Wildparkstadion | ||
Owners | Stadt Karlsruhe (City of Karlsruhe) | |
Opened | August 7, 1955 | |
Renovated | 1978, 1986, 1991-1993 | |
Tenants | Karlsruher SC (Fußball-Bundesliga) World Games 1989 | |
Capacity | 29,699 | |
Field dimensions | 105 x 68 m | |
Surface | Grass |
Wildparkstadion is a football stadium located in Karlsruhe, Germany. It is the home of the football club Karlsruher SC.
It is located northeast of the Karlsruhe Palace (Schloss) and is part of the former deer park (Wildpark) of the Grand Dukes of Baden in the Hardtwald, hence the name. There have been football pitches at the location since 1922, and the stadium was built in 1955, with several major renovations since.
External links[]
- Stadium information (German)
Karlsruher Football Club |
Current season •
Club honours •
Managers •
Players •
Squads •
Wildparkstadion |
3. Liga stadiums 2023-24 |
Audi Sportpark (FC Ingolstadt) · BWT-Stadion am Hardtwald (SV Sandhausen) · Carl-Benz-Stadion (Waldhof Mannheim) · Donaustadion (SSV Ulm) · Dreisamstadion (SC Freiburg II) · Erzgebirgsstadion (Erzgebirge Aue) · Grünwalder Stadion (1860 Munich) · Home Deluxe Arena (SC Verl) · Jahnstadion Regensburg (Jahn Regensburg) · Leuna Chemie Stadion (Hallescher FC) · Ludwigsparkstadion (1. FC Saarbrücken) · Preußenstadion (Preußen Münster) · Rudolf-Harbig-Stadion (Dynamo Dresden) · Schauinsland-Reisen-Arena (MSV Duisburg) · Schüco-Arena (Arminia Bielefeld) · Sportpark Höhenberg (Viktoria Köln) · Sportpark Unterhaching (SpVgg Unterhaching) · Stadion an der Hafenstraße (Rot-Weiss Essen) · Stadion Lohmühle (VfB Lübeck) · Stadion Rote Erde (Borussia Dortmund II) |
Germany |