Milan and Inter back on long road towards a new San Siro
Champions League - AC Milan v Liverpool - San Siro, Milan, Italy - September 17, 2024 General view inside the stadium before the match REUTERS/Claudia Greco/File Phot
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Inter Milan and
AC Milan are once again aiming to get a new stadium built on the site of the
iconic San Siro but the Serie A giants have a long way to go before they'll be
able set foot in the modern arena for which they have long hoped.
The
announcement on Tuesday that a "positive" meeting was held between
the two clubs, mayor of Milan Giuseppe Sala and Italy's culture and sport
ministers relaunched a project which was abandoned in 2023 after it spent over
three years winding its way through the bureaucratic and political corridors.
That project - originally priced at 1.3 billion euros -will have to be revised to include
only a partial demolition of the existing, city-owned San Siro, the site of
which would be used for green space and a range of sports facilities and
entertainment venues.
Meanwhile a new
stadium, which in the previous project was planned to have a capacity of
60,000, would be built in the area to the immediate west of the current ground
which is currently occupied by car parking and a local park.
However this
time round the clubs will have to agree to purchase the land, which according
to latest reports is set to be valued at around 200 million euros.
That sale would
take time assuming it is even approved by Milan city council, and given that
there was strong local opposition to the project last time, there is no
guarantee of a vote in the clubs' favour.
Sources say any vote would be on a knife edge as councillors across
the political spectrum have been angered by what they see as a bypassing of
local democracy, as Sala tries to not become the mayor who let two of the
world's biggest football clubs leave the city.
Earlier this
year AC Milan acquired land in the nearby town of San Donato Milanese for 40
million euros -- and have still not officially abandoned the idea of building
there -- while Inter looked at Rozzano and Assago, also to the south of the
city.
One source said Milan city council has been left in the dark about both the revised
San Siro project and a proposal, rejected as too costly by the two clubs, to
modernise the current stadium.
They said a
vote against the sale could bring down Sala's local government and potentially
hand Italy's economic capital to the right-wing coalition which leads the
country.
if the clubs
move elsewhere it wouldn't just be politically costly, it would also leave the
city with a huge unused stadium on its outskirts which would no longer bring in
seven million euros in annual rent and would have to be either repurposed or
demolished.
If the stadium
-- due to host the 2026 Winter Olympics opening ceremony -- is still in public
hands by the end of next year, a building protection order preventing the
demolition of its second tier will automatically come into effect.
If Milan and
Inter purchase the land before that deadline it would stop the restriction
automatically being activated but Sala has said a complete demolition is
"very unlikely, and the clubs know that".
Fans also have
concerns, in particular regarding the drastically reduced capacity compared to
the current stadium, which regularly holds more than 70,000 spectators.
Not only did
the previously proposed stadium have some 15,000 fewer seats for the two
best-supported teams in Italy, who each have 40,000 season ticket holders, it
was also planned to have a minimum of 9,000 corporate hospitality places,
increasing to 13,500 for some events.
"We have
always believed from our experience that any stadium would need to have a
capacity of at least 70,000," says Giuseppe Munafo, the president of major
Milan supporters' association AIMC.
"Our
position is that we would like any new stadium to maintain the same number of
seats that aren't for what we would call the elite, those places that are sold
for 1,000 euros."
The AIMC is
affiliated with Milan and brings together tens of thousands of fans.
Both the AIMC
and the hardcore ultras supporters have staged protests at recent Milan matches
over a startling increase in prices for general sale tickets.


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