Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The stadium used by SC Freiburg up until 2021, the Dreisamstadion, opened in 1954, no longer meets the requirements of a modern stadium due to a pitch that is too small 100.5 m × 68 m (330 ft × 223 ft), and also a gradient of 98 centimetres (39 in) from the goal in the south to the goal in the north towards the Dreisam.
View to the northwest North-side stands Solar panels on the roof of the stadium. Dreisamstadion is a football stadium in Freiburg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany.It was formerly the home of Bundesliga team SC Freiburg between 1954 and 2021, until a new stadium — the Europa-Park Stadion — was built in October 2021.
Franz Siegel Stadion, is an arena in Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany. It is primarily used for ice hockey , and is the home to the EHC Freiburg of the DEL 2. It opened in the late 1960s and holds 5,800 spectators.
SC Freiburg formerly played its home games at the Dreisamstadion, named after the Dreisam River which flows through Freiburg. Because of sponsorship agreements, the stadium was known as the Schwarzwald-Stadion. The stadium has an approximate capacity of 24,000 spectators, and was built in 1953.
The Möslestadion is a football stadium in Freiburg im Breisgau. The stadium used to be home to the Freiburger FC. Today it is used by the second men's team and the Freiburg soccer school of the SC Freiburg. Since the 2008/09 season, the stadium has also been used for the SC Freiburg women's team. The stadium can hold about 5,400 spectators.
The river leaves the Black Forest at the Freiburg soccer stadium called Schwarzwald-Stadion and continues flowing westwards. In the eastern part of the city, water is withdrawn from the river at Sandfang. It is used to supply the Gewerbekanal, an industrial canal, and the famous Freiburg Bächle with water.
The first international football match in a Freiburg venue took place on this stadium, which could hold up to 6,000 spectators. The Germany national team played an international friendly match against Switzerland on 18 May 1913 and Germany lost by 1–2 in front of 10,000 spectators. [ 2 ]
Freiburg Airport is an airport situated in the northwestern part of Freiburg, in the southwest of Germany.It is one of the oldest aerodromes in Germany. [1] The airport is approved for powered aircraft, motor gliders, helicopters, gliders, hot air balloons, for parachuting and under certain restrictions also for ultralight aircraft and gyrocopters.