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Siemens turns stadium into high-tech temple

Siemens turns stadium into high-tech temple

By:  John Blau  On: 22 Jan 2006 For: IDG News Service (Düsseldorf Bureau) Creator

Soccer stadiums aren't the simple structures they once were. The sport's soaring popularity has led to the construction of a new generation of eye-catching, high-tech stadiums, equipped with the latest IT, security, energy and building management systems. Munich's new soccer stadium, the Allianz Arena, is in that league.

All systems in the arena are monitored and controlled by a handful of technicians located in a small room, equipped with fewer than 10 desktop monitors from a mix of vendors including Dell Inc.

Like the technicians, the soccer players are also squeezed into a relatively small room -- the size of a two-car garage at most. But this room is low tech, or better, no tech, with the exception perhaps of the two digital clocks located at opposite sides of the room.

For all the technology that is changing the look and feel of stadiums for spectators, soccer indeed remains low tech: it's still a game of running, sweating and competing. And that's something, arguably, technology shouldn't change.










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John Blau John Blau is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.
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