Saturday, 3 December 2005, 11:15 GMT
Nuremberg - Franken-Stadion
The Franken-Stadion has had a number of facelifts down the years, the most recent costing £38m in readiness for participation at the World Cup.
The tournament's smallest venue first opened in 1928 and was a marching area for the Hitler Youth in the 1930s.
It had an overhaul in 1963 and changed name from the Urban Stadium in another redevelopment between 1987 and 1991.
The 36,000-capacity stadium's latest changes coincided with tenants 1 FC Nurnberg returning to the top-flight.
FIXTURES (all times BST)
Sun 11 June (1700): Mexico v Iran (Gp D)
Thu 15 June (1700): England v Trinidad & Tobago (Gp B)
Sun 18 June (1400): Japan v Croatia (Gp F)
Thu 22 June (2000): Ghana v USA (Gp E)
Sun 25 June (2000): Portugal v Holland (2nd round)
DID YOU KNOW?
It may not look the most modern of grounds, but it has embraced 21st century, environmentally-friendly thinking as all rainwater is recycled for use elsewhere in the stadium.
E-mail this to a friend
RELATED INTERNET LINKS:
Fifa
Your city guide
Nuremberg ticket information
(Official 2006 World Cup site)
Nurnberg weather
City guide: Nuremberg
FC Nurnberg
Learn German
Country profile: Germany
Franken-Stadion
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites
Sport Homepage
|
World Cup 2006
|
Football
|
Cricket
|
Rugby Union
|
Rugby League
|
Tennis
|
Golf
|
Motorsport
|
Boxing
|
Athletics
|
Snooker
|
Horse Racing
|
Cycling
|
Disability Sport
|
Olympics 2012
|
Sport Relief
|
Other Sport...
|
TV/Radio Schedule
|
Photo Galleries
|
Sport Academy
|
Health & Fitness
|
Fun and Games
|
Northern Ireland
|
Scotland
|
Wales
Football Contents:
World Cup 2006
|
My Club
|
Gossip & Transfers
|
Premiership
|
Championship
|
League One
|
League Two
|
Non League
|
FA Cup
|
League Cup
|
Scottish League
|
Scottish Premier
|
Scottish Cups
|
Welsh
|
Irish
|
Internationals
|
Europe
|
African
Women
|
Photo Galleries
|
Football Focus
|
Match of the Day
|
World Football
|
Skills
|
Laws & Equipment
|
Get Involved
|
Score on BBCi
^ Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage | Feedback | Help | ©