Hong Kong Football Club Stadium
Hong Kong Football Club Stadium (Chinese: 香港足球會球場), nicknamed The Jungle, is a multi-purpose stadium located in Happy Valley, Hong Kong inside the oval of Happy Valley Racecourse. The stadium is privately owned by the Hong Kong Football Club and has 2,750 seats. It hosts the annual Hong Kong Tens tournament and the HKFC International Soccer Sevens tournament.
Address | 3 Sports Road, Happy Valley, Hong Kong |
---|---|
Coordinates | 22°16′28″N 114°10′54″E / 22.274425°N 114.181677°E |
Public transit | Causeway Bay station |
Owner | Hong Kong Football Club |
Operator | Hong Kong Football Club |
Capacity | 2,750[1] 1,720 (football) |
Field size | 100.5 x 65 metres (110 x 71 yards) |
Surface | Artificial turf |
Construction | |
Opened | 1886 |
Renovated | 1995 |
Tenants | |
Hong Kong Football Club (football) Lucky Mile (football) Club Albion (football) HKFC (rugby) Hong Kong national rugby union team (rugby) |
The main pitch is used for football and rugby (union) matches, and there is an adjoining hockey pitch. The playing surface has been synthetic since 2004.
History
editThe original HKFC Stadium on Sports Road was the venue for the world-famous Hong Kong Sevens from its inception in 1976 until it outgrew its home and was moved to the Hong Kong Government Stadium (now the Hong Kong Stadium) in 1982. The original stadium was built in 1954 and demolished in 1995 and was located northeast, adjacent to the racecourse.[2][3]
The stadium's home attendance record is 1,720, reached during the HKFC's defeat against Kitchee on 26 February 2023.[4]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Soccer/Rugby Pitch, archived from the original on 8 April 2019, retrieved 22 September 2016
- ^ Way, Dennis M. (2011). Along The Sports Road: The Hong Kong Football Club, Its Environs And Personalities 1886-2011. Hong Kong: Hong Kong Football Club. pp. 124–125. ISBN 9789881977212.
- ^ gwulo.com/atom/19474
- ^ "港超|傑志作客大勝港會 今季首掛紅旗1720人坐滿地獄球場 (18:44) - 20230226 - 體育". 明報新聞網 - 即時新聞 instant news (in Traditional Chinese). Retrieved 2023-05-01.
External links
edit- The Hong Kong Football Club Archived 2013-09-28 at the Wayback Machine