Gelora Bung Karno Stadium





Coordinates: 6°13′6.88″S 106°48′9.04″E / 6.2185778°S 106.8025111°E / -6.2185778; 106.8025111





















































































Gelora Bung Karno Main Stadium
Stadion Utama Gelora Bung Karno
GBK, SUGBK, Stadion Utama, Stadion Senayan
Aerial SUGBK.jpg
Former names
Gelora Senayan Main Stadium (1969–17 January 2001)
Location
Gelora, Tanah Abang, Central Jakarta, Indonesia
Coordinates 6°13′7″S 106°48′9″E / 6.21861°S 106.80250°E / -6.21861; 106.80250
Public transit
TransJakarta Corridor 1 Gelora Bung Karno
TransJakarta Corridor 9 Senayan JCC
Commuter Line Palmerah Station
MRT Jakarta Istora Station
Owner Government of Indonesia
Operator Pusat Pengelolaan Komplek Gelora Bung Karno (Gelora Bung Karno Complex Management Center)
Executive suites 4[1]
Capacity 77,193[2]

Record attendance 150,000
Persib Bandung v PSMS Medan
(23 February 1985)[3][dubious ]
Field size 105 by 68 m (344 by 223 ft)
Surface
Zeon Zoysia[4]
Construction
Broke ground 8 February 1960 (entire complex)
Opened 21 July 1962
Renovated 2016–2017
Closed 2016–2018
Reopened 14 January 2018
Construction cost
$12,500,000 (1958, entire complex)
Rp769.69 billion (2016–2017)[5]
Architect Frederich Silaban
Tenants

Indonesia national football team
Persija Jakarta (2008–2018)[6]
Website
GBK.id/stadion-utama/

Gelora Bung Karno Main Stadium (Indonesian: Stadion Utama Gelora Bung Karno; literally "Bung Karno Sports Arena Main Stadium") is a multi-purpose stadium located at the center of the Gelora Bung Karno Sports Complex in Central Jakarta, Indonesia. The stadium is named after Sukarno, Indonesia's first President. It is mostly used for football matches.


When first opened in 1962, the stadium had a seating capacity of 110,000. It has been reduced twice: first to 88,083 in 2006 for the 2007 AFC Asian Cup and second to 77,193[2] between 2016 and 2017 for the 2018 Asian Games and Asian Para Games. In the 2016–17 renovations, all spectator benches are replaced by single seats. The 88,083 capacity made it the 7th largest association football stadium in the world. Today it is the 28th largest association football stadium in the world and 8th largest association football stadium in Asia. Since its opening, it holds record as the largest stadium in Indonesia.


The 2007 AFC Asian Cup Final took place in the stadium. During the 2018 Asian Games, the stadium hosted the opening and closing ceremonies and also its entire athletics events in between, while it used as the opening ceremony and athletics competition venue for the 2018 Asian Para Games.




Contents






  • 1 Name


  • 2 History


  • 3 Events hosted


    • 3.1 International




  • 4 Tournament results


    • 4.1 1962 Asian Games


    • 4.2 1979 Southeast Asian Games


    • 4.3 1987 Southeast Asian Games


    • 4.4 1997 Southeast Asian Games


    • 4.5 2002 AFF Championship


    • 4.6 2004 AFF Championship


    • 4.7 2007 AFC Asian Cup


    • 4.8 2008 AFF Championship


    • 4.9 2010 AFF Championship


    • 4.10 2011 Southeast Asian Games


    • 4.11 2018 AFC U-19 Championship


    • 4.12 2018 AFF Championship




  • 5 Other uses


  • 6 Concerts and shows


  • 7 Recent renovations


  • 8 Gallery


  • 9 Footnotes


  • 10 Bibliography


  • 11 See also


  • 12 External links





Name


Although the stadium is popularly known as Gelora Bung Karno Stadium (Stadion Gelora Bung Karno) or GBK Stadium, its official name is Gelora Bung Karno Main Stadium (Stadion Utama Gelora Bung Karno), as there are other stadiums in the Gelora Bung Karno Sports Complex, such as the Tennis Stadium and the Swimming Stadium. During the New Order era, the complex was renamed "Gelora Senayan Complex" and the stadium was renamed "Gelora Senayan Main Stadium" in 1969 under the "de-Sukarnoization" policy by then-President Suharto. After the fall of the dictatorship, the complex name was reverted by President Abdurrahman Wahid on a Presidential Decree effective since 17 January 2001.



History




The stadium under construction, April 1962.




The massive roof ring structure popularly dubbed as Temu Gelang by Sukarno


Construction began on 8 February 1960 and finished on 21 July 1962,[7] in time to host the following month's Asian Games. Its construction was partially funded through a special loan from the Soviet Union. The stadium's original capacity of 110,000 people was reduced to 88,083 as a result of renovations for the 2007 AFC Asian Cup.[8] It is divided into 24 sectors and 12 entrances, and into upper and lower stands. The special feature of this stadium is the huge steel roof construction that forms a gigantic ring called temu gelang (joined ring), something that was very rare in 1962. Other than to shade the spectators in all sectors from the heat of tropical sun, the purpose of this giant ring construction is also to emphasize the grandeur of the stadium.[9]



Events hosted




During the 2018 Asian Games, the stadium was covered in changing colors LED lights.


GBK Stadium hosted the 2007 Asian Cup Final between Iraq and Saudi Arabia. Other competitions held there are several Tiger Cup finals and domestic cup finals.



International



  • Host of the 1962 and 2018 Asian Games

  • Host of the 2018 Asian Para Games

  • Host of the 1963 Games of the New Emerging Forces

  • Host of Southeast Asian Games (in 1979, 1987, 1997, and 2011)

  • Host of the Asian Athletics Championships (in 1985, 1995, and 2000)

  • Host of the 2002 Tiger Cup for 9 out of 10 Group A matches, semifinal matches, third place play-off, and the final.

  • Host of the 2003 ASEAN Club Championship.

  • Host of the 2004 Tiger Cup first leg semifinal match against Malaysia and first leg final match against Singapore.

  • Host of the 2007 AFC Asian Cup for 5 out of 6 Group D matches, quarterfinals between Saudi Arabia and Uzbekistan, and the final.

  • Host of the 2008 AFF Suzuki Cup for first leg semifinal match against Thailand

  • Host for the F.C. Bayern Munich 2008 Post-season Tour

  • Host of the 2010 AFF Suzuki Cup for 5 out of 6 Group A matches, semifinal matches against the Philippines, and second leg final match against Malaysia

  • Host for the LA Galaxy 2011 Asia-Pacific Post-season Tour

  • Host for all 2 matches of the Inter Milan 2012 Post-season Tour

  • Host for the Valencia CF 2012 Asia Preseason Tour (their only match outside Europe)

  • Host for the Arsenal F.C. 2013 Asia Preseason Tour

  • Host for the Liverpool F.C. 2013 Asia Preseason Tour

  • Host for the Chelsea F.C. 2013 Asia Preseason Tour

  • Host for the Juventus F.C. 2014 Asia Preseason Tour

  • Host of the 2014 Asian Dream Cup against Park Ji-sung and Friends, featuring footballers and celebrities, including the cast of Running Man.

  • Host for the A.S. Roma 2015 Asia Preseason Tour

  • Host of the 2018 AFC U-19 Championship

  • Host of Indonesia's home match at the 2018 AFF Championship



Tournament results



1962 Asian Games





























































































































































Date
Time (UTC+7)
Team #1
Res.
Team #2
Round
Attendance
25 August 1962 -  Indonesia 1–0  South Vietnam Group A -
25 August 1962 -  Japan 3–1  Thailand Group B -
26 August 1962 -  Malaya 15–1  Philippines Group A -
26 August 1962 -  India 0–2  South Korea Group B -
27 August 1962 -  Indonesia 6–0  Philippines Group A -
27 August 1962 -  South Korea 3–2  Thailand Group B -
28 August 1962 -  Indonesia 2–3  Malaya Group A -
28 August 1962 -  Thailand 1–4  India Group B -
29 August 1962 -  South Vietnam 3–0  Malaya Group A -
29 August 1962 -  India 2–0  Japan Group B -
30 August 1962 -  South Vietnam 6–0  Philippines Group A -
30 August 1962 -  South Korea 1–0  Japan Group B -
1 September 1962 -  South Vietnam 2–3  India Semifinals -
1 September 1962 -  South Korea 2–1 (a.e.t.)  Malaya Semifinals -
3 September 1962 -  South Vietnam 1–4  Malaya Bronze medal match -
4 September 1962 -  India 2–1  South Korea Gold medal match


1979 Southeast Asian Games

























































































































Date
Time (UTC+07)
Team #1
Res.
Team #2
Round
Attendance
22 September 1979 -  Indonesia 3–0  Singapore Group stage -
22 September 1979 -  Thailand 1–0  Myanmar Group stage -
23 September 1979 -  Singapore 0–2  Malaysia Group stage -
23 September 1979 -  Indonesia 1–3  Thailand Group stage -
25 September 1979 -  Malaysia 0–0  Myanmar Group stage -
25 September 1979 -  Singapore 2–2  Thailand Group stage -
26 September 1979 -  Myanmar 1–2  Singapore Group stage -
26 September 1979 -  Indonesia 0–0  Malaysia Group stage -
28 September 1979 -  Malaysia 1–0  Thailand Group stage -
28 September 1979 -  Indonesia 2–1  Myanmar Group stage -
29 September 1979 -  Indonesia 0–0 (a.e.t.)
(3–1 pen.)
 Thailand Second place play-off -
30 September 1979 -  Indonesia 0–1  Malaysia Gold medal match 85,000


1987 Southeast Asian Games







































































































Date
Time (UTC+07)
Team #1
Res.
Team #2
Round
Attendance
10 September 1987 -  Singapore 0–0  Malaysia Group stage -
10 September 1987 -  Thailand 3–1  Brunei Group stage -
12 September 1987 -  Malaysia 2–2
 Myanmar
Group stage -
12 September 1987 -  Indonesia 2–0  Brunei Group stage -
14 September 1987 -  Singapore 0–0  Myanmar Group stage -
14 September 1987 -  Indonesia 0–0  Thailand Group stage -
16 September 1987 -  Thailand 0–2  Malaysia Semifinals -
17 September 1987 -  Indonesia 4–1  Myanmar Semifinals -
19 September 1987 -  Thailand 4–0  Myanmar Bronze medal match -
20 September 1987 -  Indonesia 1–0  Malaysia Gold medal match 120,000


1997 Southeast Asian Games











































































































































Date
Time (UTC+07)
Team #1
Res.
Team #2
Round
Attendance
5 October 1997 -  Vietnam 0–1  Malaysia Group stage -
5 October 1997 -  Indonesia 5–2  Laos Group stage -
7 October 1997 -  Malaysia 4–0
 Philippines
Group stage -
7 October 1997 -  Indonesia 2–2  Vietnam Group stage -
9 October 1997 -  Laos 4–1  Philippines Group stage -
9 October 1997 -  Indonesia 4–0  Malaysia Group stage -
12 October 1997 -  Indonesia 2–0  Philippines Group stage -
12 October 1997 -  Vietnam 2–1  Laos Group stage -
14 October 1997 -  Vietnam 3–0  Philippines Group stage -
14 October 1997 -  Laos 1–0  Malaysia Group stage -
16 October 1997 -  Thailand 2–1  Vietnam Semifinals -
16 October 1997 -  Indonesia 2–1  Singapore Semifinals -
18 October 1997 -  Vietnam 1–0  Singapore Bronze medal match -
18 October 1997 -  Indonesia 1–1 (a.e.t.)
(2–4 pen.)
 Thailand Gold medal match -


2002 AFF Championship


































































































































Date
Time (UTC+07)
Team #1
Res.
Team #2
Round
Attendance
15 December 2002 17.05  Indonesia 0–0  Myanmar Group stage 40,000
15 December 2002 19.35  Vietnam 9–2  Cambodia Group stage -
17 December 2002 16.05  Philippines 1–6  Myanmar Group stage -
17 December 2002 18.35  Indonesia 4–2  Cambodia Group stage 20,000
19 December 2002 16.05  Myanmar 5–0  Cambodia Group stage -
19 December 2002 18.35  Vietnam 4–1  Philippines Group stage -
21 December 2002 16.05  Cambodia 1–0  Philippines Group stage -
21 December 2002 18.35  Indonesia 2–2  Vietnam Group stage 30,000
23 December 2002 18.35  Indonesia 13–1  Philippines Group stage 50,340
27 December 2002 16.00  Vietnam 0–4  Thailand Semifinals -
27 December 2002 19.00  Indonesia 1–0  Malaysia Semifinals 50,000
29 December 2002 16.00  Vietnam 2–1  Malaysia Third place play-off -
29 December 2002 19.00  Indonesia 2–2 (a.e.t.)
(2–4 pen.)
 Thailand Final 100,000


2004 AFF Championship































Date
Time (UTC+07)
Team #1
Res.
Team #2
Round
Attendance
28 December 2004 19.45  Indonesia 1–2  Malaysia Semifinals first leg -
8 January 2005 19.45  Indonesia 1–3  Singapore Finals first leg -


2007 AFC Asian Cup












































































Date
Time (UTC+07)
Team #1
Res.
Team #2
Round
Attendance
10 July 2007 17:15  Indonesia 2–1  Bahrain Group D 60,000
11 July 2007 19:30  South Korea 1–1  Saudi Arabia Group D 15,000
14 July 2007 19:30  Saudi Arabia 2–1  Indonesia Group D 88,000
15 July 2007 19:30  Bahrain 2–1  South Korea Group D 9,000
18 July 2007 17:15  Indonesia 0–1  South Korea Group D 88,000
22 July 2007 20:15  Saudi Arabia 2–1  Uzbekistan Quarter-finals 12,000
29 July 2007 19:30  Iraq 1–0  Saudi Arabia Final 60,000


2008 AFF Championship



































































Date
Time (UTC+07)
Team #1
Res.
Team #2
Round
Attendance
5 December 2008 17:00  Singapore 5–0  Cambodia Group stage 18,000
5 December 2008 19:30  Indonesia 3–0  Myanmar Group stage 40,000
7 December 2008 17:00  Singapore 3–1  Myanmar Group stage 21,000
7 December 2008 19:30  Cambodia 0–4  Indonesia Group stage 30,000
9 December 2008 19:30  Indonesia 0–2  Singapore Group stage 50,000
16 December 2008 19:00  Indonesia 0–1  Thailand Semifinals first leg 70,000


2010 AFF Championship





















































































Date
Time (UTC+07)
Team #1
Res.
Team #2
Round
Attendance
1 December 2010 17:00  Thailand 2–2  Laos Group stage -
1 December 2010 19:30  Indonesia 5–1  Malaysia Group stage 62,000
4 December 2010 17:00  Thailand 0–0  Malaysia Group stage -
4 December 2010 19:30  Laos 0–6  Indonesia Group stage -
7 December 2010 19:30  Indonesia 2–1  Thailand Group stage 65,000
16 December 2010 19:00  Philippines 0–1  Indonesia Semifinals first leg 70,000
19 December 2010 19:00  Indonesia 1–0  Philippines Semifinals second leg 88,000
29 December 2010 19:00  Indonesia 2–1  Malaysia Finals second leg 88,000


2011 Southeast Asian Games




















































































































































Date
Time (UTC+07)
Team #1
Res.
Team #2
Round
Attendance
3 November 2011 16.00  Vietnam 3–1
 Philippines
Group stage -
3 November 2011 19.00
 Laos
2–3  Myanmar Group stage -
7 November 2011 16.00
 Singapore
0–0
 Malaysia
Group stage -
7 November 2011 19.00  Indonesia 6–0
 Laos
Group stage -
9 November 2011 16.00  Malaysia 2–1
 Thailand
Group stage -
9 November 2011 19.00
 Cambodia
1–2  Singapore Group stage -
11 November 2011 14.00
 Singapore
0–2  Indonesia Group stage -
11 November 2011 17.00  Thailand 4–0
 Cambodia
Group stage -
13 November 2011 16.00  Malaysia 4–1
 Cambodia
Group stage -
13 November 2011 19.00  Indonesia 3–1
 Thailand
Group stage -
17 November 2011 16.00
 Thailand
0–2  Singapore Group stage -
17 November 2011 19.00
 Indonesia
0–1  Malaysia Group stage -
19 November 2011 16.00  Malaysia 1–0
 Myanmar
Semifinals -
19 November 2011 19.00
 Vietnam
0–2  Indonesia Semifinals -
21 November 2011 19.30  Malaysia 1–1 (a.e.t.)
(4–3 pen.)

 Indonesia
Gold medal match -


2018 AFC U-19 Championship












































































Date
Time (UTC+07)
Team #1
Result
Team #2
Round
Attendance
18 October 2018 16.00  United Arab Emirates 2–1
 Qatar
Group stage 2,124
18 October 2018 19.00  Indonesia 3–1
 Chinese Taipei
Group stage 17,320
21 October 2018 16.00
 Chinese Taipei
1–8  United Arab Emirates Group stage 4,781
21 October 2018 19.00  Qatar 6–5
 Indonesia
Group stage 38,217
24 October 2018 19.00  Indonesia 1–0
 United Arab Emirates
Group stage 30,022
28 October 2018 16.00  Qatar 7–3 (a.e.t.)
 Thailand
Quarter-finals 16,758
28 October 2018 19.30  Japan 2–0
 Indonesia
Quarter-finals 60,154


2018 AFF Championship































Date
Time (UTC+07)
Team #1
Result
Team #2
Round
Attendance
13 November 2018 19.00  Indonesia 3–1
 Timor-Leste
Group stage 15,138
25 November 2018 19.00  Indonesia -
 Philippines
Group stage -


Other uses


Other than sports, the stadium is also used for other events such as national ceremonies, political gatherings, admission exams, religious affairs, concerts, etc. Notable events include:



  • The Grand Catholic mass led by Pope John Paul II, in October 1989[10]

  • The 100th anniversary of Indonesian National Awakening day, 20 May 2008[11]

  • The political rally for both of parliamentary and also presidential elections in 2004, 2009, and 2014

  • Christmas event jointly organized by the Indonesia Bethel Church for the whole district since 2006 until now (only absent in 2012)


  • Indonesia Tiberias Church Christmas Services


  • HKBP Jubileum (147th in 2007 and 150th in 2011)

  • The 85th anniversary of Nahdlatul Ulama (2011)[12]

  • Admission exams for thousands Indonesian Ministry of Health civil servants applicants on 3 November 2013[13]



Concerts and shows

















































































Date
Artists
Events
Attendance
4 December 1975

Deep Purple
N/A
150,000
December 1993

Michael Jackson

Dangerous World Tour
Cancelled
October 1996

Michael Jackson

History World Tour
100.000
21 September 2011

Linkin Park

A Thousand Suns World Tour
25,000
22 September 2012



SM Town Live World Tour III
50,000
9 March 2013



Music Bank World Tour
25,000
25 August 2013

Metallica
N/A
60,000
13 December 2013

Slank
N/A
N/A
23 August 2014



RCTI 25th Anniversary
N/A
25 March 2015

One Direction

On the Road Again Tour
43,032
11 September 2015

Bon Jovi

Bon Jovi Live!
40,000
8 November 2018

Guns N' Roses

Not in This Lifetime... Tour

TBD


Recent renovations




The new seats


Indonesia hosted the 2018 Asian Games and 2018 Asian Para Games and the Gelora Bung Karno Main Stadium was chosen as both Games' main venue. Due to the age of this stadium, which already exceeded fifty years, the government renovated the stadium in order to meet the standards made by the Olympic Council of Asia. All of the colorful wooden long benches (bleachers) that still remained when the renovation commenced were scrapped and replaced with single seats, ultimately made it an all-seater stadium. The old single seats which had been installed during earlier renovation were also replaced. The seats, colored red, white, and grey, created an illusion of waving Indonesian flag.


Its lighting system was upgraded from 1200 lux to 3500 lux.[14][15] On the stadium's roof, there are 1,293 solar panels installed.[16] After renovation, the stadium accommodates the needs of disabled users.[17]



Gallery




Footnotes





  1. ^ Zafna, Grandyos (12 January 2018). "Stadion Utama GBK juga Dilengkapi Empat Sky Box". Detik.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 21 January 2018..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ ab "E-Booking Stadion Utama Gelora Bung Karno". gbk.id. Retrieved 3 October 2018.


  3. ^ "Jelang PSMS vs Persib, Kenangan Rekor 150.000 Penonton di Senayan". Kompas.com (in Indonesian). Kompas Gramedia Group. 25 March 2017. Retrieved 10 December 2017.


  4. ^ Rindi Nuris Velarosdela (4 September 2018). "Mengenal Rumput Zeon Zoysia, Jenis Rumput Terbaik yang Dipasang di Stadion GBK". Kompas.com. Retrieved 15 September 2018.


  5. ^ Ahmad Fawwaz Usman (8 August 2017). "Menuju Asian Games 2018, Renovasi GBK Nyaris Rampung". Liputan6.com. Retrieved 30 November 2017.


  6. ^ Persija Jakarta Harus Segera Pindah dari SUGBK, I Gede Widiade Siapkan Dua Stadion Ini


  7. ^ Bung Karno Stadium in Jakarta, Bung Karno Stadium, Bung Karno Stadium in Jakarta, Indonesia


  8. ^ Indonesia v Bahrain (Group D) in Jakarta


  9. ^ M.F. Siregar, Matahari Olahraga Indonesia, page 82-83


  10. ^ Tempo online: Sang Gembala Itu Telah Datang


  11. ^ Rangkaian Peringatan 100 Tahun Kebangkitan Nasional


  12. ^ "30 Ribu Banser Amankan Harlah NU di Gelora Bung Karno". Tempo.co (in Indonesian). 17 July 2011. Retrieved 10 December 2017.


  13. ^ Ujian CPNS di Gelora Bung Karno


  14. ^ Rahmat, Arby (12 January 2018). "Lampu Stadion GBK Saingi San Siro Milan". CNN Indonesia (in Indonesian). Retrieved 14 January 2018.


  15. ^ Baskoro, Rangga (12 January 2018). "SU GBK Jadi Stadion Paling Terang Di Asia". Tribunnews.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 12 January 2018.


  16. ^ Diah, Femi (29 September 2017). "Wajah Terkini Stadion Utama GBK: Rasa Baru yang Makin Merah Putih". Detik.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 12 January 2018.


  17. ^ Raya, Mercy (12 January 2018). "Stadion Utama GBK Sudah Lebih Ramah Disabilitas". Detik.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 12 January 2018.




Bibliography



  • Pour, Julius (2004), Dari Gelora Bung Karno ke Gelora Bung Karno (in Indonesian), Jakarta: Grasindo, ISBN 978-979-732-444-5.


See also


  • List of stadiums by capacity


External links






  • Profile on GBK Sports Complex Official Website























Events and tenants
Preceded by
700th Anniversary Stadium
Chiang Mai


Southeast Asian Games Athletics Competitions
Main Venue

1997
Succeeded by
Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah Stadium
Bandar Seri Begawan

Preceded by
Workers Stadium
Beijing


AFC Asian Cup
Final Venue

2007
Succeeded by
Khalifa Stadium
Doha

Preceded by
Incheon Asiad Main Stadium
Incheon


Asian Games
Opening and Closing Ceremonies

2018
Succeeded by
Hangzhou Sports Park Stadium
Hangzhou

Preceded by
Incheon Asiad Main Stadium
Incheon


Asian Games
Main Stadium

2018
Succeeded by
Hangzhou Sports Park Stadium
Hangzhou











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