If you want to be an instant expert on sports stadiums, you could do worse than bookmark this site,
World Stadiums, which has almost every major world stadium catalogued, displayed and its main features explained. Have a look and see what imagination can do when it's properly unleashed.

To start you off, you might want to check out
Stadium Design Principles, and then perhaps head over and check out their selection of the
most architecturally distinctive stadiums of all sizes, from the 25,000-seater
Dr. Magalhães Pessoa stadium in Portugal to the 150,000-seater
R. May Day Stadium in Pyongyang.
And you can check out a
whole bunch of stadiums of 60,000 size to get you up to speed with what sort of scale to expect for the proposed Auckland stadium, and just what can be done with them. Comparing them to
NZ's existing stadiums might be a useful exercise.

Included too for example are both the
Estádio Municipal de Braga in Portugal (left, above) that the
Domain Stadium Promotion Group have suggested as a model for a Carlaw Park stadium with a minimum footprint, and the 63-000 seater
Saitama Stadium in Japan (right) also cited as a possible model for a Carlaw Park stadium sited within the trees of the domain edge.
You might like to complete your visit by looking at the
stadiums of the future, the stadiums of the world currently either on the board or under construction, and consider just how the waterfront bedpan proposed for Auckland might fit within this rather attractive group.
LINK: World Stadiums website
Carlaw Park option must be put on table - Domain Stadium Promotion Group, Scoop
TAGS: Stadium, Architecture, Sport
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