Name
Allianz Stadium Turin
Alternate: Juventus Stadium
Sponsor: Allianz

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Established
2011 (14 years old)

Capacity
41,507

Build Cost
€155 million

Architect
Giorgetto Giugiaro

Country
Italy

Location
Turin

Timezone
UTC +01:00 Central European Time (CET)

Coordinates
45°6′34″N 7°38′28″E



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Upcoming
tiny league badge icon 10 Dec Juventus tiny home badge icon - tiny away badge icon Pafos
tiny league badge icon 20 Dec Juventus tiny home badge icon - tiny away badge icon Roma
tiny league badge icon 03 Jan Juventus tiny home badge icon - tiny away badge icon Lecce
tiny league badge icon 12 Jan Juventus tiny home badge icon - tiny away badge icon Cremonese
tiny league badge icon 21 Jan Juventus tiny home badge icon - tiny away badge icon Benfica
tiny league badge icon 25 Jan Juventus tiny home badge icon - tiny away badge icon Napoli
tiny league badge icon 04 Feb Juventus tiny home badge icon - tiny away badge icon Atalanta

Results
tiny league badge icon 02 Dec Juventus tiny home badge icon 2 - 0 tiny away badge icon Udinese
tiny league badge icon 29 Nov Juventus tiny home badge icon 2 - 1 tiny away badge icon Cagliari
tiny league badge icon 15 Nov Italy Rug tiny home badge icon 14 - 32 tiny away badge icon South Afri
tiny league badge icon 08 Nov Juventus tiny home badge icon 0 - 0 tiny away badge icon Torino
tiny league badge icon 04 Nov Juventus tiny home badge icon 1 - 1 tiny away badge icon Sporting C
tiny league badge icon 29 Oct Juventus tiny home badge icon 3 - 1 tiny away badge icon Udinese
tiny league badge icon 05 Oct Juventus tiny home badge icon 0 - 0 tiny away badge icon AC Milan


Description
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Juventus Stadium (Italian pronunciation: ), known for sponsorship reasons as the Allianz Stadium since July 2017, sometimes simply known in Italy as the Stadium (Italian: Lo Stadium), is an all-seater football stadium in the Vallette borough of Turin, Italy, and the home of Juventus FC The stadium was built on the site of its former ground, the Stadio delle Alpi in the latter 2000s, and is the first club-owned football modern venue in the country. It is also one of only four stadiums in Italy accredited with the UEFA Category 4, which have the highest technical level in the confederation's Stadium Infrastructure Regulations, alongside the San Siro, the Stadio Olimpico di Roma and the Stadio Olimpico Grande Torino. It was opened at the start of the 2011–12 season and, with 41,507 spectators, it is the sixth largest football stadium in Italy by seating capacity, as well the first in Piedmont.

First football structure to be built in post-modern style and the first without architectural barriers in the country, Juventus played the first match in the stadium on 8 September 2011 against the world's oldest professional football club Notts County, in a friendly which ended 1–1; Luca Toni scored the first goal. The first competitive match was against Parma three days later, where Stephan Lichtsteiner scored the stadium's first competitive goal in the 16th minute. Juventus only lost three of their first 100 league matches at the Juventus Stadium.

The stadium hosted the 2014 UEFA Europa League Final and the 2021 UEFA Nations League Finals. Also, it hosted the 2022 UEFA Women's Champions League Final. In its area there are some other structures related with the club such as the J-Museum, the J-Medical and a concept store, as well as a shopping center.
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