Gelora Bung Karno Stadium
Gelora Bung Karno Main Stadium, formerly Senayan Main Stadium and Gelora Senayan Main Stadium, is a multi-purpose stadium located at the center of the Gelora Bung Karno Sports Complex in Central Jakarta, Indonesia. It is mostly used for football matches, and usually used by the Indonesia national football team and Super League club Persija Jakarta. The stadium is named after Sukarno, the then-president of Indonesia, who sparked the idea of building the sports complex.
When first opened prior to the 1962 Asian Games, the stadium had a seating capacity of 110,000. It has been reduced twice during renovations: first to 88,306 in 2006 for the 2007 AFC Asian Cup and then to 77,193 single seats as part of renovations for the 2018 Asian Games and Asian Para Games, where it hosted the ceremonies and athletics competitions. Due to the most recent renovation which saw all remaining bleachers replaced by single seats, it is the 28th largest association football stadium in the world and the 8th largest association football stadium in Asia.
History
Under Sukarno: construction and inauguration
After the Asian Games Federation declared Jakarta to host the 1962 Asian Games in 1958, the minimum requirement that yet to be met by the Jakarta was the availability of a multi-sport complex. In response to this, President Sukarno issued Presidential Decree No. 113/1959 dated 11 May 1959 about the establishment of the Asian Games Council of Indonesia led by Minister of Sports Maladi. As an architect and civil engineering graduate, Sukarno proposed a location near M. H. Thamrin Boulevard and Menteng for the future sports complex. then Sukarno accompanied Friedrich Silaban, a renowned architect to review the location of the proposed sports complex by helicopter. Silaban disagreed with the selection of Dukuh Atas because he argued the construction of a sports complex in the center the future downtown area will potentially create a massive traffic congestion. Sukarno agreed Silaban suggestion and instead assigned the Senayan area with an area of approximately 300 hectares.Construction began on 8 February 1960 and finished on 21 July 1962, in time to host the following month's Asian Games. It was built as part of Sukarno's construction sprees before the 1962 Asian Games and the centerpiece of the Sports Complex. Its construction was partially funded through a special loan from the Soviet Union. The stadium's original capacity was 110,000 people. The stadium is well known for its gigantic ring-shaped facade, as the world's first circular roof football stadium and also was designed to shade spectators from the sun, and increase the grandeur of the stadium. The idea came from Sukarno himself and although Soviet architects didn't want to implement temu gelang at first due to its unusual design, but Sukarno insisted and he got his way in the end.
Although the stadium is popularly known as Gelora Bung Karno Stadium or GBK Stadium, its official name is Gelora Bung Karno Main Stadium, as there are other stadiums in the Gelora Bung Karno Sports Complex, such as the Sports Palace and the secondary stadium. It was known as Senajan Main Stadium from its opening through the 1962 Asiad until the complex's name was changed to Gelora Bung Karno by a Presidential Decree issued on 24 September 1962, twenty days after the games ended.
Under Soeharto: ''Gelora Senayan''
During the New Order era, the complex was renamed "Gelora Senayan Complex" and the stadium was renamed "Gelora Senayan Main Stadium" in 1969. The name changes was part of the "de-Sukarnoization" policy by military junta government under Suharto.At the 1985 Perserikatan Final, Match Persib Bandung against PSMS Medan which was held at this stadium became an amateur match with the largest attendance of 150,000 spectators. The match was finally won by PSMS Medan.
''Reformasi''–present
Under reformation regime, the complex name was reverted by President Abdurrahman Wahid in a decree effective since 17 January 2001. The stadium's capacity was then reduced further to 88,306 as a result of renovations for the 2007 AFC Asian Cup.The stadium served as the main venue of the 2018 Asian Games and Asian Para Games, hosting the ceremonies and athletics. It underwent renovations in preparation for the events; to comply with FIFA standards, all of the stadium's existing seating was replaced, including its remaining bleachers, making it an all-seater with a capacity of 77,193. The new seats are coloured in red, white, and grey—resembling a waving flag of Indonesia. A new, brighter LED lighting system was also installed, with 620 fixtures, and an RGB lighting system was installed on the stadium's facade. Improvements were also made to the stadium's accessibility. The 2016–18 renovation of this stadium cost Rp769,69 billion.
Sporting events
GBK Stadium hosted the 2007 Asian Cup final between Iraq and Saudi Arabia. Other competitions held there are several AFF Cup finals, domestic cup finals, Liga 2 Playoff and Finals, and Liga Nusantara Playoff and Finals.International
- Host of the 1962 and 2018 Asian Games
- Host of the 2018 Asian Para Games
- Host of the 1963 GANEFO
- Host of the Olaria Atlético Clube 1970
- Host of the Santos FC exhibition 1972
- Host of the Muhammad Ali vs. Rudie Lubbers boxing match, October 20, 1973.
- Host of Southeast Asian Games
- Host of the Asian Athletics Championships
- Host of the 2002 Tiger Cup for 9 out of 10 Group A matches, semifinal matches, third place play-off, and the final.
- Host of the 2003 ASEAN Club Championship.
- Host of the 2004 Tiger Cup first leg semifinal match against Malaysia and first leg final match against Singapore.
- Host of the 2007 AFC Asian Cup for 5 out of 6 Group D matches, quarterfinals between Saudi Arabia and Uzbekistan, and the final.
- Host of the 2008 AFF Suzuki Cup for first leg semifinal match against Thailand
- Host of matches in the 2010 AFC Champions League competition with Persipura Jayapura and Persija Jakarta in 2018 and 2019 AFC Cup matches
- Host for the Bayern Munich 2008 Post-season Tour
- Host of the 2010 AFF Suzuki Cup for 5 out of 6 Group A matches, semifinal matches against the Philippines, and second leg final match against Malaysia
- Host for the LA Galaxy 2011 Asia-Pacific Post-season Tour
- Host for all 2 matches of the Inter Milan 2012 Post-season Tour
- Host for the Valencia 2012 Asia Preseason Tour
- Host for the Arsenal 2013 Asia Preseason Tour
- Host for the Liverpool 2013 Asia Preseason Tour
- Host for the Chelsea 2013 Asia Preseason Tour
- Host for the Juventus 2014 Asia Preseason Tour
- Host of the 2014 Asian Dream Cup against Park Ji-sung and Friends, featuring footballers and celebrities, including the cast of Running Man.
- Host for the Roma 2015 Asia Preseason Tour
- Host of the 2018 AFC U-19 Championship
- Host of Indonesia's home matches at the 2018 AFF Championship
- Host of Indonesia's home matches at the 2022 AFF Championship
- Host for the Argentina 2023 Asian-season Tour
- Host of the 2025 ASEAN U-23 Championship
Tournament results
1979 Southeast Asian Games|1979 Southeast Asian Games]]
| Date | Time | Team #1 | Res. | Team #2 | Round | Attendance |
| 22 September 1979 | ' | 3–0 | Group stage | N/A | ||
| 23 September 1979 | ' | 1–0 | Group stage | N/A | ||
| 23 September 1979 | 0–2 | ' | Group stage | N/A | ||
| 23 September 1979 | 1–3 | ' | Group stage | N/A | ||
| 25 September 1979 | 0–0 | Group stage | N/A | |||
| 25 September 1979 | 2–2 | Group stage | N/A | |||
| 26 September 1979 | 1–2 | ' | Group stage | N/A | ||
| 26 September 1979 | 0–0 | Group stage | N/A | |||
| 28 September 1979 | ' | 1–0 | Group stage | N/A | ||
| 28 September 1979 | ' | 2–1 | Group stage | N/A | ||
| 29 September 1979 | ' | 0–0 | Second place play-off | N/A | ||
| 30 September 1979 | 0–1 | Gold medal match | 85,000 |
1987 Southeast Asian Games|1987 Southeast Asian Games]]
| Date | Time | Team #1 | Res. | Team #2 | Round | Attendance |
| 10 September 1987 | 0–0 | Group stage | N/A | |||
| 10 September 1987 | ' | 3–1 | Group stage | N/A | ||
| 12 September 1987 | 2–2 | Group stage | N/A | |||
| 12 September 1987 | ' | 2–0 | Group stage | N/A | ||
| 14 September 1987 | 0–0 | Group stage | N/A | |||
| 14 September 1987 | 0–0 | Group stage | N/A | |||
| 16 September 1987 | 0–2 | ' | Semi-finals | N/A | ||
| 17 September 1987 | ' | 4–1 | Semi-finals | 75,000 | ||
| 19 September 1987 | ' | 4–0 | Bronze medal match | N/A | ||
| 20 September 1987 | ' | 1–0 | Gold medal match | 120,000 |