1. Name Student Id
Abdul Rauf Bin Rahmat 2013738117
Ahmad Abdul Aziz Bin Ali 2013750265
Saad Safiyuddin Bin Mahmud Rushdi 2013593699
Mohammad Akmal Bin Mohammad Annuar 2013341419
2. INTRODUCTION
• The Allianz Arena, opened in 2005 and home
to both major Munich clubs, Bayern and TSV
1860, was designed purely as a football
stadium. The architecturally unique arena was
constructed in under three years. Read on for
comprehensive facts and figures about the
state-of-the-art stadium in the heart of
Europe.
3. History
• Allianz Arena replaced Munich old Olympistadion.
• The first match at the stadium was held on 30th May
2005.
• The Allianz Arena was one of the playing venue
during the world cup 2006 at Germany.
• In 2012, Allianz Arena was the host of Champion
League final.
4. Project details
• Client : FC Bayern Munich
• Architect : Herzog and de Meuron
• Contractor : Alpine Bau
• Construction period : 2002-2005
• Cost of project : 340 million euro
• Location : Munich
• Country : Germany
5. Project details (cont)
• Building type : sport and leisure, stadium
• Support structure construction : frame construction
• Facade construction : building envelope
• Support structured material : reinforced concrete,
steel/aluminium
• Facade material : concrete, plastic, fair-faced
concrete
6. Function
opening
• 30 May 2005: TSV 1860 3-2 FC Nuremberg
31 May 2005: FC Bayern 4-2 Germany
Event
• FIFA World Cup 2006.
• 2012 UEFA Champions League Final.
Usually
• Bayern Munich FC game
7. ECONOMIC VALUE
• Contribution to tourism - There are always hordes of
visitors to the Allianz Arena from the Middle or Far East, FC
Bayern fans from all over Germany. To see the color
cascading shell outside the stadium in the late afternoon.
The magnificent stadium in the north of Munich remains a
major attraction for tourists from all over the world.
• Attracting business - A large area business and for the
sponsors. Inside the stadium there are restaurants,
shopping facilities.
• Contribution of sector to economy - When the stadium was
in use for major sporting events. The event has the
potential to boost economic growth, create new job
opportunities, increase tourism levels, regenerate host
regions.
8. Building morphology
DESCRIPTION
Façade 2,874 rhomboidal inflated ETFE foil panels form the 66,500 m² roof
and façade Biggest membrane shell in the world.
Façade lighting 1,056 (of 2,760) illuminated panels (in white, red or blue)
4,250 individual lights
Each panel has 4 identical lights (installed in pairs between two lens
shaped panels)
25,344 long-life fluorescent tubes with a lifespan of 8,000 hours
Pitch
190 monitors in the Arena
Total surface (barrier to barrier): 120 m x 83 m
Spectator distance from pitch: 7.5 m minimum
9. (Cont)
DESCRIPTION
Roof Structure
Total area: 38.000 m².
Primary roof structure (60%).
48 radial main beams, approx 65 m long and weighing up to
106 t.
Total of 5,300 t S355 steel.
Fire Prevention and
Safety
22,000 sprinklers
300 dry/wet risers
4,600 fire detectors
Approx. 35,000 linear fire detectors
Alarm system: 6,200 loudspeakers
10. Location
• From the subway station just south of the arena, visitors approach the stadium
through a park that was designed to disentangle and guide them to the entrance.
An esplanade rises gradually from ground level at the subway station entrance,
practically building the parking garage's cover, to the entrance level of the stadium.
On the other side of the Autobahn, the Fröttmaning Hill with its windmill affords a
marvellous view on the stadium. Also the Romanesque Heilig-Kreuz-Kirche, the
oldest structure on the area of the City of Munich designed to serve religious
purposes, is located there together with its copy, an artwork in concrete as a
reminder for the village of Fröttmaning which disappeared with the construction
of the Autobahn.
12. Method of construction
The stadium is designed so that the main entrance to the stadium would be from an elevated
esplanade separated from the parking space consisting of Europe’s biggest underground car park.
The roof of the stadium has in-built roller blinds which may be drawn back and forth during games
to provide protection from the sun.
• Total concrete used during stadium construction: 120,000 m³
• Total concrete used for the parking garage: 85,000 m³
• Total steel used during stadium construction: 22,000 tonnes
• Total steel used for the parking garage: 14,000 tonnes
13. facilities
Inside the
Arena
6,000 m² of catering facilities devided into following sections:
28 kiosks
2 fan-restaurants (one in the north- and one in the south-stand), each with 1,000 seats
Restaurant Arena a la Carte accommodating 400 people
Press club with about 350 seats
Mixed Zone ( 520 m²)
offices and conference rooms
comfortably appointed media areas
a nursery
54 ticket counters
shopping facilities
changing rooms ( 4 for players: FC Bayern 2, TSV 1860 2 ; 4 for coaches ; 2 for referees)
2 warm-up rooms, each 110m²
550 WC-cubicles in the Arena
300 HD-TV Monitors in the Arena
Parking 9,800 parking places in four x four-storey Esplanade car parks (the largest in Europe)
Entrance height: 2 metres
1,200 parking places on two levels in the stadium
350 coach places (240 to the north and 110 to the south of the Esplanade)
130 parking spaces for the disabled