Dinamo Stadium
Full nameDinamo Stadium
LocationSukhumi, Abkhazia[1]
Coordinates43°00′00″N 41°00′00″E / 43.00000°N 41.00000°E / 43.00000; 41.00000
Capacity4,300 (All seated)
Surfacegrass
Opened2015

Dinamo Stadium is a football stadium in Sukhumi, Georgia. It is home to Dinamo Sukhumi of the internationally unrecognized Abkhazian championship.[2] Also the equally unrecognized Abkhazia national football team plays its matches on the stadium, having hosted the 2016 ConIFA World Football Cup and friendlies against a Donetsk People's Republic representative team.

The stadium was opened in 2015. It has a total capacity of 4300 seats. The East Stand (1700 seats) is located along Abazinskaia St and the main stand-West Stand (2600 seats) along Voronov street. There are six main stadium entrances are located on the sides of the two stress, with four secondary exits (emergency and technical) in the corners of the territory.

On the first floor are located: lobby, locker rooms with shower (two locker rooms for athletes, judges, and two locker rooms for children's sections), bathrooms, massage and trainer's rooms, First Aid, toilets, utility and technical rooms. On the second floor, apart from the facilities relating directly to football matches, there are hall, gyms with locker rooms, the press center. Press rooms are located on the third level of the main grandstand. The building is equipped with hot and cold water supply, sanitation, ventilation, electronic video scoreboard.

Ramps and special places for people with limited mobility and the accompanying are constructed for unhindered and convenient accessibility. Design solutions are based on modern trends of football stadiums design and construction and in accordance with the sanitary, fire and environmental requirements.

References

  1. The political status of Abkhazia is disputed. Having unilaterally declared independence from Georgia in 1992, Abkhazia is formally recognised as an independent state by 5 UN member states (two other states previously recognised it but then withdrew their recognition), while the remainder of the international community recognizes it as as de jure Georgian territory. Georgia continues to claim the area as its own territory, designating it as Russian-occupied territory.
  2. "Where football meets politics". New Internationalist. 17 July 2018. Retrieved 25 May 2019.
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