Fortín de Ludueña
Estadio Ludueña | |
Fortín | |
Address | Casilda y Matienzo Rosario, Santa Fe Argentina |
---|---|
Owner | C.A. Tiro Federal Argentino |
Type | Stadium |
Capacity | 10,000 |
Field size | 105 x 68 m [1] |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Opened | 1956 |
Renovated | 2001 |
Expanded | 2001 |
Tenants | |
Tiro Federal (1956–present) |
Estadio Ludueña (mostly known for its nickname Fortín de Ludueña)[2][3] is a football stadium located in the city of Rosario of Santa Fe Province, Argentina. The stadium is owned and operated by C.A. Tiro Federal Argentino. It has a capacity of 10,000 spectators and was inaugurated in 1956.[4]
History
[edit]The first Tiro Federal venue was located on Humberto Primo and Goosweiler streets. The team played there since their foundation in 1905[5] until 1926,[6] when the club acquired a land on Vèlez Sarsfield and Iguazú streets in the Barrio Industrial, where a new stadium was built. It was close to Club Argentino's venue. While works were in progress, Tiro Federal used other venues such as Gimnasia y Esgrima stadium in Parque Independencia. The Barrio Industrial venue was inaugurated in 1929.[6]
In 1935 Tiro Federal moved to another land on Boulevard 27 de Febrero and Moreno streets, popularly known as "cancha del tanque" due to its proximity with a water tank that was part of a Obras Sanitarias de la Nación plant.[6][7] On March 4, 1954, the Executive Committee agreed with club members to buy a land in Barrio Ludueña, where a new stadium would be built. The land was located on Casilda and Matienzo streets.[7]
After Tiro Federal promoted to the regionalised Torneo Argentino B in 1998,[5] the team had to play their home matches in other stadiums[8][9] due to the low capacity and deterioration of their own venue. Stadiums used were Estadio Gabino Sosa (Central Córdoba) and Estadio José María Olaeta (Argentino de Rosario), and Estadio Gigante de Arroyito, which were their home venues during the 1998–99 season.[7][6]
The stadium was finally refurbished during 2001. Works included the replacements of the old wooden stand (the only by then) for concrete blocks mounted on iron structures. Besides, three new stands were built on the other sides of the stadium. Press booths, toilettes, locker rooms, were also renovated and modernised, while a fence was placed surrounding the pitch. On 9 December 2001 the stadium was reinaugurated in a Torneo Argentino A match vs San Martín de Tucumán (ended 2–2).[7]
As big doors were placed outside the Ludueña Stadium, it was soon nicknamed Fortín due to its similarity with a fortification.[7]
References
[edit]- ^ El Fortín de Ludueña - info on BeSoccer.com
- ^ Chacarita visita a Tiro Federal on La Voz, 9 Ago 2010
- ^ Tiro Fedral vs Instituto on Télam, 6 Mar 2011
- ^ ESTADIO EL FORTÍN DE LUDUEÑA overview
- ^ a b Volver: Tiro Federal cumple 115 años en un momento donde debe resurgir by Juan José Cavalcante on El Ciudadano web, 29 Mar 2020
- ^ a b c d "Los diferentes reductos de Tiro Federal" by Leonardo Volpe on Historia del Fútbol Rosarino, 30 Jan 2011
- ^ a b c d e "El Fortín de Ludueña on Historias del Ascenso blogsite
- ^ Argentina Fourth Level (Torneo Argentino "B" - Interior) 1998/99 on the RSSSF
- ^ "" by José Carluccio, 28 Dec 2012
External links
[edit]- Stadium photos at Football Ground Map