Mali12,013
1 December 2023 Argentina0–3 Mali10,901
2 December 2023 Germany2–2 (4–3 p) France13,037

See also

References

  1. (in Indonesian) Stadion Manahan
  2. "Stadion Manahan Jadi Venue Semifinal dan Final Piala Dunia U-17". PSSI.org (in Indonesian). Football Association of Indonesia. 23 July 2023.
  3. "Sistem Pencahayaan Stadion Manahan Lebih Canggih Dibanding Luzhniki". Kompas. Retrieved 22 August 2018.
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