On 18 December, as part of the celebration for this year’s Qatar National Day, Al Rayyan Stadium will be inaugurated as the fourth FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022™ tournament venue when it hosts the Amir Cup final between Al Sadd and Al Arabi.
It will be the latest milestone for the Supreme Committee for Delivery and Legacy (SC) and follows the successful redevelopment of Khalifa International and the inaugurations of Al Janoub and Education City stadiums.
Football fans, especially those of Al Rayyan Sports Club, will marvel at the sight of this magnificent 40,000-capacity venue – which will become their new home and stand as a symbol of sustainability.
The task of deconstructing Ahmed Bin Ali Stadium and fulfilling the sustainability goals of the new venue provided SC with a unique opportunity. The result – 90% of materials from the old stadium were reused or recycled within the new project – and that process began with the careful deconstruction of the existing venue.
Abdulla Al Fehani, SC’s Al Rayyan Venue Precinct Director, said that the deconstruction of the stadium is a specialist job – you take the building apart in different elements.
Those elements included the concrete, the wiring, the steel which is part of the structure itself, and other elements like the doors, seats and lights. We removed those elements, then removed the structure itself, until it was concluded.
Among the materials to be reused in the new stadium precinct was upwards of 250,000m² of backfill, while other materials were used for temporary infrastructure, like labour accommodation. Some materials were also set aside for public art installations, while seat tags were saved and given to Al Rayyan supporters and club officials as mementos of their previous home.
Some time into the project, construction of temporary training sites for Al Rayyan Sports Club was added to the scope, revealed the SC Sustainability and Environment Director Engineer Bodour Al Meer.
We also realised there were quite a few sports lights in the stadium, which we were able to take down carefully and then reuse for the temporary training sites next to the venue.
While some of the reused materials are not as visible in the new stadium complex, trees and plants that once surrounded the old stadium were retained and replanted, and which helped minimise damage to the natural environment.
Al Fehani said they moved about 200 plants to a nearby nursery, next to the stadium site, then moved a lot of them back to the redeveloped site. Some trees were given to the Ministry of Municipality and Environment.
With a new era set to formally begin for Al Rayyan Venue and the surrounding complex, the process that brought about the transformation of the site has proudly become another important legacy chapter for SC and its goal of staging the first carbon-neutral FIFA World Cup.
For Al Rayyan, the focus on waste recycling was good and interesting with many new lessons learned. It really pushed the contractor and the local market in a new direction, said Al Meer.
We are currently preparing a best practice guideline document on this topic to share with the wider local construction industry.
Visit qatar2022.qa for more information about the new Al Rayyan Venue. More details about the Amir Cup 2020 final match available here.
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