南非世界杯主体育场

南非世界杯主体育场,第1张

这是我在维基百科上找到的 约翰内斯堡足球城体育场的介绍

Soccer City

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Soccer City

Location Johannesburg, South Africa

Coordinates 26°14′5.27〃S 27°58′56.47〃E / 26.2347972°S 27.9823528°E / -26.234797227.9823528Coordinates: 26°14′5.27〃S 27°58′56.47〃E / 26.2347972°S 27.9823528°E / -26.234797227.9823528

Broke ground 1986[1]

Opened 1989[2]

Renovated 2009

Expanded 2009

Owner The Stadia and Soccer Development Trust [3]

Operator South African Football Association

Surface Grass

Construction cost Rand 3.3 billion

(USD $ 440 million)

Architect Boogertman &Partners, Populous[4]

Capacity 91,141 (Association football)[5][6]

Tenants

South Africa national football team

Soccer City, formerly known as the FNB Stadium, is a stadium located in the Soweto area of Johannesburg, South Africa. It is located next to the South African Football Association headquarters (SAFA House) where both the FIFA offices and the Local Organising Committee for the 2010 FIFA World Cup are housed.[5]

A football-specific stadium, Soccer City is currently the largest stadium in Africa with a capacity of 94,700. Most of the largest football events in South Africa are played at Soccer City[vague] and the venue is better suited to these events than the Ellis Park Stadium[citation needed], where the final for the Rugby World Cup in 1995 was held. Soweto and the National Exhibition Centre in Nasrec are nearby.

It was the site of Nelson Mandela's first speech in Johannesburg after his release from prison. It was also the site of Chris Hani's funeral.

Contents [hide]

1 Construction

2 Stadium design

3 Before the upgrade

4 1996 African Cup of Nations

5 2010 World Cup

5.1 2010 World Cup Schedule

6 See also

7 References

8 External links

[edit] Construction

The Soccer City Stadium in Johannesburg has undergone a major upgrade for the 2010 tournament, with a new design inspired by traditional African pottery. The Dutch company BAM constructed the upgrade. The Populous sports facilities group came up with the design. The upper tier has been extended around the stadium to increase the capacity to 91,141 [7] with an extra 99 Executive suites, an encircling roof has been constructed, new changing room facilities have been developed and new floodlights have been installed. The number of suites in this stadium has been increased to 195. The R1.5 billion [6] tender to upgrade the stadium was won by Grinaker-LTA.[8] The construction was completed on Wednesday, 21 October 2009. The completion was marked by a huge celebration at the stadium.[7]

Construction work in progress at Soccer City in May 2008.

Construction work in progress at Soccer City in December 2008.[edit] Stadium design

The outside of the stadium is designed to have the appearance of an African pot, the cladding on the outside is a mosaic of fire and earthen colours with a ring of lights running around the bottom of the structure, simulating fire underneath the pot. No spectator will be more than 100 metres (330 ft) from the action and there are no restricted views in the stadium.[9]

The stands in Soccer City are articulated by ten black vertical linesnine are aligned geographically with the nine other stadia involved in the 2010 World Cup, and a tenth line is aimed at Berlin's Olympic Stadium, which hosted the previous World Cup final in 2006. This represents the road to the final and it is hoped that after the World Cup, each goal scored at the stadium will be placed in pre-cast concrete panels on a podium so that the full history of the tournament’s scores can be seen for years to come.[10]

[edit] Before the upgrade

The stadium from before the upgrade had a capacity of 80,000. The newly reconstructed stadium retains the original structure's west upper tier and entire lower tier (the lower tier was divided into two tiers).

[edit] 1996 African Cup of Nations

Soccer City served as the main venue for the tournament. It hosted the opening game, 5 other group games, a quarter final, semi final, the 3rd place play-off and the final. The games were:

Date Time (UTC+2) Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round Attendance

1996-01-13 South Africa 3–0 Cameroon Group A (opening match) 80,000

1996-01-15 Egypt 2–1 Angola Group A 6,000

1996-01-18 Cameroon 2–1 Egypt Group A 4,000

1996-01-20 South Africa 1–0 Angola Group A 30,000

1996-01-24 South Africa 0–1 Egypt Group A 20,000

1996-01-25 Zaire 2–0 Liberia Group C 3,000

1996-01-27 South Africa 2–1 Algeria Quarter-finals 30,000

1996-01-31 South Africa 3–0 Ghana Semi-finals 75,000

1996-02-03 Ghana 0–1 Zambia Third place match 80,000

1996-02-03 South Africa 2–0 Tunisia Final 80,000

[edit] 2010 World Cup

The stadium will hold the opening match South Africa Vs. Mexico, four more first-round matches, one second-round match, one quarter-final, and the final.

[edit] 2010 World Cup Schedule

Date Time (UTC+2) Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round Attendance

2010-06-11 16.00 South Africa vs Mexico Group A (opening match) –

2010-06-14 13.30 Netherlands vs Denmark Group E –

2010-06-17 13.30 Argentina vs South Korea Group B –

2010-06-20 20.30 Brazil vs Côte d'Ivoire Group G –

2010-06-23 20.30 Ghana vs Germany Group D –

2010-06-27 20.30 Winners of Group B vs Runners-up of Group A Round of 16 –

2010-07-02 20.30 Winners of Match 49 vs Winners of Match 50 Quarter Finals –

2010-07-11 20.30 Winners of Match 61 vs Winners of Match 62 Final –

[edit] See also

1996 African Cup of Nations

2010 FIFA World Cup

[edit] References

^ "2010 FIFA World Cup - the beautiful game". First National Bank (South Africa). https://www.fnb.co.za/aboutus/sponsorship/fifa.html. Retrieved 2008-06-30.

^ Lucille Davie (2007-01-23). "Soccer goes back 120 years in Joburg". City of Johannesburg. http://www.joburgnews.co.za/2007/jan/jan23_soccerhistory.stm. Retrieved 2008-06-30.

^ "Soccer City". South African Football Association. http://www.safagoal.net/index.php?page=soccercity. Retrieved 2008-06-30.

^ Soccer City architect Populous

^ a b "Soccer City". FIFA. http://www.fifa.com/worldcup/destination/stadiums/stadium=5007759/index.html. Retrieved 2008-06-30.

^ a b "Stadia". South African Football Association. http://www.safagoal.net/index.php?page=stadia. Retrieved 2008-06-30.

^ a b "Soccer City is ready for play". 23 October 2009.

^ "2010 lead stadium work begins". SAinfo. 2007-01-18. http://www.southafrica.info/2010/fnbstadium-180107.htm. Retrieved 2008-06-30.

^ "World Cup: One year to go". BBC News. 2009-06-11. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/8092181.stm. Retrieved 2009-06-18.

^ "Take a seat at Soccer City". http://www.shine2010.co.za/Community/blogs/goodnews/archive/2009/10/21/take-a-seat-at-soccer-city.aspx. Retrieved 23 March 2010.

[edit] External links

Media related to Soccer City at Wikimedia Commons

Official Site

FNB-Stadium at Footballmatch

Soccer City at the 2010 Communication Project

FIFA 2010 sponsorship at FNB

Soccer City ESPN Profile

360 View

[show]v • d • eVenues of the 1996 African Cup of Nations

Soccer City (Johannesburg) • Kings Park Stadium (Durban) • Free State Stadium (Bloemfontein) • EPRU Stadium (Port Elizabeth)

[show]v • d • eFIFA World Cup Final venues

Uruguay 1930 • Italy 1934 • France 1938 • Brazil 1950 • Switzerland 1954 • Sweden 1958 • Chile 1962 • England 1966 • Mexico 1970 • West Germany 1974 • Argentina 1978 • Spain 1982 • Mexico 1986 • Italy 1990 • United States 1994 • France 1998 • Korea/Japan 2002 • Germany 2006 • South Africa 2010 • Brazil 2014

[show]v • d • e2010 FIFA World Cup Stadia

Cape Town Stadium (Cape Town) • Ellis Park Stadium (Johannesburg) • Free State Stadium (Bloemfontein) • Loftus Versfeld Stadium (Pretoria) • Mbombela Stadium (Nelspruit) • Moses Mabhida Stadium (Durban) • Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium (Port Elizabeth) • Peter Mokaba Stadium (Polokwane) • Royal Bafokeng Stadium (Rustenburg) • Soccer City (Johannesburg)

Preceded by

Olympiastadion

Berlin FIFA World Cup

Final Venue

2010 Succeeded by

Estádio do Maracanã

Rio de Janeiro

Preceded by

Stade El Menzah

Tunis African Cup of Nations

Final Venue

1996 Succeeded by

Stade du 4-Août

Ouagadougou

如果重新启动计算机后仍然出现错误,就说明该文件遭到损坏。

KERNEL32.DLL是WINDOWS系统的核心文件之一,其作用类似于DOS中的IO.SYS,MSDOS.SYS。如果该文件发生损坏,计算机将不能正常工作,出现的故障也会多种多样,这要看其损坏的程度。

损坏的原因有可能是存放该文件的硬盘区域发生磁道损坏造成,也有可能是其他原因。

你可以尝试如下的修复办法!

1.用系统自带的SCANDISK进行磁盘扫描,包括整盘介质扫描,如果损坏不严重,可能修复。

2.采用覆盖法重新安装一次WINDOWS。

如果以上两种方法都不行,建议格式化硬盘后重建系统。

如果是Windows XP,可试

用CD Boot 机,进入Recovery Console, 把Kernel32.dll 抄到 windows\system32 试试.

转过来的,不要骂我!!

用kernel32.dll在百度上找找,问题多多,当然玩游戏的不多,呵呵!

无法定位程序输入点RestoreLastError

有些程序,在XP下开发的,在2000或以下版本运行时,总是报错,提示:

"无法定位程序输入点RestoreLastError于动态链接库kernel32.dll上"

此类问题的原因,主要是因为在XP上的Kernel32.dll上面有RestoreLastError函数,而在2000上面的Kernel32.dll没有这个函数。

可以如下解决:

(一直漂 原创,转载请说明)

用二进制编辑器,把报错的程序的RestoreLastError改成SetLastError。

步骤如下:

假如启动aspbiz.exe报错,

1.用UltraEdit打开aspbiz.exe

2.找到RestoreLastError字符串,将其改为:SetLastError,并且,后面四位补上0x00,就是十六进制的0

3.存盘,退出

4.OK!

建议重装系统(xp的)

world cup [wə:ld][kʌp]

n.

世界杯足球赛:1928年奥运会结束后,国际足联召开代表会议,一致通过决议,举办四年一次的世界足球锦标赛。这对于世界足球运动的进一步发展和提高起到了积极的推动作用。最初这个新的足球大赛称为“世界足球锦标赛”。1956年,国际足联在卢森堡召开的会议上,决定易名为“雷米特杯赛”。这是为表彰前国际足联主席法国人雷米特为足球运动所作出的成就。雷米特担任国际足联主席33年(1921-1954),是世界足球锦标赛的发起者和组织者。后来,有人建议将两个名字联起来,称为“世界足球锦标赛---雷米特杯”。于是,在赫尔辛基会议上决定更名为“世界足球锦标赛---雷米特杯”,简称”世界杯“。


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原文地址: http://outofmemory.cn/tougao/9263920.html

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