World’s biggest football stadium with 115,000-capacity set to eclipse Man Utd’s 100,000-seat venue dream
MANCHESTER UNITED's so-called 100,000-seater "Wembley of the North" proposal is set to be eclipsed by a remarkable new project in Morocco.
While there has been much excitement generated by Sir Jim Ratcliffe's plans for the Red Devils, it looks set to pale in comparison to what's happening in north Africa.
The designers behind Tottenham's state-of-the-art ground - Populous - have been drafted in by the Atlas Lions to design a breathtaking stadium for the 2030 World Cup.
Dubbed the Grand Stade de Casablanca, the project is expected to result in the largest stadium in world football with a jaw-dropping capacity of 115,000.
Morocco are hosting the 2030 tournament with Spain and Portugal, and it is hoped it will pressure Fifa on where to host the final.
The Santiago Bernabeu and the Nou Camp are also in the running to host the final, with the former having recently been revamped and the latter currently being rebuilt..
READ MORE IN FOOTBALL
The stadium in Morocco will also play host to two local teams following the World Cup.
Preparation work has already begun at a 100-hectare site 24 miles north of Casablanca in the town of El Mansouria near Benslimane Airport following the approval of public financing in October.
UK-based Populous are being joined on the project by Moroccan architecture firm Oualalou + Choi.
Their winning design is said to draw inspiration from a local custom known as a "moussem" - an annual social gathering involving more than 30 tribes from southern Morocco and other regions of Northwest Africa.
Populous announced the design will see the stadium structure set under a grand, tented roof that emerges following a forested landscape around the ground.