Construction In 1926, through the actions of the first president of AEK Athens,
Konstantinos Spanoudis, a piece of land in the suburb of
Nea Filadelfeia, originally set aside for refugee housing, was donated as a training ground for refugees. AEK began using the grounds for training (albeit unofficially), and by 1930, the property was signed over to the club. The stadium was completed in 1929 and officially opened in 1930 at a ceremony attended by Prime Minister
Eleftherios Venizelos. The first home game, on 2 November 1930, was an exhibition match against
Olympiacos, which ended in a 2–2 draw. The stadium had a
horseshoe shape (with stands on three of its four sides).
Expansion On 11 March 1955, the first expansion of the stadium began under the presidency of
Nikos Goumas. The expansion included the construction of a large new stand and the installation of turf. The construction works on the stadium lasted about 7 years. The inauguration of the new stand took place on 3 January 1962 with a friendly match against
Barcelona. The game, which ended 0–6 for the Catalans, was attended by the heir to the Spanish throne,
Juan Carlos, and his future wife,
Sofia. In 1979, the chairman of the club,
Loukas Barlos, initiated the constitution of a double-tiered south stand, the addition of which made it the largest stadium in
Athens at the time, as its capacity was over 35,000 after the construction of this new stand. This stand, and particularly its lower tier known as "Skepasti" ("the Covered"), became the new home of the
ultras of AEK, who had until then resided in the opposite "Gate 21" stand. The stand was inaugurated on October 7 in a league match against
Panathinaikos, which ended 0–1 for the greens. On 30 November 1980, the stadium set an attendance record when AEK sold 36,766 tickets in the league game against Panathinaikos.
Renovation In 1998, AEK Athens decided to install new seats, reducing the stadium's capacity from 35,000 to 24,729 (excluding the press and VIP stands).
Demolition Giannis Granitsas, then president of the
amateur AEK and temporarily chairman of AEK Athens F.C., decided to demolish the stadium in June 2003. He claimed that the stadium was too old and seriously damaged by the
1999 Athens earthquake. The last match held at the stadium was on 3 May 2003 between AEK Athens and
Aris. The game ended in a 4–0 win for AEK with
Ilija Ivić scoring the last goal at the 77th minute. ==Plans for a new venue==