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Feyenoord

FEY
Founded: 1908
Type: domestic
Country: Netherlands Netherlands
Last Played:
Active Seasons: 94

Feyenoord Stadium

Stadion Feijenoord

Stadion Feijenoord

Rotterdam, Rotterdam 51,177 capacity

Stadion Feijenoord, universally known as De Kuip ("the Tub"), is the legendary home of Feyenoord, located in the Feijenoord district of Rotterdam, South Holland. The stadium holds 51,177 spectators and was inaugurated in September 1937, designed by architect Leendert van der Vlugt in an Art Deco style that gave it an immediately iconic appearance. The distinctive oval bowl shape and the characteristic white concrete framework make De Kuip one of the most recognisable stadium silhouettes in world football. The ground sits in the heart of Rotterdam's working-class southern docklands community, reflecting the club's deep roots in the industrial, port-working culture of the city.

Feyenoord are one of the most historic and passionate clubs in European football, having won the European Cup in 1970, beating Celtic 2-1 after extra time in Milan - the only Dutch club to win the competition other than Ajax - and the UEFA Cup in 1974 and 2002. De Kuip has been the backdrop for all of these European triumphs and for Feyenoord's 15 Eredivisie titles. The stadium hosted the UEFA Champions League final in 2000 and several other major European events. Legendary players including Johan Cruyff, Ruud van Nistelrooy, Dirk Kuyt, Robin van Persie, Arjen Robben, and Clarence Seedorf have all played at De Kuip, and the stadium has witnessed some of Dutch football's most celebrated moments.

Feyenoord have long planned a new stadium - the "New Feyenoord Stadium" or "Feyenoord City" - to be built adjacent to the existing De Kuip on the waterfront of the Maas in Rotterdam South. This project, which has been in development for many years, aims to provide a modern 63,000-seat venue while preserving the historic De Kuip as part of a broader regeneration of Rotterdam South. The current stadium holds its own with extraordinary atmosphere on matchdays, particularly when Feyenoord play Ajax in the De Klassieker - Dutch football's greatest rivalry. The standing sections and the noise generated by the passionate Feyenoord crowd make De Kuip one of European football's most intense and memorable experiences.