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Great Strahov Stadium

AC Sparta PragueAthletics (track and field) venues in CzechoslovakiaDefunct football venues in the Czech RepublicFootball venues in CzechoslovakiaMusic venues in Prague
PetřínPrague 6Sports venues in Prague
Praha Strahovsky stadion
Praha Strahovsky stadion

The Great Strahov Stadium (Czech: Velký strahovský stadion) is a stadium in the Strahov district of Prague, Czech Republic. It was built for displays of synchronized gymnastics on a massive scale, with a field three times as long as and three times as wide as the standard Association football pitch. It has a capacity of 250,000 spectators, of which 56,000 is seating, making it the largest modern stadium and the second largest sports venue ever built.As of 2019 the stadium is no longer in use for competitive sports events; it is a training centre for Sparta Prague, and used to host pop and rock concerts. The stadium is sited on Petřín Hill overlooking the old city. It can be accessed by taking the Petřín funicular up the hill through the gardens, or by taking tram lines 22, 23 or 25 to Malovanka station.

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

Great Strahov Stadium
Strahov Tunnel, Prague Břevnov

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Latitude Longitude
N 50.080336111111 ° E 14.387861111111 °
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Velký strahovský stadion

Strahov Tunnel
151 34 Prague, Břevnov
Prague, Czechia
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Praha Strahovsky stadion
Praha Strahovsky stadion
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Gymnázium Jana Keplera
Gymnázium Jana Keplera

The Gymnázium Jana Keplera (English: Johannes Kepler Grammar School or Johannes Kepler Gymnasium) is a public gymnasium located in Prague 6 district in Prague, Czech Republic. It offers eight-year and four-year programmes covering both sciences and humanities and including the study of foreign languages (English language is compulsory, for the last four years students choose French language or German language in addition). The school has approximately 75 teachers and 600 students and is housed within a single building comprising three parts. The oldest part was built in 1932 in the functionalist style. On 6 June 1971 the school, which changed names several times during its existence, was named in honor of Johannes Kepler. Each year the school opens one class on the eight-year programme (where pupils begin at the age of eleven, having transferred to gymnasium after just five years of attendance at primary school) and three classes on the four-year programme (for fifteen-year-old entrants who have completed a full nine years at primary school), so there is a total number of twenty classes at the school. The final-year students take the maturita, the Czech school-leaving exam. Gymnázium Jana Keplera offers numerous extracurricular activities, for example being part of a musical ensemble or a drama club. The school has a sports ground and three indoor gyms. The library comprises almost 17,000 volumes of classical literature and textbooks as well as recent scholarly writings. Gymnázium Jana Keplera is considered one of the most prestigious schools in Czech Republic. Their students are continuously ending with one of the best results in the final exam "Maturita" as well as in many different high school mathematics, physics and language competitions.