Part of Sports Forum Leipzig After the
War of the Fourth Coalition, educators
Ernst Moritz Arndt and
Friedrich Ludwig Jahn wanted German national sports celebrations to train the
Lützow Free Corps to defend against the
French. Leipzig became one of the wealthiest cities in Germany, with a number of sports festivals; the only larger sports gathering was the
1936 Summer Olympics. Leader
Walter Ulbricht wanted a national-class stadium to commemorate the 100,000 fallen soldiers in the
Battle of Leipzig.
Free German Youth regional leader Heinz Haferkorn was tasked with finding 200 volunteers per day, and work on the stadium began on August 2, 1955. To save money, debris from the
1945 bombings was used. Its architect of record was Karl Souradny, who only completed the ground drawings and never visited the site.
Replacement In 1990, due to riots in other European countries and in Leipzig's
Alfred-Kunze-Sportpark, access to Zentralstadion was banned to reduce further rioting. The bell in the stadium's
Werner Seelenbinder Tower was silenced. Due to the rising maintenance costs, the city decided to build a smaller, soccer-only stadium in 1997. According to critics, Berlin's similar-size
Olympiastadion was renovated at the same time and the Zentralstadion could have been saved.
Germany won the right to host the
2006 FIFA World Cup in 2000, prompting renovation of many German
soccer-specific stadiums (including the Olympiastadion). ==Gallery==