The Estádio Olímpico do Pará, also known as Mangueirão, is a football stadium in Belém, Pará, Brazil. It has a current seated capacity of 53,635, making it the ninth-largest football stadium in Brazil by capacity. The stadium is mainly used for football matches between the major football clubs in Pará, including Paysandu, Remo and Tuna Luso.

Estádio Olímpico do Pará
Mangueirão
Map
Full nameEstádio Estadual Jornalista Edgar Augusto Proença
Former namesEstádio Olímpico do Pará Alacid Nunes
LocationBelém, Pará, Brazil
Coordinates1°22′52.0″S 48°26′38.4″W / 1.381111°S 48.444000°W / -1.381111; -48.444000
OwnerState of Pará
Capacity53,635
Record attendance65,000 (Remo v Paysandu, 11 July 1999)
Field size105 x 68 m
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Broke ground1971
Built1971–1978
Opened4 March 1978
Renovated2002, 2023
Expanded2002, 2023
ArchitectAlcyr Meira
Tenants
Paysandu
Remo
Tuna Luso

History edit

Construction edit

The Mangueirão stadium architectonical project is from August 1969. The stadium was designed by Alcyr Meira, a local architect. The Pará State Governor of that time, Alacid Nunes, ordered a 120,000 people football stadium construction project. The works started in 1970, when were built the ditch, the field and the general bleachers. A year later, the project was changed, and the stadium maximum capacity was reduced from 120,000 to 70,000. In 1971 the construction works restarted, with the construction of the first structural module. The stadium had its first stage of construction completed in 1978.[1]

The Mangueirão remained unfinished for many years and was nicknamed "bandola" for having only one side of the bleachers covered and painted in a marajoara motif.

Opening edit

The opening match was played on 4 March 1978, when a Pará All-Stars team beat a Youngsters Uruguay national team 4–0. The first goal of the stadium was scored by Pará's Mesquita. Earlier, in an unofficial opening, Remo beat Operário 2–0.

First reform edit

In 2000, the Mangueirão underwent renovations for the completion of the bleachers and the inclusion of an athletics track that lasted until 2002. At the stadium's reinauguration, on 5 May 2002, Paysandu and Remo tied 2–2 in a match valid for the Campeonato Paraense. The official name of the stadium was changed to the journalist Edgar Augusto Proença.[2]

From 2002 to 2009, the Mangueirão hosted the Grande Prêmio Brasil Caixa de Atletismo, with a record attendance in Latin America in 2005, with more than 40,000 spectators for this sport category.

The biggest attendance that the stadium received after its first renovation was 57,930, on 15 May 2003, when Paysandu lost to Boca Juniors in a match valid for the Copa Libertadores.

Second reform edit

On 23 February 2021, a general renovation and expansion of the stadium was announced by the state government. Some FIFA standard modifications would be implemented, besides the addition of a control center for the Video assistant referee.[3]

Close to the reopening, the stadium hosted two test events, with games between Remo and Paysandu valid for the semi-finals of the 2023 Copa Verde, on March 26 and 29, respectively. The official reopening took place on 9 April, in a derby match valid for the last round of Campeonato Paraense, with a 1–0 victory for Paysandu.[4]

Brazil national football team edit

Date Time (UTC–3) Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round Attendance
8 November 1990 Undisclosed   Brazil 0–0   Chile Friendly 33,664
9 October 1997 Undisclosed   Brazil 2–0   Morocco Friendly Undisclosed
12 October 2005 21:30   Brazil 3–0   Venezuela 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification 47,000
28 September 2011 21:50   Brazil 2–0   Argentina 2011 Superclásico de las Américas 45,000
8 September 2023 21:45   Brazil 5–1   Bolivia 2026 FIFA World Cup qualification 43,188

Notable events edit

Concerts edit

Date Artist Tour / Concert name
July 3, 2023 Thiaguinho Tardezinha Tour
July 16, 2023 Alok New Experience Festival
November 18, 2023 Gusttavo Lima Buteco Tour
November 24, 2023 Joelma Isso é Calypso Tour
December 16, 2023 Psica Festival
May 11, 2024 Só Pra Contrariar O Último Encontro Tour

References edit

  1. ^ "Estádio Olímpico Mangueirão completa 35 anos de inauguração" (in Portuguese). Globo Esporte. 4 March 2013.
  2. ^ "Com clássico Re-Pa de quatro gols, reinauguração do Mangueirão completa maioridade nesta terça-feira" (in Portuguese). O Liberal. 5 May 2020.
  3. ^ "Reconstrução e modernização vão deixar o Mangueirão à altura dos grandes estádios" (in Portuguese). Agência Pará. 26 February 2021.
  4. ^ "Na reinauguração do Mangueirão, Paysandu vence o Remo de novo, agora pelo Paraense" (in Portuguese). O Liberal. 9 April 2023.

External links edit

See also edit