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Education City Stadium

Association football stadium in Al Rayyan, Qatar

Education City Stadium

Association football stadium in Al Rayyan, Qatar

FieldValue
nameEducation City Stadium
native_namear
imageEducation City Stadium.jpg
captionInterior view of the stadium before the 2022 FIFA World Cup Group H match between South Korea and Portugal.
mapframe-wikidatayes
location
coordinates
public_transitEducation City (المدينة التعليمية)
ownerQatar Foundation
fullnameEducation City Stadium
capacity
record_attendance44,667 (Morocco vs Spain, 6 December 2022)
surfaceGrass
broke_ground2016
opened15 June 2020
architect
project_managerASTAD
structural_engineer
main_contractors
tenantsQatar national football team (selected matches)

| mapframe-wikidata = yes

Education City Stadium () is a football stadium which is located in Al Rayyan, Qatar, and was built as a venue in time for the 2022 FIFA World Cup held in Qatar. The stadium is located within several university campuses at the Qatar Foundation's Education City. Following the FIFA World Cup, the stadium will retain 25,000 seats for use by university athletic teams. On 3 September 2020, the stadium hosted its first official match, played in the 2020–21 Qatar Stars League season.

The stadium is located about 7 km north-west of Doha.

Construction

The stadium is located on the outskirts of the capital Doha and has a capacity of 40,000 seats. It has been given the nickname "Diamond in the Desert". With 20 percent of its building materials identified as green, the stadium is among the world's most environmentally sustainable stadiums. In May 2019, Education City Stadium received a five-star GSAS rating.

The build contractor is JPAC JV, who appointed Pattern Design as the lead design architect, and Buro Happold for the engineering design.

On 15 March 2022, FIFA president Gianni Infantino met with Qatar Minister of Labor, Ali bin Samikh Al Marri in Doha, and discussed the labor reforms taking place in the country. On 16 March 2022 Infantino said in an interview, “I am pleased to see the strong commitment from the Qatari authorities to ensure the reforms are fully implemented across the labor market, leaving a lasting legacy of the FIFA World Cup long after the event, and benefiting migrant workers in the host country in the long term.”

On November 1, 2022, the International Labor Organization (ILO) recognized that Qatar has “undertaken comprehensive labor reforms to improve the conditions of the hundreds of thousands of migrant workers” which have “yielded benefits for workers, employers, and the economy more broadly.” This builds upon their 2021 report that detailed the positive impact of Qatar's new labor legislation and implementation mechanisms. Also, On November 23, 2022, Foreign Policy (an American media house) drafted a report on the latest acknowledgement of the labor reforms that Qatar initiated, as the nation has already been scrutinized for its treatment of migrant workers in the past. Reforms include the introduction of a nondiscriminatory minimum wage, the removal of barriers to change jobs, and the introduction of a worker compensation fund in 2018 that has paid out $350 million so far.

2022 FIFA World Cup

The Education City Stadium was one of eight stadiums built, renovated or reconstructed for the 2022 FIFA World Cup Qatar. The construction of the stadium was completed in June 2020, making it the third World Cup stadium to be completed. It officially opened on 15 June 2020.

History

Aerial view of Education City Stadium

Construction began in 2016.

On 30 September 2019, FIFA announced the Education City Stadium as the host of the third place match and final of the 2019 FIFA Club World Cup, with the tournament being held in Qatar. The stadium would also have hosted Liverpool’s first match in the semi-finals, but on 7 December 2019, the official opening of Education City Stadium was postponed until early 2020. Thus, Liverpool's opener, the final, and the third place match were all moved to the Khalifa International Stadium, also in Al Rayyan.

The 2020 FIFA Club World Cup was once again held in Qatar. The Education City Stadium was one of the venues. One second round match, one semi-final match, the third place match and the final between Bayern Munich and UANL all took place in the stadium. In 2020 the Education City Stadium hosted the East and West Zone matches of the 2020 AFC Champions League.

The stadium hosted five matches of the 2021 FIFA Arab Cup.

Recent tournament results

2021 FIFA Arab Cup

DateTimeTeam #1ResultTeam #2RoundAttendance
1 December 202122:000–1Group C4,777
3 December 202116:001–2Group A23,254
4 December 202122:001–1Group C3,075
7 December 202122:001–0Group D5,991
10 December 202118:002–1Quarter-finals21,329

2022 FIFA World Cup

The Education City Stadium hosted eight matches during the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

DateTimeTeam No. 1ResultTeam No. 2RoundAttendance
22 November 202216:000–0Group D42,925
24 November 202216:000–0Group H41,663
26 November 202216:002–0Group C44,259
28 November 202216:002–3Group H43,983
30 November 202218:001–0Group D43,627
2 December 202218:002–1Group H44,097
6 December 202218:000–0Round of 1644,667
9 December 202218:001–1Quarter-finals43,893

2023 AFC Asian Cup

On 5 April 2023, the Education City Stadium was chosen as one of eight (later nine) venues for the 2023 AFC Asian Cup.

DateTimeTeam No. 1ResultTeam No. 2RoundAttendance
14 January 202420:304–1Group C27,691
19 January 202414:302–1Group D38,663
23 January 202418:002–1Group C34,259
25 January 202418:000–0Group F38,773
30 January 202419:001–1Round of 1642,389
3 February 202414:302–1Quarter-finals35,640

2025 FIFA Arab Cup

DateTimeTeam #1ResultTeam #2RoundAttendance
2 December 202520:002–1Group B21,628
5 December 202517:300–0Group B37,996
7 December 202520:000–0Group A39,571
9 December 202520:003–1Group D21,386
12 December 202517:301–0Quarter-finals43,486

References

References

  1. "Education City Stadium". fifa.com.
  2. "The official completion of Education City Stadium". qatar2022.qa.
  3. "Cazorla dazzles as football arrives at Education City".
  4. "Education City Stadium". qatar2022.qa.
  5. (5 July 2020). "Education City Stadium set for COVID-19-themed inauguration". thestadiumbusiness.com.
  6. (10 February 2021). "'Diamond in the Desert' will shine for FIFA Club World Cup 2020 Final". iloveqatar.net.
  7. (15 May 2019). "Education City Stadium …. Jewel of the Desert". gulf-times.com.
  8. (20 June 2020). "Education City stadium will house two Qatar Foundation schools after Qatar 2022 World Cup". thepeninsulaqatar.com.
  9. (9 July 2018). "Education City Stadium Design".
  10. "FIFA President and Qatar Minister of Labour meet to discuss progress of labour rights".
  11. (2022-03-16). "FIFA chief Infantino lauds Qatar's labour reforms".
  12. Ali Al Ansari, Ali Al Ansari. (23 November 2022). "Don't ignore labour reforms of qatar". Foreign Policy.
  13. (22 October 2021). "Qatar 2022: Football World Glone stadiums at a glance". aljazeera.com.
  14. (4 June 2020). "Education City Stadium completed". gulf-times.com.
  15. "Education City Stadium to host FIFA Club World Cup Qatar 2019™ final". FIFA.
  16. (30 September 2019). "Qatar 2022 World Cup venue to host Liverpool games at Club World Cup". bbc.com.
  17. (7 December 2019). "Liverpool's Club World Cup semi-final in Qatar to be moved with venue not ready". theguardian.com.
  18. (31 March 2021). "600 days to go: Qatar's FIFA World Cup stadiums are looking incredible". thepeninsulaqatar.com.
  19. (18 January 2021). "Education City and Ahmad Bin Ali stadiums to host FIFA Club World Cup 2020™".
  20. (18 December 2021). "2021 FIFA Arab Cup: Participating teams, fixtures and all you need to know". goal.com.
  21. (5 April 2023). "AFC Asian Cup Qatar 2023™ competition dates and venues confirmed". Asian Football Confederation.
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