place

Red Star Stadium

1963 establishments in SerbiaAthletics (track and field) venues in SerbiaAthletics (track and field) venues in Serbia and MontenegroAthletics (track and field) venues in YugoslaviaFootball venues in Serbia
Football venues in Serbia and MontenegroFootball venues in YugoslaviaNational stadiumsPages with Serbo-Croatian IPARed Star BelgradeSavski VenacSports venues completed in 1963Sports venues in BelgradeUEFA Euro 1976 stadiumsUEFA European Championship final stadiumsYugoslav Serbian architecture
Fk Red Star stadium
Fk Red Star stadium

The Rajko Mitić Stadium (Serbian: Стадион Рајко Митић / Stadion Rajko Mitić, pronounced [ˈstâdioːn ˈrâːjko ˈmǐːtit͡ɕ]), previously known as Red Star Stadium (Serbian: Стадион Црвена звезда / Stadion Crvena zvezda), also known as Marakana (Serbian Cyrillic: Маракана), is a multi-use stadium in Belgrade, Serbia which has been the home ground of Red Star Belgrade since 1963. The stadium is located in Dedinje, municipality of Savski Venac. Rajko Mitić Stadium, renamed in December 2014 in honor of the club's former player and legend Rajko Mitić (1922–2008), has a seating capacity of 53,000 and is currently the largest stadium in Serbia by capacity. The Stadium has hosted numerous international matches at a senior level, including the European Cup final in 1973 and the UEFA European Championship finals in 1976.

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

Red Star Stadium
Rajka Mitica, Belgrade Београд (Савски венац)

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Red Star StadiumContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 44.783333333333 ° E 20.464722222222 °
placeShow on map

Address

Стадион „Рајко Митић“

Rajka Mitica
11000 Belgrade, Београд (Савски венац)
Central Serbia, Serbia
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q478000)
linkOpenStreetMap (26763283)

Fk Red Star stadium
Fk Red Star stadium
Share experience

Nearby Places