place

Atotxa Stadium

1913 establishments in Spain1999 disestablishments in SpainDefunct football venues in SpainFootball venues in the Basque Country (autonomous community)Real Sociedad
San SebastiánSports venues completed in 1913Sports venues demolished in 1999
La Real Sociedad en el primer partido de Liga de Primera División en el campo de Atotxa (1 de 4) Fondo Marín Kutxa Fototeka
La Real Sociedad en el primer partido de Liga de Primera División en el campo de Atotxa (1 de 4) Fondo Marín Kutxa Fototeka

Atotxa (Spanish: Atocha) was a football stadium in San Sebastián, Spain. It was the home ground of Real Sociedad until 1993 when it was replaced by Anoeta Stadium. It had superseded Ondarreta Stadium 80 years earlier. It had a capacity of 17,000 spectators.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Atotxa Stadium (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Atotxa Stadium
Atotxa Zelaiko Plaza, San Sebastián Egia (Egia)

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Atotxa StadiumContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 43.3195 ° E -1.975 °
placeShow on map

Address

Atotxa Zelaiko Plaza

Atotxa Zelaiko Plaza
San Sebastián, Egia (Egia)
Autonomous Community of the Basque Country, Spain
mapOpen on Google Maps

La Real Sociedad en el primer partido de Liga de Primera División en el campo de Atotxa (1 de 4) Fondo Marín Kutxa Fototeka
La Real Sociedad en el primer partido de Liga de Primera División en el campo de Atotxa (1 de 4) Fondo Marín Kutxa Fototeka
Share experience

Nearby Places

Tabakalera
Tabakalera

Tabakalera is a former tobacco factory in San Sebastián, Basque Autonomous Community, Spain, which was converted into a contemporary culture centre. Located in the Egia district of San Sebastián, next to the Estación del Norte railway station and the Cristina Enea Park, it takes up one of the biggest plots (13.277 m2) of the urban area. For 90 years (1913–2003) Tabakalera was a tobacco factory. It was one of the main employers in San Sebastián and most of the workers were women. The building took the name of the enterprise that managed the tobacco production in Spain until the privatisation process that converted Tabacalera into Altadis. In 2003 the factory was closed by Altadis. A year later, in 2004, the San Sebastián City Council, the Provincial Council of Gipuzkoa and the Basque Government bought the building in order to transform it into the International Centre for Contemporary Culture of San Sebastián.Since 2007 Tabakalera organised a wide sort of activities. Exhibitions like Summer by Julian Schnabel (2007), No es Neutral (2008), Egiatik (2008) and Look Again (2009) or experimental shortfilm screenings like LABO, in collaboration with Clermont-Ferrand Festival. In 2010, refurbishment works began in the building. On September 11, 2015, the renovated building was inaugurated. The building contains exhibition halls, a multi-purpose plaza, a multi-purpose hall, a cinema theatre, a creation library called Ubik, media labs called Hirikilabs, spaces for art creation, a cafeteria called Taba, a residence for artists, and a four-star hotel, called One Shot Tabakalera House. It also hosts the headquarters of local culture institutions Kutxa Kultur, the Basque Film Archive, the San Sebastián International Film Festival, the Elías Querejeta Film School and the Etxepare Basque Institute.