Skip to Content

The 7 Biggest Stadiums In The World

It's all about communism and American football

By Tim Newcomb
this image is not available
Bear Grylls//Digital Spy

Don't expect intimate views when you enter one of the world's largest stadiums, but at least you can watch the game with 100,000 of your closest friends. Though you'd expect European football stadiums to clean house on a list like this—you'd be wrong. The Beautiful Game can only offer up the 100,000-seat Camp Nou in Spain with Mexico delivering the slightly smaller Estadio Azteca.

Australia tries to squeeze into the top seven with the 100,018-seat Melbourne Cricket Ground, but they're all outmatched by Americans' love of college American football.

Strangely, the most reclusive country in the world claims the No. 1 spot...

Rungrado 1st of May Stadium, Pyongyang, North Korea

this image is not available
Bear Grylls//Digital Spy

Seating: 114,000

In perhaps the strangest turn of events, the largest stadium in the world resides in North Korea—not exactly a hotbed for athletics. Opened in 1989, on 1 May, as you may have guessed, the stadium was designed to mimic a magnolia blossom with its 16 arches across the roof. 

While Rungrado, also known as May Day Stadium, hosts football, it also puts on events like the Arirang Festival, which included 100,000 participants, and celebrations of North Korean leaders.

Michigan Stadium, Ann Arbor, Michigan

this image is not available
Bear Grylls//Digital Spy

Seating: 107, 601

As is the case with most major college American football venues in the U.S., Michigan Stadium on the campus of the University of Michigan has changed in capacity over its lifetime. 

First constructed in 1927 with 72,000 seats, the early plans envisioned a 150,000-seat venue, so original construction included the ability to expand beyond 100,000. Mimicking the Yale Bowl design, The Big House eventually ballooned to a capacity of more than 109,000 seats. Then a recent remodel brought it back down to 107,601.

Beaver Stadium, State College, Pennsylvania

this image is not available
Bear Grylls//Digital Spy

Seating: 106,572

Opened in 1960 using portions of a 1909 stadium that was dismantled and moved to the current site on the campus of Penn State University, the original 1960 horseshoe design of 46,000 seats has seen a major expansion over the years. 

A 2001 renovation to Beaver Stadium—named in honor of a lawyer who fought for the Union Army in the Civil War and became governor of Pennsylvania—added the final 12,000 seats, bumping capacity to 106,572 and giving the venue 100 rows on the east side, 100 rows on the west, 60 in the lower end zones, 35 in the north upper deck, 20 in the club seating level, and 25 in the south upper deck.

Advertisement - Continue Reading Below

Ohio Stadium, Columbus, Ohio

this image is not available
Bear Grylls//Digital Spy

Seating: 104,944

The fourth largest stadium in the world is the third largest in the Big 10 Conference, but Ohio Stadium doesn't take a back seat when it comes to historical significance. Dubbed The Horseshoe, the Howard Dwight Smith-designed structure on the banks of the Olentangy River originally opened in 1922 with over 66,000 seats and multiple decks. 

The legendary American football design gave Ohio State University a classic style, but over time that style has filled in with seats, officially enclosing the shoe in 2001 by making temporary seats permanent and boosting capacity to just shy of 105,000.

Kyle Field, College Station, Texas

this image is not available
Bear Grylls//Digital Spy

Seating: 102,733

While still an impressive 82,000-seat venue for much of its life, a major redevelopment for the 2014 season at Texas A&M University boosted Kyle Field's capacity to one of the largest in the world at 102,733. 

Originally opened in 1904 after horticulture professor E.J. Kyle purchased a covered grandstand and cordoned off an agricultural field, the structure took on new life as a stadium in 1927. Expansions have continued every since at the Home of the 12th Man.

Neyland Stadium, Knoxville, Tennessee

this image is not available
Bear Grylls//Digital Spy

Seating: 102,455

What started in 1921 as Shields-Watkins Field has grown for decades to now encompass both Shields -Watkins Field and the venue that surrounds it, becoming the 102,000-plus-seat Neyland Stadium on the campus of the University of Tennessee. 

With nearly 20 expansion projects in its lifetime, Neyland has evolved from the early days of just 3,200 seats in a west grandstand in 1921 all the way up to over 104,000 seats before dipping slightly to its current capacity.

Advertisement - Continue Reading Below

Tiger Stadium, Baton Rouge, Louisiana

this image is not available
Bear Grylls//Digital Spy

Seating: 102,321

The 528 windows on the exterior of Tiger Stadium on the campus of Louisiana State University serve a real purpose as a Tiger Stadium was a dormitory for about 1,500 students for decades. 

Opened as a 12,000-seat stadium in 1924 with stands on both the east and west side, expansion ensued in 1936 that turned Tiger Stadium into a horseshoe and added seating above the addition of dorm rooms. The state budget allowed money for dorm rooms, so LSU took advantage of the funds in a double-whammy and even used the rooms as part of student housing until the late 1980s. Tiger Stadium turned into a bowl in 1953 and eventually reached over 102,000 seats and into the upper echelon of the world's largest stadiums.  

From: Popular Mechanics
Watch Next
 
preview for Esquire UK - Featured Videos
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below

Culture

frank sinatra scorsese movie

How Scorsese Might Approach a Frank Sinatra Biopic

writer helen walsh liverpool

Tabitha Lasley: What It Felt Like for a Girl

when forms come alive, hayward gallery february 2024franz west

What to Do in London This Weekend

fallout

Everything We Know About 'Fallout' S2

Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below