Former names | Spartak Stadium (1949–1989) |
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Location | Ukraine 40030, Sumy, Vulytsia Haharina 9 |
Coordinates | 50°54′8″N 34°47′59″E / 50.90222°N 34.79972°E |
Owner | PJSC "Spartak" (2001–2007) City of Sumy (2007–present) |
Operator | City of Sumy |
Capacity | 25,830[2] |
Field size | 105 m × 68 m (344 ft × 223 ft) |
Surface | Grass |
Scoreboard | 3.69 X 5.94 (m) "Videoton" |
Construction | |
Broke ground | September 2, 1999 |
Opened | 20 September 2001 |
Renovated | 2001 (rebuilt completely) |
Construction cost | ₴ 50,000,000+ |
Architect | ? |
Project manager | PJSC "Spartak" |
Structural engineer | "Tsivilproektrestavratsia" ("Ukraniiproektrekonstruktsia") |
Services engineer | "Stroimashservis" (groundwork) |
General contractor | PPKMP "NASA" |
Main contractors | "Sumykhimprom" (southern stand) "Agropromstroi" (eastern stand) "Sumy machine-building Frunze Production Complex" (northern stand) |
Tenants | |
FC Spartak Sumy (2001–2007) PFC Sumy (2009–2019[1]) FC Alians Lypova Dolyna (2019–2022) FC Sumy (2019–present) FC Viktoriya Sumy (2023-present) | |
Website | |
fc.sumy.ua |
Yuvileiny Stadium is a football stadium in Sumy, Ukraine. It serves as home grounds for Ukrainian First League club FC Viktoriya Sumy, and as a secondary venue for Ukrainian Second League club FC Sumy, whose main field is Avangarde Stadium. With a capacity of 25,830 spectators, it is the 7th largest stadium in Ukraine. The stadium opened in 2001 within Sumy's Kozhedub Park.
The stadium hosted the 2009 Ukrainian Super Cup between Dynamo Kyiv and Vorskla Poltava and the 2011 Ukrainian Cup final between Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk. Otherwise, the stadium hosts most of Viktoriya's matches in the Ukrainian First League as well as some important home matches for FC Sumy. The stadium's first match held an attendance record of about 29,300 spectators[3] when Spartak Sumy played Naftovyk Okhtyrka in 2003.
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