Champions League Winner PSG Short-Lists Two Sites Outside Paris for Future Stadium
- Paris Saint-Germain announced two finalist sites, Massy and Poissy, for its future stadium, with a final decision expected in fall 2026.
- The club launched the stadium project after initiating an exploratory approach over several months to identify viable locations linked to local actors.
- PSG will conduct detailed, equally serious feasibility studies on both sites, emphasizing modern, sustainable infrastructure meeting international standards.
- Massy benefits from strong multimodal connections to Paris and economic development potential near the Saclay scientific pole, while Poissy is more advanced in planning.
- The club will remain at Parc des Princes for several years, and the project aims to serve the club, supporters, and local authorities beyond the 2026 municipal elections.
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Champions League winner PSG short-lists two sites outside Paris for future stadium
PARIS (AP) — Paris Saint-Germain has short-listed two sites outside the capital city to build its future stadium.
The PSG announced that it had selected two applications for the construction of its future stadium: the sites of Massy and Poissy. The club, which initially wished to purchase the Parc des Princes, will make its final decision in 2026. - Where will the PSG play? The applications of two municipalities selected for the future stadium (Sports).
Massy (Essonne) and Poissy (Yvelines) are the two cities chosen by Paris Saint-Germain to carry out in-depth studies for the construction of a large stadium. In Essonne, the local elected officials, already on foot, savor.
The football club of the capital will continue its exploratory studies on these two communes, located respectively in Essonne and the Yvelines. A final decision is expected in autumn 2026.
Champions League winners could be forced to abandon stadium and build new home
Paris Saint-Germain are planning to leave their iconic Parc des Princes home in order to build a new state-of-the-art stadium. The move would see the newly-crowned Champions League winners leave Paris for a projected 90,000-seater arena on the outskirts of the city. European champions PSG could be set for a stunning move from their Parc des Princes homeGetty PSG do not own the Parc des Princes and have leased the stadium from the Paris City Hall…
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