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Qatar To Build World’s First Demountable Football Stadium

Ahead of the 2022 World Cup, host Qatar has unveiled designs for a modular stadium the ability to be disassembled and reconstructed in another form in another location.
 
Fifa has reported that the stadium named Ras Abu Aboud has been designed by Spain's Fenwick Iribarren Architects, and uses shipping containers as its primary building blocks. 
 
Each of these shipping containers will house things like removable seats, concession stands and toilets, and can be dismantled and moved off once the cup has been run.
 
This could mean that either the entire stadium is rebuilt in another location, perhaps for another World Cup, or sectioned off into smaller sports or cultural venues. All in all, the stadium will seat 40,000 and is slated for completion in 2020. Event organizers hope it can become a model of sustainability when it comes to stadium design.
 
"This venue offers the perfect legacy, capable of being reassembled in a new location in its entirety or built into numerous small sports and cultural venues," says Secretary General of Qatar's Supreme Committee for Delivery and Legacy, Hassan Al Thawadi. 

"All of this in a stadium that delivers the atmosphere fans expect at a World Cup and which we will build in a more sustainable way than ever before. I'm delighted with this design and confident that Ras Abu Aboud will become a blueprint for future mega-event planners to follow."
 
The video below give an idea of how the Ras Abu Aboud Stadium will come together – and maybe come apart again.

Qatar To Build World’s First Demountable Football Stadium

The stadium named Ras Abu Aboud has been designed by Spain's Fenwick Iribarren Architects, and uses shipping containers as its primary building blocks.

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Ahead of the 2022 World Cup, host Qatar has unveiled designs for a modular stadium the ability to be disassembled and reconstructed in another form in another location.
 
Fifa has reported that the stadium named Ras Abu Aboud has been designed by Spain's Fenwick Iribarren Architects, and uses shipping containers as its primary building blocks. 
 
Each of these shipping containers will house things like removable seats, concession stands and toilets, and can be dismantled and moved off once the cup has been run.
 
This could mean that either the entire stadium is rebuilt in another location, perhaps for another World Cup, or sectioned off into smaller sports or cultural venues. All in all, the stadium will seat 40,000 and is slated for completion in 2020. Event organizers hope it can become a model of sustainability when it comes to stadium design.
 
"This venue offers the perfect legacy, capable of being reassembled in a new location in its entirety or built into numerous small sports and cultural venues," says Secretary General of Qatar's Supreme Committee for Delivery and Legacy, Hassan Al Thawadi. 

"All of this in a stadium that delivers the atmosphere fans expect at a World Cup and which we will build in a more sustainable way than ever before. I'm delighted with this design and confident that Ras Abu Aboud will become a blueprint for future mega-event planners to follow."
 
The video below give an idea of how the Ras Abu Aboud Stadium will come together – and maybe come apart again.

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