Estadio Banorte
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Estadio Banorte
Summary
Estadio Banorte is an association football venue[1]. It ranks in the top 0.23% of association_football_venue entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,546 views/month, #4 of 1,755).[2]
Key Facts
- Estadio Banorte is located in Coyoacán[3].
- Estadio Banorte is located in Mexico City[4].
- Estadio Banorte is in the country of Mexico[5].
- Estadio Banorte's instance of is recorded as association football venue[6].
- Estadio Banorte's architect is recorded as Pedro Ramírez Vázquez[7].
- Estadio Banorte's architect is recorded as Rafael Mijares Alcérreca[8].
- Estadio Banorte is owned by Mexico City[9].
- Estadio Banorte is owned by Grupo Televisa[10].
- Estadio Banorte is operated by Mexico City[11].
- Estadio Banorte's Commons category is recorded as Estadio Azteca[12].
- Estadio Banorte's occupant is recorded as Club América[13].
- Estadio Banorte's occupant is recorded as Mexico men's national football team[14].
- Estadio Banorte's occupant is recorded as Cruz Azul[15].
- Estadio Banorte's occupant is recorded as Cruz Azul (women)[16].
- May 29, 1966 marks the founding of Estadio Banorte[17].
- Estadio Banorte's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 19.303055555555556, 'lon': -99.15055555555556}[18].
- Estadio Banorte's sport is recorded as association football[19].
- Estadio Banorte's located on street is recorded as Calzada de Tlalpan[20].
- Estadio Banorte's surface played on is recorded as lawn[21].
- Estadio Banorte's significant event is recorded as 1970 FIFA World Cup[22].
- Estadio Banorte's significant event is recorded as 1986 FIFA World Cup[23].
- Estadio Banorte's official website is recorded as https://estadiobanorte.com.mx[24].
- Estadio Banorte's maximum capacity is recorded as {'amount': '+115000'}[25].
- Estadio Banorte's date of official opening is recorded as May 29, 1966[26].
- Estadio Banorte's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'es', 'text': 'Estadio Azteca'}[27].
Body
Geography
Estadio Banorte is in the country of Mexico[5]. Located in include Coyoacán[3], a territorial demarcation of Mexico City[28], in Mexico[29], founded in 1928[30] and Mexico City[4], a federative entity of Mexico[31], in Mexico[32], founded in 1521[33].
Designation and Status
Estadio Banorte's instance of is recorded as association football venue[6].
History and Context
May 29, 1966 marks the founding of Estadio Banorte[17]. Owners include Mexico City[9], a federative entity of Mexico[34], in Mexico[35], founded in 1521[36] and Grupo Televisa[10], a business[37], in Mexico[38], founded in 1973[39], headquartered in Mexico City[40].
Why It Matters
Estadio Banorte ranks in the top 0.23% of association_football_venue entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,546 views/month, #4 of 1,755).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[41] It is known by 27 alternative names across languages and contexts.[42]