PSG does not intend to waste any more time on its future stadium and this week visited a new ground in Île-de-France. Parisian leaders would even like to make their choice at the beginning of 2025.
PSG is accelerating for its future stadium. Repeating since last January that it must move from the Parc des Princes because it cannot buy it from the Paris town hall, the club is struggling to find land of at least 50 hectares in Île-de-France capable of hosting its future setting of 60,000 to 90,000 places, as well as an area including shops, hotels, restaurants, offices and car parks.
PSG visited the old Ris-Orangis racecourse
According to the latest information from Le Parisien, two leaders of PSG (Victoriano Melero, general director, and Nicolas Ramillon, director in charge of the real estate sector) visited this Tuesday the former Ris-Orangis racecourse, located in Essonne, in the south from Paris. A site of almost 100 hectares, abandoned for more than 20 years, and available immediately. Problem is, it is located more than 32 kilometers from the Parc des Princes and 53 km from the PSG Campus, well beyond the 20 km radius listed in the club's specifications.
But according to Le Parisien, route tests carried out in real conditions between Poissy and Ris-Orangis were not eliminated and the track would therefore not be closed. However, this is not the only site studied by PSG, which would have identified at least three other places meeting its specifications according to Le Parisien, including another located in the Essonne department.
Several other avenues studied, a decision taken at the beginning of 2025?
At the start of the week, the agglomeration of Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, where a land located in Montigny-le-Bretonneux interests the club, paid for an advertising page in L'Equipe to praise its territory with the following hook: “What better place than Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines to host the future PSG stadium? »
According to Le Parisien, PSG leaders in any case do not want to waste any more time and would aim to make their choice in the first weeks of 2025. Once the choice of land has been made, building the new stadium could however take several years. .
Nasser Al-Khelaïfi recently spoke of three-four years on RMC Sport, Victoriano Melero had counted on at least 8 years a few weeks ago in an interview with Le Parisien while some experts think it will take at least 15 years. to PSG to build its future stadium.
Soccer
France