Location Maps of Jakarta International Stadium : [ Ссылка ]
#JakartaInternationalStadium ( #JIS) is a retractable roof football stadium in Tanjung Priok, #Jakarta, Indonesia. It is the home ground of #Persija Jakarta after moving from their current stadium, Gelora Bung Karno #Stadium, and the occasional home of the Indonesia national football team, after an agreement between PSSI and PT #JAKPRO to use the facility. The stadium is able to host 82,000 spectators, making it the largest stadium in Indonesia. Construction of the stadium was delayed due to land disputes and class-action lawsuits by former squatters whose homes were demolished to make way for the stadium. Construction commenced in late 2019 and completed in April 2022.
The stadium complex is built on 22 hectares of land and the stadium building itself is built on 375.7 m2 (4,044 sq ft). This stadium will be the largest capacity retractable roof stadium in Asia and the second largest retractable roof stadium by capacity in the world, just behind AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.
In late 2000s to early 2010s, plans had emerged that a new home stadium for Persija Jakarta would be built in 26.5 hectares of land near the BMW Park (Indonesian: Taman #BMW (Bersih, Manusiawi dan Berwibawa)) in #TanjungPriok, North Jakarta, where squatters had been illegally building homes for the last few years. The stadium was to be named 'BMW Stadium' after the aforementioned neighbouring park and was scheduled to be built by 2013 and completed by 2015. The stadium had a planned capacity of 50,000 and was originally planned to feature a running track. This stadium was to be a replacement of Lebak Bulus Stadium which was demolished for the Jakarta MRT train depot.
After multiple series of failed planning and construction, the land dispute was over and it was ready to be cleared for construction on 2017, and buildings of former squatters was later demolished. Two years after the land was cleared, an official plan was released for a stadium of 82,000 capacity with a retractable roof and without a running track, unlike the previous project designs over the years. The newly designed project was given the name 'Jakarta International Stadium' and broke ground on 14 March 2019 with Jakarta Governor Anies Baswedan kicking off the construction.
The stadium construction started in September 2019 and is expected to be completed by December 2021. The construction of the stadium hasn't been halted amid the COVID-19 pandemic, albeit safety precautions and medical check-ups for workers has been implemented. Due to the pandemic, the construction progress slowed down caused by the decrease of construction workers and delay of construction materials being shipped and transported for the project. This problem has pushed the estimated opening date from October 2021 to March 2022.
The stadium warm-up training area, outside the stadium in 4 September 2021 during construction.
On 4 June 2021, the lifting of the steel roof truss began. The three-phased lifting was completed on 17 June 2021. The main truss has a total mass of 3,900 tons and has a length of 70 metres (230 ft). Jakarta Governor Anies Baswedan claimed that the lifting was the biggest and heaviest ever done on a stadium roof in the world, and earned a MURI record for the Heaviest Lifting of Stadium Roof Structure on 28 July 2021. The stadium also earned two other records for the First Retractable Roof Stadium in Indonesia and the First Stadium to be a Platinum-Certified Green Building in Indonesia.
On 10 December 2021, the construction of the sheet metal roof has been completed, while the stadium has reached 87,85% completion.
The stadium was planned to have a soft opening on 11 December 2021, but a week before the opening, the government decided to postpone it due to the Omicron variant outbreak. The soft opening date was delayed to 6 February 2022, but was later delayed again due to rising COVID-19 cases. The stadium finally had its soft opening on 13 April 2022, to coincide with the first matchday of the 2021 International Youth Championship.
The stadium will host the 2021 IYC on 13–19 April 2022, a friendly cup participated by the youth teams of Indonesia, Barcelona, Bali United, and Atlético Madrid. The group stage matches of the championship was scheduled to be held in the newly renovated Kapten I Wayan Dipta Stadium in Bali,. The competition is going to be hosted in the stadium to "show the world that European-quality stadiums will be an icon of Indonesia" said Gede Widiade, the chairman of Pancoran Soccer Field, the organizer of the event.
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