List of football stadiums in Estonia

The following is a list of football stadiums in Estonia, ordered by seating capacity. Only stadiums with a seating capacity of 500 or more are included.

Picture StadiumCapacityLocationHome Team
A. Le Coq Arena
(Lilleküla Stadium)
14,336TallinnEstonia,
FC Flora Tallinn,

FCI Levadia

Kalevi Keskstaadion12,000Tallinnunder renovation
Kadriorg Stadium5,000TallinnJK Tallinna Kalev
Tehvandi Stadium3,200OtepääFC Otepää
Kuressaare linnastaadion2,000KuressaareFC Kuressaare
Rakvere linnastaadion1,829RakvereRakvere JK Tarvas
Stadium of Tartu University1,700Tartu
Tamme Stadium1,638TartuTartu JK Tammeka
Pirita Velodrome1,602Tallinn
Võru Stadium1,600VõruVõru FC Helios
Pärnu Rannastaadion1,501PärnuPärnu JK Vaprus,
PJK
Sportland Arena1,198TallinnTallinna JK Legion,

FC Flora (during winter),

FCI Levadia (during winter)

Viljandi linnastaadion1,084ViljandiViljandi JK Tulevik
Narva Kreenholmi Stadium1,065NarvaJK Narva Trans
Narva Kalev-Fama Stadium1,000NarvaNarva Trans (during winter)
Tabasalu Arena1,000TabasaluJK Tabasalu
Viimsi Stadium1,000ViimsiViimsi JK
Haapsalu linnastaadion896HaapsaluLäänemaa JK
Tartu Annelinna kunstmurustaadion738TartuTartu JK Welco
Valga Keskstaadion653ValgaFC Valga Warrior
Hiiu Stadium650TallinnNõmme Kalju FC
Lootospark600PõlvaPõlva FC Lootos,
FC Lootos Põlva (women)
Sepa Jalgpallikeskus508TartuTartu JK Tammeka

(during winter)

Jõhvi linnastaadion500JõhviJõhvi FC Phoenix
Maardu linnastaadion500MaarduMaardu Linnameeskond
Paide linnastaadion500PaidePaide Linnameeskond

Future stadiums

Stadiums which are currently being renovated or in development:

StadiumFuture CapacityLocationHome Team Opening Notes
Kalevi Keskstaadion15,000TallinnJK Tallinna Kalev 2023 The renovation's 1st phase will see the refurbishment of the running track and football pitch. The 2nd phase is set to see the installation of lights and the construction of a roof for the stands. Photos.
Paide Stadium 2,000 Paide Paide Linnameeskond 2024 in October 2021, Paide Linnameeskond announced their plan to construct a new modern 2,000 seater stadium that would be opened by latest in 2024.[1]
Hiiu Stadium 1,500 Tallinn Nõmme Kalju FC 2022 The renovation of Hiiu Stadium will see the refurbishment of the artificial turf pitch, the construction of a new grandstand and the renovation of the stadium's administrative building. The initial plan to replace the artificial turf pitch with natural grass was not pursued.[2]
Holm Park

(Raadi Jalgpallipark)

Tartu Tartu JK Welco 2022 Raadi Jalgpallipark is set to be the first environmentally friendly stadium in Estonia.[3] The grand opening of the stadium is planned to take place in the summer of 2022.

Indoor football facilities

List of indoor football fields in Estonia:

PictureStadium CapacityField's size (m)Location Year opened
EJL Jalgpallihall 558100 × 64 (m)Tallinn 2013
Sõle Jalgpallihall 400 104 × 68 (m) Tallinn 2016
Männimäe Jalgpallihall 200 100 × 64 (m) Viljandi 2021
Annemõisa Jalgpallihall 100 × 64 (m) Tartu 2022
Uuemõisa Jalgpallihall 100 × 64 (m) Haapsalu 2021
Infoneti Lasnamäe Jalgpallihall 102 × 68 (m) Tallinn 2016
Männiku Jalgpallikeskus 90 × 60 (m) Tallinn 2009
Kindluse Spordikompleksi Jalgpallihall 79 × 49 (m) Rae 2021
Kotka Hall 70 × 50 (m) Tallinn 2006

List of indoor football facilities in Estonia which are currently in development or under construction:

StadiumLocation Expected year of completion
Rapla Jalgpallihall Rapla 2022
Pärnu Jalgpallihall Pärnu 2022
Rakvere Jalgpallihall Rakvere 2022
Kuressaare Jalgpallihall Kuressaare 2022
Jõhvi Jalgpallihall Jõhvi 2022
Paide Jalgpallihall Paide 2023
Narva Jalgpallihall Narva 2023
Jõgeva Jalgpallihall Jõgeva 2023
Viimsi Jalgpallihall Viimsi 2023
Maarjamäe Jalgpallihall Tallinn TBD
Tartu statsionaarne Jalgpallihall Tartu TBD

See also

References

  1. "Paide Linnameeskond – Staadion südames 2023" (in Estonian). Retrieved 2021-11-04.
  2. "Kalju mänguga avati Premium liigas järjekorras 57. väljak. Miks nõmmekatel praegu kindlat kodu pole?". Delfi Sport. Retrieved 2021-05-20.
  3. "Avaleht". Raadi roheline jalgpallipark (in Estonian). Retrieved 2021-04-21.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.