The departure from the Parc des Princes leaves no doubt in the minds of the leaders of PSG and in particular the Emir of Qatar. In addition, the club's minority shareholder Arctos is also very favorable to the construction of a new stadium. The bad news is confirmed for the supporters.
There is no longer any doubt that Paris Saint-Germain will leave the Parc des Princes in the years to come. Fans of the capital's club don't want to believe it, but Qatar has made a choice which seems definitive and which is no longer linked to the identity of the city's Mayor. Nasser Al-Khelaïfi has repeated it several times, the reigning French champion wants to have a bigger stadium that belongs to him. Two things that are difficult to reconcile at the Parc des Princes, even if work had been planned to expand the current PSG enclosure.
But in this issue, RMC tells us that Qatar is not alone in pushing for the construction of a new stadium. Indeed, the radio reveals that Arctos, new minority shareholder of Paris Saint-Germain, is also pushing internally for the club to leave the Parc des Princes and move to a brand new stadium. “Arctos has been a fantastic partner and will be very important at all levels in the United States in the years to come: the 2025 Club World Cup, the 2026 World Cup, new American partners and the new stadium” a source at the club tells Arthur Perrot.
Arctos in favor of building a stadium
Established in the global football market, Arctos wishes to develop further and is full of ambitions with the possible takeover of a club such as Braga to come and therefore the ultimate ambition of building with Qatar the future Paris Saint-Germain stadium . Bad news for the supporters of the Bleu et Rouge, for whom a departure from the Parc des Princes seems more and more inevitable. It now remains to be seen when this departure will take place while in the middle of the week, Le Parisien revealed the details of PSG's colossal project. An ultra-modern stadium that can accommodate up to 90,000 spectators with mass VIP boxes, hotels and even integrated restaurants. High-end services that the Parc des Princes cannot currently offer.