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Lidl Arena

European League of Football venuesFC Wil 1900Football venues in SwitzerlandSports venues completed in 1967Wil
The Sportpark Bergholz in Wil (2022)
The Sportpark Bergholz in Wil (2022)

Lidl Arena (until 2013 and from 2019 to 2022: Stadion Bergholz; from 2013 to 2019: IGP Arena) is located in the city of Wil in the Swiss canton of St. Gallen and is the home ground of the football club FC Wil and the Heveltic Guards. The football stadium is owned by the city of Wil.

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

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 47.458333 ° E 9.037222 °
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Address

Lidl Arena (Stadion Bergholz)

Bergholzstrasse
9501 , Südquartier (Kreis Wil - Stadt (Wil))
St. Gallen, Switzerland
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The Sportpark Bergholz in Wil (2022)
The Sportpark Bergholz in Wil (2022)
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Nearby Places

Adula Alps
Adula Alps

The Adula Alps, also known as the West Graubünden and Misox Alps, are a western Alpine mountain group, the part of the Lepontine Alps from the Lukmanier and St Gotthard Passes to the Splügen Pass. They lie mostly in Switzerland, in the Cantons of Ticino, Graubünden, and Uri, and partly in Italy, in the province of Sondrio in Lombardy, stretching south to Lake Como. They form subsection 10B of the Alps, according to the Partizione delle Alpi, and subsection 10 III, according to the unified orographic classification of the Alps by Sergio Marazzi (SOIUSA). A string of mountains of the Adula stand on the international border between Switzerland and Italy, including Pizzo Tambò, Piz di Pian, Cima de Pian Guarnei (Pizzo Quadro), Cime di Val Loga, Piz Tamborello, Piz della Forcola, Pizzaccio, and Cima dello Stagn, while Pizzo Ferré is near the border on the Italian side. The mountain guides of the Swiss Alpine Club do not lead climbers in groups for the Adula Alps, but attach parts of them to other sections. The highest peak is the Rheinwaldhorn (3402 metres, 11,161 ft), which in Italian is called the Adula, giving the range its name.The main valleys are Val Malvaglia, which drains into the lower Blenio Valley, and three others draining south out of the Adula Alps, which are, from west to east, Val Calanca, Valle Mesolcina, and Valle Spluga (or San Giacomo).The creation of an Adula National Park was planned by Switzerland for sixteen years, from 2000. It would have become only the second in the country, after the Swiss National Park, but in November 2016 the inhabitants voted against it.