Roma have unveiled plans for a brand new state-of-the-art
stadium to be built over the next few years.
The provisionally titled 'Stadio della Roma', with a
standard capacity of 52,000 - which could be enlarged to 60,000 for specific
events - will be constructed within the Italian capital and allow the
Giallorossi to move away from the Stadio Olimpico, which is shared with rivals
Lazio.
"The Roma fans deserve their own stadium,"
Francesco Totti told the new stadium's official website.
"Something personal, something that belongs to them.
A stadium that, in reality, makes you tremble."
The ground, designed in part as a homage to the
Colosseum, will include a complex consisting of bars, restaurants and a
top-class training facility, as well as shops and the new Roma Hall of Fame.
The project - which is set to cost up to €300 million -
is being partly funded by outside investment from corporations including Nike,
Disney and Goldman Sachs, and is committed to using sustainable architecture in
its construction.
Roma president James Pallotta is confident the arena will
become a source of intimidation for visiting teams as well as an important
source of economic growth within the city.
"The stadium will be able to scare our opponents,
but meanwhile it has to become a new icon for the city of Rome," he told
reporters. "Building this new stadium will create a lot of new jobs and
stimulate the economic growth in the city.
"The Stadio Olimpico is a wonderful stadium, but we
feel the need for a change and a new challenge. We come from experience in
Boston and we feel that we can do the same here in Rome."
Mayor of Rome Ignazio Marino was especially pleased to
see the construction work take place in an area of the city where building
complications would be kept to a minimum.
"The Stadium will be built in an already urbanized
area, and that's a big point for us. My wish is to watch [Francesco] Totti and
his team-mates playing in the new stadium from the 2016-17 season."
Architect Dan Meis added of the stadium's design:
"To be able to try and capture AS Roma and some of the world's most
passionate fans and wrap that incredible history into a modern building was the
opportunity of a lifetime for any architect."
Culled from Goal
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