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The National Arena (Romanian: Arena Națională) is a retractable roof football stadium in Bucharest, Romania. It opened in 2011 on the site of the original National Stadium, which was demolished between 2007 and 2008. The stadium hosts major football matches including home matches of the Romania National Football Team, and usually Romanian Cup ...
(overall in Romania) Stadium Capacity Town/City Team League UEFA Category 4 (Elite) Stadiums 1 Arena Națională: 55,634 Bucharest: Romania national football team: FCSB: Romanian SuperLiga: 4 Steaua Stadium: 31,254 Bucharest: Steaua București: Romanian Liga II: 5 Ion Oblemenco Stadium: 30,983 Craiova: Universitatea Craiova: Romanian SuperLiga ...
The Steaua Stadium (Romanian: Stadionul Steaua), informally also known as Ghencea Stadium, is a multi-purpose stadium in Bucharest, Romania. It primarily serves as the home stadium of CSA Steaua București and the Romania national football team, replacing the former venue. The new stadium cost €95 million and is located in the neighbourhood ...
The Romania national team mainly plays its home games at the Arena Națională in Bucharest, the largest stadium in the country. It opened in 2011 and has a capacity of 55,600 seats. It opened in 2011 and has a capacity of 55,600 seats.
The Cotroceni Stadium is a football stadium in Bucharest, Romania. It holds 14,542 people. The venue was the home ground of Progresul București. The stadium was built in 1995, being the first stadium built, after the fall of Communism in Romania in 1989. [1] It was the host for the Romanian Cup Final in 2004 and 2005.
The stadium was originally built in 1973. Before 2004 it had a capacity of about 10,000 seats, hosting the home games of CFR Cluj, mostly in the second and third divisions of Romanian football. As CFR Cluj qualified for the Champions League group stage in 2008 , the stadium was expanded.
The Central Stadium of the Romanian National Football Centre is a football stadium in Romania. The ground is part of the Football Centre in Buftea and has a double stand with views to each of its two fields. It can hold 800 people on each side. The complex is the second training centre of the Romanian Football Federation.
The Dinamo Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium in Bucharest, Romania. It is used mostly for football matches and was the home ground of Dinamo București since its inception and until 2022, when the stadium didn't receive the license to host matches from Liga I and Liga II .