Hertha announce stadium plan for 2025
Bundesliga club Hertha Berlin will move to a 55,000-capacity stadium in 2025, according to president Werner Gegenbauer.
Hertha Berlin president Werner Gegenbauer has announced plans to create a 55,000-capacity stadium by 2025 and declared the club's current home "no longer suitable".
The Olympiastadion has hosted Hertha's home games since 1963, but Gegenbauer has outlined plans for a dedicated football stadium in order to maximise revenue and give the club a venue with state-of-the-art facilities.
Gegenbauer explained the rationale behind the plans, telling the club's official website: "On match days, which account for 95 per cent of our game business, the Olympiastadion is no longer suitable nor future-oriented.
"As a club and medium-sized company, we cannot bear the disadvantage of an aging Olympiastadion, which does not belong to us."
The club has today announced plans to build a new stadium by 2025. Read all the details right here! March 30, 2017
Hertha's tenancy at the Olympiastadion runs until 2025, by which time Gegenbauer hopes that a 100 per cent privately funded arena will be in place.
After examining more than 50 possible locations for a new stadium, the club has identified the Olympiapark as the most suitable, meaning supporters will not need to travel to a new destination if the plans come to fruition.
"Our clear favourite is the Olympiapark, with the best and already existing infrastructure," said Gegenbauer.
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"Hertha BSC is firmly convinced that the Berlin Senate recognizes the necessity of a new building.
"Hertha must not be deprived of its future simply because no solution was found for an overly large, listed stadium that Hertha does not belong in."