Estadio Juan Francisco Barraza

Estadio Juan Francisco Barraza is a multi-purpose stadium in San Miguel, El Salvador.[2] It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home stadium of C.D. Águila and C.D. Dragón. It is named after the 1950s star Juan Francisco "Cariota" Barraza in 1982. The stadium holds 10,000 people.[3]

Estadio Juan Francisco Barraza
Nido Aguilucho
Full nameEstadio Municipal Juan Francisco Barraza
Former namesEstadio Migueleño
LocationSan Miguel, El Salvador
OwnerMayor of San Miguel
Capacity10,000[1]
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Built15 November 1956
Renovated2016-2017
Construction costUSD$ 43,558.34
ArchitectParedes Lemus
Tenants
C.D. Águila
C.D. Dragón

History

Construction began in November 1956 and was under the direction of Pablo Paredes Lemus and Cia. After 3 years of building, The stadium was opened and held its very first game on November 15, 1959. This day saw Honduran Club Deportivo Olimpia play against Águila and drew 1-1. In 1982, 26 years after its construction, the Aguila board, decided to change its name to Estadio Juan Francisco Barraza, after the iconic footballer in El Salvador.

gollark: ...
gollark: It's somewhat important to incentivize people to make things which aren't conveniently sellable physical objects.
gollark: Plants should really have solar-powered microcontrollers with cellular/satellite links so they can receive emails.
gollark: I mean, natural ones yes, artificially designed ones I'm fine with. Although any sufficiently short one is probably going to turn up in some organism somewhere through sheer chance, even if it's not doing the same thing.
gollark: I think intellectual property definitely needs reduction. Copyright lasts waaaaay too long, patent weirdness basically stopped 3D printer development for ages, and trademarking-or-whatever "sky" is ridiculous. Also, you can patent some software stuff you probably shouldn't be able to.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.