Estadio Centenario
| Estadio Centenario | |
Aerial view of the stadium in 2021 | |
Interactive map of Centenary Stadium | |
| Full name | Estadio Centenario |
|---|---|
| Location | Avenida Dr. Américo Ricaldoni y Federico Videla, Parque Batlle, Montevideo, Uruguay |
| Coordinates | 34°53′40.78″S 56°9′10.22″W / 34.8946611°S 56.1528389°W |
| Owner | Montevideo Department |
| Operator | Comisión Administradora del Field Oficial (CAFO) |
| Capacity | 60,235 |
| Surface | Grass |
| Record attendance | 79,867 Uruguay–Yugoslavia (27 July 1930) |
| Field size | 105 x 68 m |
| Construction | |
| Broke ground | 21 July 1929 |
| Built | 1929–30 (8 months) |
| Opened | 18 July 1930 |
| Renovated | 2021 |
| Construction cost | $1,000,000 |
| Architect | Juan Antonio Scasso |
| Tenants | |
| Uruguay national football team (1930–present) Peñarol (1933–2016) | |
The Estadio Centenario (Spanish pronunciation: [estaðjo θentenaɾjo]; lit. 'Centenary Stadium', named after the centenary of Uruguay's Constitution) is an association football stadium in Montevideo, Uruguay. Located in the Parque Batlle neighbourhood, it is owned by the Montevideo Department.
The stadium was built between 1929 and 1930 to host the inaugural 1930 FIFA World Cup. It is listed by FIFA as one of the football world's classic stadiums. On 18 July 1983, it was declared by FIFA as the first Historical Monument of World Football, to this day the only building to achieve this recognition worldwide.
Estadio Centenario is the national stadium of Uruguay and the primary home of their national football team. Even the top-ranked Brazil national football team has only managed three wins in 20 attempts; two were official matches during 2010 and 2018 World Cup qualification, but one was Uruguay's heaviest defeat at the stadium when they lost 4–0 to Brazil in 2009.