Briskeby Stadion
Interactive map of Briskeby Stadion | |
| Former names | Briskeby gressbane |
|---|---|
| Location | Hamar, Norway |
| Coordinates | 60°47′44″N 11°5′32″E / 60.79556°N 11.09222°E |
| Owner | Hamar Municipality |
| Operator | Hamar Sportsanlegg |
| Capacity | 7,600 |
| Surface | Artificial turf |
| Record attendance | 14,500 |
| Field size | 105 m × 68 m (115 yd × 74 yd) |
| Construction | |
| Broke ground | 26 April 1934 |
| Opened | 28 June 1936 |
| Construction cost | 32,036 kr (1934–36) 3.5 million kr (1984–86) 111 million kr (2007–08) |
| Architect | Biong Arkitekter |
| Tenants | |
| Briskebyen FL (1936–45) Norwegian Football Cup final (1938) Hamarkameratene (1946–) | |
Briskeby Stadion, previously known as Briskeby gressbane, is an all-seater football stadium located at Briskebyen in the town of Hamar, Norway. It is home to the Norwegian First Division side Hamarkameratene (Ham-Kam) and is owned by Hamar Municipality. The venue has artificial turf, three stands, and a capacity for 8,068 spectators. It was used for the 1938 Norwegian Football Cup final—which saw the venue's record 14,500 spectators—and has also hosted five Norway national under-21 football team matches between 1984 and 2011.
Construction started in 1934, and the venue opened on 28 June 1936 as the first home venue for Briskebyen FL. The club merged with Hamar AIL in 1946 to form Ham-Kam. The new club has played since 1970, playing 22 seasons in the top tier, having been relegated eight times, most recently in 2008. Ham-Kam's record home attendance is 11,500, dating from a 1976 match against Lillestrøm. In 1984, the clubhouse was rebuilt with luxury boxes and a new 2,400-seat East Stand was built. The investments led the club into financial distress, and in 1993, the municipality had to purchase the venue to save the club. Planning of a new or upgraded venue started in 2001, construction started in 2007, and the first stage was completed the following year. It cost 111 million kr, having suffered large cost overruns.