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Danish studio CEBRA to design new football stadium complex in Albania
CEBRA wins international competition to design the new Skenderbeu Stadium in Korça. The winning design proposal creates a vibrant neighbourhood around the multi-purpose stadium that attracts fans as well as active citizens, businesses, and guests in the Albanian city.
This Tuesday, The National Territorial Planning Agency in Albania announced CEBRA as the winner of the International Design Competition to design the new Skenderbeu Stadium complex in Korça.
With a capacity of 10,000 visitors, the new stadium with club-coloured red seats will hold great excitement on match days when fans can support the club from the grandstands. However, the new stadium complex has even bigger ambitions for sports and culture in Korça.
As part of the redevelopment design of the existing football stadium, CEBRA has designed a master plan for developing a vibrant neighbourhood around the new Skenderbeu Stadium. Buildings and alleys inspired by the Korça typologies will create a familiar cultural experience visible from both inside and outside the stadium.
A neighbourhood stadium
Traditionally, due to its size and usage, a stadium is placed by itself surrounded by parking. CEBRA, however, challenges this idea. Instead, their design proposes to extend the Parku Rinia city park and the built environment around the stadium to connect vibrant city life to the arena complex. You will even see buildings shoot up over the arena roof.
To respect the history of the entire plot, the fields and pitches stay where they are. CEBRA plans to extend the park across the Bulevardi Rilindasit and through the plot to form a green and shaded space at the very centre of the site. In the proposed master plan, the building mass is divided into city blocks as the proposal extends adjacent streets from the surrounding neighbourhoods into the area. Each block should then be filled with individual buildings of varying sizes and functions. Thus, new streets and alleys are formed that will lead through the neighbourhood and right to the arena. Moreover, surrounding buildings will shoot up over the arena roof.
“The design is ground-breaking in the sense that it almost camouflages the stadium among new city blocks, alleys, and the public park. This is not to hide the arena but to celebrate sports and culture in a wider architectural context that holds the very essence of Korça. The new stadium is not just an icon for sports, but an asset for the neighbourhood in one of the most important cultural cities in Albania,” says Mikkel Frost, Founding Partner at CEBRA.
New facilities create an active park and urban community
Besides the new Skenderbeu Stadium, the 158,000 square metre site holds an existing athletic games training area, football pitches and smaller courts, a new Olympic pool, indoor court facilities, and accommodation. Moreover, a new plaza welcomes the arena guests as an arrival square close to the entrance of the stadium, where a bust of the national hero Skenderbeu remains.
The proposal adds a new restaurant at the centre of the park, as well as a pink pavilion coffee stand for the local football team supporters, to the existing beacons of the Kids Museum, the triangular seating bank, and the Tamara Nikolla Sports Palace. To create a lively urban hub, suitable for both cultural events and daily living for residents in the district, CEBRA gives examples of buildings contributing to a vibrant city life. These include shops, family housing, daycare centres, sports museums, pubs and restaurants, and supermarkets for families, supporters, tourists, and young adults.
“With the design, we want to create openness and an urban integration with the rest of the city by offering a new neighbourhood for recreational space, active lifestyle, pitches, cafés, and general city life. The park offers so much potential already and with the new neighbourhood, the arena area comes to life as a new urban hub,” says Mikkel Frost.
Catches Korça’s DNA
In their evaluation, the committee emphasised that the design properly fits the scale of the city, and is respectful of the park and trees, as well as they considered the proposal a friendly intervention representing the DNA of Korça. Moreover, they stressed that the project is flexible and can be built step-by-step.
To fit into the context of Korça and only subtly add contemporary traits, the Danish studio has carefully studied particularly the old part of town and noted the most significant characteristics. Based on this morphological analysis of the Korça typologies, the neighbourhood will consist mainly of two to four-floored buildings and an environment that is rich in variation, unique shapes, and irregular urban spaces. The city blocks and the streets between them will be irregular, making the urban spaces diverse. Based on the Korça typologies, most buildings are rendered or stone-based and have red, hip roofs in many variations.
Due to the early stage of the project, the start date and completion date of the project are yet to be scheduled.
PROJECT DETAILS
Location: Korça, Albania
Size: 85,000 m² stadium complex
Client: The National Planning Agency - The Ministry of Education and Sports
Function: Mixed use
Architect: CEBRA, Uno Architects
Artist: Naxhi Bakalli
Building Estimator: Elvis Uku
Engineer: Arup
ABOUT CEBRA
CEBRA is a Danish architecture and design practice owned by architects Mikkel Frost, Carsten Primdahl, Kolja Nielsen and Mikkel Hallundbæk Schlesinger and founded in 2001. With a growing international portfolio of projects from across the globe, CEBRA employs a multidisciplinary staff of more than 65 employees working from offices in Aarhus and Copenhagen. CEBRA’s Albanian portfolio also counts the ongoing Mount Tirana in the capital city.
Vendndodhja
Korçë, Albania