Kadriorg Stadium (Estonian: Kadrioru staadion) is a multi-purpose stadium in Tallinn, Estonia. Opened in 1926, it is one of the oldest stadiums in Estonia. It serves as the national athletics stadium of Estonia and as the home ground of JK Tallinna Kalev. The stadium holds 5,000. Kadriorg Stadium is located about 2 km east of the city centre in the subdistrict of Kadriorg, near Kadriorg Palace. The address of the stadium is Roheline aas 24, 10150 Tallinn.

Kadriorg has been the national athletics stadium of the nation throughout its entire history and was the home ground of the Estonia national football team from its opening in 1926 until the Soviet occupation of Estonia in 1940, and again after the country's re-independence from 1992 until 2000, after which the team moved to A. Le Coq Arena. Throughout its history, Kadriorg Stadium has at some point been the home ground for nearly all of the top-flight football teams of Tallinn, such as FC Flora, Levadia, Kalev, Nõmme Kalju, TJK Legion and TVMK.

Kadriorg Stadium has hosted the European Athletics U23 Championships in 2015 and 2021, as well as the European Athletics U20 Championships in 2011 and 2021. It was also one of the venues for the 2012 UEFA European U19 Championship.

History

The first wooden grandstand was initially built to be the stage for the 1923 Estonian Song Festival held at the same location and was later modified to become the 2,500-seat grandstand of the new stadium

Kadriorg Stadium was opened on 13 June 1926, eight years after Estonia had become independent. The stadium's opening event was attended by 15,000 people and saw Estonia beat Lithuania 3–1 in football. The stadium complex was designed by German architect Renner and the first wooden grandstand by Estonian architect Karl Burman. Upon completion, the stadium was inaugurated as the country's national stadium and was considered to be the finest of the Baltic states.

Despite its grand look, the 2,500-capacity grandstand quickly proved to be too small to facilitate the growing number of spectators and underwent an expansion in 1934, before an inspection in 1935 found the wooden structure to be in need of immediate repairs as it was in danger of collapsing.

A design competition for a new grandstand was held in the spring of 1936 and the project of Estonian architect Elmar Lohk was chosen, mainly due to his innovative solution to lead the spectators to their seats through passages from the back of the grandstand, unlike the then commonly used approach in Europe that often saw spectators enter the stand from the front. The construction began in late 1936 and was finished in a year, by late 1937.

Kadriorg Stadium's roof was believed to be the largest cantilever concrete roof in the world after its completion in 1937

With its freestanding concrete roof, the new grandstand was believed to be one of the most modern in Europe at the time and was seen as an outstanding achievement in the field of reinforced concrete structures. The stadium was officially re-opened on 15 May 1938 with great celebration by the first president of Estonia Konstantin Päts. The opening event saw Estonia draw 1–1 with RC Strasbourg in front of 8,000 people. A year later, World War II had reached Estonia and the country was occupied by the Soviet Union, after which Kadriorg Stadium was renamed as Dünamo staadion.

Soviet Union - USA - West Germany decathlon event (1974)

During the Soviet occupation, the stadium continued to be one of the primary sports venues of the region and hosted a number of international and Soviet wide athletics competitions, most notably the Soviet Union – USA – West Germany decathlon event in 1974 and the Soviet Union – East Germany athletics competition in 1986. The 1986 event also saw two athletics world records set in Kadriorg, when Yuriy Sedykh set a world record of 86.66 m in hammer throw and Heike Drechsler a world record of 7.45 m in women's long jump.

In 1992, the stadium hosted the first match of the Estonia national football team after the country's re-independence, when Estonia drew 1–1 with Slovenia. It was also the location of the infamous "One team in Tallinn" fixture between Estonia and Scotland, which was abandoned after three seconds when the home team refused to turn up, in protest at the game's kick-off time being brought forward several hours. The national team's last match in Kadriorg took place on 3 September 2000 against Portugal, after which the team moved to A. Le Coq Arena.

Kadriorg Stadium received floodlights in 2024, more than 27 years after "One team in Tallinn"

In 2011, Kadriorg Stadium hosted the 21st European Athletics Junior Championships. The stadium was one of the venues for the 2012 UEFA European U19 Championship and hosted three group stage matches. In 2015, the stadium hosted the U23 European Athletics Championships. In 2021, Kadriorg hosted both U20 and U23 European Athletics Championships.

Future

For Kadriorg Stadium's 100th birthday in 2026, the City of Tallinn will renovate the complex for €20 million. The renovation will see the complete refurbishment of the sports field and the historic grandstand, as well as the construction of a new 1,600-seat stand on the opposite side of the field. Additionally, a new 1,000-seat football ground will be built behind the main stadium, next to the current athletics training field. The new football ground will also have its own administrative building that would be connected with the grandstand by a planned tunnel. The first works began in 2023, when floodlights were installed for the main stadium and its both training fields.

Grandstand

The current grandstand was built during Estonia's first period of independence

Kadriorg Stadium's current grandstand was opened in 1938 and is an official cultural heritage monument. Designed by architect Elmar Lohk and famous engineer August Komendant, it was seen during its time as an outstanding achievement in the field of reinforced concrete structures and was mostly noted for its 12.8 m long and 51 m wide cantilever concrete roof, among the largest in the world at the time after Stadio Artemio Franchi. The grandstand has also been brought out by world-famous architectural critic Kenneth Frampton as one of the most outstanding and historic concrete structures in Estonia.

The grandstand's capacity is 3,524 seats and the opposite stand has 1,476 seats.

Athletics records

World records

Kadriorg Stadium has seen three world records in athletics. The first two were set during the 1986 Soviet Union – East Germany athletics competition, where Yuriy Sedykh set a world record of 86.66 m in the hammer throw and Heike Drechsler a world record of 7.45 m in women's long jump. The stadium saw its third world record in 2006, when Tatyana Lysenko threw 77.80 m in women's hammer throw.

Stadium records

Updated on 1 January 2024.

Men

EventRecordAthleteNationalityDateRef
100 m10.07Jimmy VicautFrance22.07.2011
200 m20.25Jaysuma Saidy NdureNorway22.07.2007
400 m45.02Ricky PetruccianiSwitzerland10.07.2021
800 m1:45.73Curtis RobbUnited Kingdom09.06.1996
1000 m2:24.10Oleg HoldaiEstonia19.07.1996
1500 m3:38.90Jukka KeskisaloFinland25.08.2009
Mile3:59.93Nikolai VedehinEstonia25.08.2012
2000 m5:14.4Ain MõnjamEstonia20.08.1986
3000 m7:52.46James GetandaKenya30.07.2003
5000 m13:20.16Ali KayaTurkey11.07.2015
10,000 m27:53.38Ali KayaTurkey09.07.2015
20,000 m1:03:00.8Stepan BaidiukUkraine1975
110 m hurdles13.31Stanislavs OlijarsLatvia16.08.2005
400 m hurdles48.04Rasmus MägiEstonia30.07.2023
3000 m steeplechase8:26.26Nikolay MatyushenkoUkraine21.06.1986
High jump2.36Hennadiy AvdyeyenkoUkraine06.07.1988
Pole vault5.85Grigoriy YegorovKazakhstan05.07.1988
Long jump8.46Leonid VoloshinRussia05.07.1988
Triple jump17.47Aleksandr KovalenkoBelarus07.07.1988
Shot put22.60Ulf TimmermannEast Germany21.06.1986
Discus throw70.61Virgilijus AleknaLithuania16.09.2005
Hammer throw86.66 (WR)Yuriy SedykhSoviet Union22.06.1986
Javelin throw90.73 (NR)Vadims VasiļevskisLatvia22.07.2007
Decathlon8628Erki NoolEstonia05.07.1998
10,000 m walk40:43.73Hagen PohleGermany17.08.1977
20,000 m walk1:29:29.4Evgeni SemerdzhievBulgaria17.08.1977
4 × 100 m relay38.36A. Yevgenyev, N. Yuschmanov, V. Muravyov, V. BryzhinSoviet Union21.06.1986
4 × 400 m relay3:03.68V. Krylov, V. Kocerjagins, V. Prosin, A. KurochkinSoviet Union22.06.1986

Women

EventRecordAthleteNationalityDateRef
100 m11.08Silke GladischEast Germany21.06.1986
200 m22.13Heike DrechslerEast Germany22.06.1986
400 m49.76Olga VladykinaUkraine21.06.1986
800 m1:57.98Sigrun WodarsEast Germany22.06.1986
1000 m2:45.3Sirje EichelmannEstonia31.08.1988
1500 m4:02.90Heike OehmeEast Germany21.06.1986
Mile4:36.36Liina TšernovEstonia18.08.2017
2000 m5:56.8Sirje EichelmannEstonia07.09.1988
3000 m8:36.00Tetyana SamolenkoUkraine22.06.1986
5000 m15:02.12Svetlana GuskovaSoviet Union21.06.1986
10,000 m32:18.69Jip VastenburgNetherlands10.07.2015
100 m hurdles12.57Cornelia OschkenatEast Germany21.06.1986
400 m hurdles54.28Emma ZapletalováSlovakia10.07.2021
3000 m steeplechase9:36.14Tuğba GüvençTurkey11.07.2015
High jump2.00Kajsa BergqvistSweden10.07.2021
Yaroslava MahuchikhUkraine
Pole vault4.57Angelica BengtssonSweden23.07.2011
Long jump7.45 (WR)Heike DrechslerEast Germany21.06.1986
Triple jump14.64Mabel GayCuba25.08.2009
Shot put22.55Natalya LisovskayaSoviet Union05.07.1988
Discus throw72.12Diana SachseEast Germany21.06.1986
Hammer throw77.80 (WR)Tatyana LysenkoRussia15.08.2006
Javelin throw67.39Maria AbakumovaRussia25.08.2009
Heptathlon6769Carolina KlüftSweden04.07.2004
10 000 m walk42:59.48Elena LashmanovaRussia21.07.2011
4 × 100 m relay42.70E. Barbashina, M. Azarashvili, I.Slyusar, O. ZolotaryovaSoviet Union21.06.1986
4 × 400 m relay3:23.25R. Ludwigs, S. Busch, A. Hesselbarth, P. MüllerEast Germany22.06.1986
80 m hurdles10.9Helgi MägiEstonia1968

See also

External links