Berlin's historic stadium taken apart to host final (AP) Updated: 2006-06-08 11:36 Olympic Stadium is the most
famous of the 12 stadiums which will be used at the World Cup, a place legendary
in sports for the 1936 Olympics where Jesse Owens stole the show from the Nazis.
Some 100,000 spectators cheered wildly at those games as the black American
won four gold medals to make a mockery of Nazi claims of Aryan supremacy, with
an infuriated Adolf Hitler refusing to enter the stadium when Owens competed.
But in the decades that followed, the place was half forgotten and rusting.
"It was dirty and pieces of cement were breaking off. I was at the 1995
German Cup final, and I told my son, 'I'm not going inside that stadium _ it's
too dangerous,"' said Peter von Loebbecker, the stadium's business manager.
That changed when Germany won the right to host the World Cup and the federal
and state government poured euro242 million (US$310 million) into renovating the
arena to host matches, including the July 9 final of soccer's showcase event,
expected to be televised to more than a billion people.
Olympic Stadium has been rebuilt under strict landmark preservation laws _
with the stones taken out one by one and cleaned before being set back in place.
But it features a modern roof with built-in floodlights and Europe's biggest
video screen.
"The unique thing in this stadium is the history has been kept, but now
inside it is a modern arena," stadium spokesman Hans-Georg Felder said. "Anybody
can build a modern arena, but there aren't many like this anymore."
Rows of bank seating have been ripped out and replaced with seats, reducing
the number of spectators to 74,000. During World Cup matches, that capacity will
drop below 70,000 because of the space needed for the media.
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