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Chedly Zouiten Stadium

Coordinates: 36°49′44″N 10°10′12″E / 36.828863°N 10.170121°E / 36.828863; 10.170121
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Chedly Zouiten Stadium
Map
Former namesStade Géo André (1942–1963)
LocationTunis, Tunisia
Capacity18,000[1]
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Built1942
Renovated2009–2012

Chedly Zouiten Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium in the Mutuelleville district of Tunis, Tunisia.[1] It is currently used by football team Stade Tunisien.[2] The stadium holds 18,000 people.[1]

It hosted the 1965 Africa Cup of Nations. It was renovated for two meetings of the 1994 Africa Cup of Nations. Long the main stadium in the capital, it was supplanted by the Stade El Menzah in 1967 and then by the Stade 7 November of Radès in 2001, both larger and more modern.

Name

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The main entrance to the stadium.

It was named as Stade Géo André, who was a French sportsman killed by German forces during the Tunisian campaign of World War II, before being renamed in honour of Chedly Zouiten, a figure of Tunisian football, after his death in 1963.

Renovation

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The municipality of Tunis closed it on 17 November 2006 to carry out renovation work estimated at 3.4 million dinars and initially caused by faults in the rainwater drainage channels. This cost includes the renovation of the sanitation and drainage network for rainwater, the renovation of the grandstand, the press stand, bleachers on the lawn side, changing rooms, electrical installations; the works were launched on 2 January 2009 for a period of ten months. It was not until 20 May 2012 that the stadium was finally reopened.

Equipment

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The stadium houses two grass football pitches, one for training and the other for national and international sports competitions, a handball field, a 400-metre track, two jumping pits, two shooting ranges and a steeple river.

Citations

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  1. ^ a b c Municipalité de Tunis.
  2. ^ "Stade Tunisien - Fédération Tunisienne de Football".

References

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  • "Complexes sportifs". Municipalité de Tunis - الشباب والرياضة (in French). n.d. Archived from the original on 23 November 2014. Retrieved 23 November 2014.

36°49′44″N 10°10′12″E / 36.828863°N 10.170121°E / 36.828863; 10.170121

Preceded by Africa Cup of Nations
Final Venue

1965
Succeeded by