Estadio Nueva Chicago

Nueva Chicago Stadium
Estadio Nueva Chicago
Estadio República de Mataderos
The stadium in 2010
AddressJusto Suárez 6900[1]
Buenos Aires
Argentina
Coordinates34°40′04.51″S 58°29′58.56″W / 34.6679194°S 58.4996000°W / -34.6679194; -58.4996000
OwnerC.A. Nueva Chicago
TypeStadium
Capacity20,000
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Opened27 October 1940 (1940-10-27)[2]
ArchitectDartiguelongue[3]

Estadio Nueva Chicago is a football stadium located in the Mataderos neighborhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina. It is also popularly known as Estadio República de Mataderos.[4] The stadium, inaugurated in 1940,[5] is owned and operated by Club Atlético Nueva Chicago. It has a capacity of 20,000.[6]

History

During their first years of existence, Nueva Chicago played in fields located near the "Mercado de Hacienda" in Mataderos. In 1920 the club started using a field on Piedrabuena and Av. Campana (now "Avenida del Trabajo") streets. Nueva Chicago played their home matches there until 1934. In successive years, the team played in other clubs stadiums.[5]

As the land on Piedrabuena and Av. Campana was chosen to build a new hospital (current Mataderos Health Center),[3] Nueva Chicago had to leave it. The club acquired a new land, starting to build a stadium, which was inaugurated in 1940 in a Tercera División match vs Sportivo Buenos Aires, won by Chicago 2–0. That victory also allowed the team to be crowned champion, promoting to Segunda División.[3][7]

In September 1944,[8] the club inaugurated a velodrome, surrounding the pitch of the stadium.[7] The track had a circumference of 370 metre.[3] Between mid-1970s and early 1990s, the stadium hosted speedway and midget races, held in the former velodrome track.[5]

References

Media related to Estadio Nueva Chicago at Wikimedia Commons

  1. ^ canuevachicago.com.ar/instalaciones Instalaciones on C.A. Nueva Chicago
  2. ^ "El estadio del club Nueva Chicago cumplió 80 años". Medios del Sur (in Spanish). 28 October 2020. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d Nueva Chicago history on Webcindario.com
  4. ^ "Confirmaron la clausura del estadio Republica de Mataderos". Medios del Sur (in Spanish). 19 April 2023. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  5. ^ a b c "Mataderos" on Viejos Estadios blogsite
  6. ^ Estadios de Argentina
  7. ^ a b Orgullo de Mataderos, orgullo de barrio on Clarín, 11 Jun 2001
  8. ^ "Velódromo municipal de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires" on Palermo online, 11 Oct 2023