Bukit Jalil National Stadium Explained

Stadium Name:Bukit Jalil National Stadium
Native Name:Stadium Kebangsaan
Location:Bukit Jalil, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Renovated:1998, 2015–2017
Owner:Malaysian Government
Operator:KL Sports City
Surface:Zeon Zoysia grass
Track| scoreboard = LED Panel by Samsung[1] | architect = Arkitek FAA
Weidleplan Consulting Gmbh
Schlaich Bergermann Partner
Populous in association with RSP KL (2017 renovation)| main_contractors = UEM Group
Malaysian Resources Corporation Berhad (2017 renovation)| tenants = Malaysia national football team (1998 - present)
Malaysia Valke (2020)| publictransit = Bukit Jalil LRT station| dimensions = 105mby68mm (344feetby223feetm)| construction_cost = RM 1 Billion[2] | seating_capacity = 100,000 (1998–2017)
90,000 (Just 87,500 are used) (2017–present) [3] | record_attendance = 98,543 (Malaysia vs Indonesia, 26 December 2010)

90,000 (Malaysia vs Singapore, 22 July 2011)}}

The Bukit Jalil National Stadium (Malay: Stadium Nasional Bukit Jalil, Jawi: Malay: {{Script/Arabic|ستاديوم ناسيونل بوکيت جليل) is a multi-purpose stadium in Bukit Jalil, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. With a capacity of 87,500, it is the largest stadium in Southeast Asia, the fourth largest in Asia, and the fifteenth largest in the world.[4]

It was officially inaugurated by then Prime Minister of Malaysia Mahathir Mohamad on 11 July 1998 ahead of the 1998 Commonwealth Games and staged its opening ceremony.[5] [6] Since then, it has also become the main venue for other international multi-sport events such as the 2001 Southeast Asian Games and the 2017 Southeast Asian Games,[7] and nowadays hosts most Malaysian international football matches, national level football competition finals such as the Malaysia FA Cup, Malaysia Cup, athletic events and music concerts.

It was built alongside other sport venues in the National Sports Complex by United Engineers Malaysia, and designed by Arkitek FAA, Weidleplan Consulting GMBH and Schlaich Bergermann Partner. A membrane structure is used for the roof, and most of the materials used were reinforced concrete.[8] Prior to this stadium, Stadium Merdeka served as the national stadium of Malaysia.

History

The stadium was built on 1 January 1995 to host the 1998 Commonwealth Games. It finished exactly on 1 January 1998. After the 1998 Commonwealth Games in September, the stadium became the home stadium for the Malaysia national football team, replacing the Shah Alam Stadium and the Merdeka Stadium. It also served as the main stadium of the 2001 Southeast Asian Games, 2006 FESPIC Games, 2008 ASEAN University Games and 2017 Southeast Asian Games.

National Stadium's capacity makes it the 21st largest stadium in the world and the 9th largest football stadium in the world. It was built by United Engineers Malaysia, Bhd and designed by Arkitek FAA. It was completed three months ahead of schedule. Designed to host a multitude of events, the National Stadium is the central and most prominent sports venue at the 1.2 km2 National Sports Complex in Bukit Jalil.

Malaysia's previous national stadium was the Merdeka Stadium before the National Sports Complex was constructed. Malaysia also uses other stadiums for their football matches such as KLFA Stadium, MBPJ Stadium and the Shah Alam Stadium.

The stadium, along with the National Sports Complex, is currently undergoing a major renovation at a combined cost of RM1.34 billion[9] as a part of KL Sports City project in 2 phases. Project 1 (Phase 1) has been completed ahead and for the 2017 SEA Games in Kuala Lumpur, with a new Populous-designed facade that covers the exterior of the stadium with twisted vertical louvres which are also LED-lighted,[10] as well as recolouring the seats to a yellow-black design and upgraded facilities. After the 2017 ASEAN Para Games, Project 2 (Phase 2) will commence, and will add a retractable roof, retractable seats, comfort ventilation and new sports and lifestyle facilities.[11]

Pitch issues

On 18 February 2020 to prevent another issue regarding the football pitch again in the future, the Malaysian Stadium Corporation (PSM) and Malaysia Ministry of Youth and Sports (KBS) plan to upgrade the pitch from cow grass to zeon zoysia grass with an estimated cost of RM10 Million. The cost included the use of specialise machine and equipment for the grass. The plan upgrade will start later this year and is expected to be completed within the next three months.[12]

Stadium facilities

The stadium is equipped with the following facilities:[13]

  • 105 m x 68 m Zeon Zoysia pitch
  • 9 laned 400m synthetic track
  • 6m x 60m warming up track
  • 1,500 flux floodlights
  • Broadcast Studios
  • Coloured Video Matrix Scoreboards
  • High-tech Cathode Ray Tube Video Screen Board
  • Individual "paddles" containing LED pixels at the seats

Entertainment uses

National Stadium has been host to other important events besides football matches. Notable music artists who have performed in the stadium include:

Sporting events

Tournament results

2004 AFF Championship

DateTime (UTC+08)Team #1Res.Team #2RoundAttendance
8 December 200418:000–1Group StageN/A
8 December 200420:455–0Group StageN/A
10 December 200418:001–1Group StageN/A
10 December 200420:454–1Group StageN/A
12 December 200418:000–8Group StageN/A
12 December 200420:450–1Group StageN/A
14 December 200418:002–1Group StageN/A
14 December 200420:452–1Group StageN/A
16 December 200418:003–1Group StageN/A
3 January 200520:001–4Semifinals second legN/A

2007 AFC Asian Cup

DateTime (UTC+08)Team #1Res.Team #2RoundAttendance
10 July 200720:301–5Group C21,155
11 July 200718:152–1Group C1,863
14 July 200718:155–0Group C7,137
15 July 200718:152–2Group C5,938
18 July 200720:300–2Group C4,520
22 July 200718:150–0 (a.e.t.)
(2–4 pen.)
Quarter-finals8,629
25 July 200718:150–0 (a.e.t.)
(4–3 pen.)
Semi-finals12,500

2010 AFF Championship

DateTime (UTC+08)Team #1Res.Team #2RoundAttendance
15 December 201020:002–0Semifinals first leg45,000
26 December 201020:003–0Finals first leg98,543

2012 AFF Championship

DateTime (UTC+08)Team #1Res.Team #2RoundAttendance
25 November 201218:002–2Group StageN/A
25 November 201220:450–3Group StageN/A
28 November 201218:001–0Group StageN/A
28 November 201220:451–4Group StageN/A
1 December 201220:452–0Group StageN/A
9 December 201220:001–1Semifinals first legN/A

2018 AFC U-16 Championship

DateTime (UTC+08)Team #1Res.Team #2RoundAttendance
20 September 201816:306–2Group Stage723
21 September 201816:300–2Group Stage3,431
23 September 201816:304–2Group Stage8,596
24 September 201816:300–0Group Stage186
24 September 201820:451–1Group Stage11,201
27 September 201811:000–2Group Stage8,378
27 September 201816:305–1Group Stage531
27 September 201820:450–0Group Stage11,388
30 September 201816:302–1Quarter-finals267
1 October 201816:302–3Quarter-finals13,743
4 October 201816:303–1Semi-finals224
7 October 201820:451–0Final352

2018 AFF Championship

DateTime (UTC+08)Team #1Res.Team #2RoundAttendance
12 November 201820:453–1Group Stage12,127
24 November 201820:303–0Group Stage83,777
1 December 201820:450–0Semifinals first leg87,545
11 December 201820:452–2Finals first leg88,482

2019 Airmarine Cup

DateTime (UTC+08)Team #1Res.Team #2RoundAttendance
20 March 201916:305–0Semi-finalsN/A
20 March 201920:450–1Semi-finalsN/A
23 March 201916:301–2Third-place playoffN/A
23 March 201920:451–1 (5–4 pen.)FinalN/A

2022 AFF Championship

DateTime (UTC+08)Team #1Res.Team #2RoundAttendance
24 December 202220:305–0Group Stage29,961
3 January 202320:304–1Group Stage65,147
7 January 202320:301–0Semi-final 1st leg62,989

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Samsung.com – National Stadium, KL Sports City.
  2. News: Bukit Jalil National Stadium – Malaysia Football Tripper. 12 July 2014. Football Tripper. 26 August 2017. en-GB.
  3. News: 'This is a football stadium, not a concert stadium': Sports fans in Malaysia protest upcoming Jay Chou concert . 5 June 2023 . AsiaOne . 6 January 2023.
  4. News: The Largest Football (Soccer) Stadiums In The World. WorldAtlas. 25 August 2017. en.
  5. Web site: National Sport Complex . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121116123806/http://www.kiat.net/malaysia/KL/nsc.html . 16 November 2012 . 16 December 2012 . kiat . dmy-all.
  6. Web site: Perbadanan Stadium Malaysia – National Stadium. 22 March 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171212232727/http://stadium.gov.my/2017/index.php/my/arena/kompleks-sukan-negara-bukit-jalil/stadium-nasional. 12 December 2017. dead.
  7. News: KL to be main venue for 2017 SEA Games. Free Malaysia Today. 25 August 2017. en-US. https://web.archive.org/web/20150617172439/http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/nation/2015/06/17/kl-to-be-main-venue-for-2017-sea-games/. 17 June 2015. dead.
  8. Web site: National Stadium, Bukit Jalil (Kuala Lumpur, 1997) Structurae. Structurae. en. 26 August 2017.
  9. Web site: MRCB's subsidiary hands over Project 1 of KL Sports City - Business News The Star Online . 26 August 2017 . thestar Malaysia.
  10. News: KL Sports City Rejuvenated And Ready To Host The South East Asian Games POPULOUS. POPULOUS. 26 August 2017. en-US.
  11. Web site: Supplemental pact for 2nd phase of KL Sports City project delayed - Business News The Star Online . 26 August 2017 . thestar Malaysia.
  12. Web site: Stadium Nasional Bukit Jalil bakal dinaik taraf dengan padang baharu Stadium Astro . 18 February 2020 . stadiumastro.
  13. Web site: Perbadanan Stadium Malaysia - Bukit Jalil National Sports Complex. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20141203083424/http://www.stadium.gov.my/index.php/en/arena/kompleks-sukan-negara-bukit-jalil. 3 December 2014. dmy-all.
  14. https://archive.today/20140608092914/http://www.chelseafc.com/news-article/article/2134873 Return Journey to Kuala Lumpur
  15. News: Arsenal to undertake pre-season tour of Malaysia and China this July. 13 December 2012. 24 May 2011. guardian.co.uk.