San Siro on course for demolition after sale to Inter and AC Milan approved

A picture shows a general view of the interior of the San Siro Stadium in Milan on October 9, 2021. The city of Milan approved on September 30, 2025 the sale of the San Siro stadium to the city's two football giants Inter Milan and AC Milan. (Photo by FRANCK FIFE / AFP)

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One of the world's most famous stadiums is set for
demolition after Milan city hall early Tuesday approved the sale of San Siro,
nicknamed football's La Scala, to the city's two football giants.
Inter and AC Milan had both threatened to abandon the city
had the sale not been approved after having looked at sites in nearby suburbs.
More than 11 hours of debate at city hall ended with 24
votes in favour of the sale for 197 million euros ($231 million) and 20 against
-enough for Italy's economic capital to decree that Inter Milan and AC Milan
will become owners of both the iconic stadium and adjacent land.
Confirmation of a vote in favour of the resolution didn't
come until nearly 4:00am after a long night which included discussion of a raft
of proposed amendments.
In the end Inter and AC Milan, both owned by US investment
funds, and the mayor of Italy's economic capital Giuseppe Sala got what they
wanted after years of uncertainty over a 1.2-billion-euro project.
The clubs proposed purchasing the site in March after a
previous project in which the land remained public was abandoned in 2023.
As long as the sale is completed by November 10 -- when a
public building protection order preventing the demolition of the San Siro
comes into effect -- Inter and AC Milan will take control of just over 28
hectares (70 acres) of public land in a densely populated area on the western
outskirts of Milan.
It is on the land to the immediate west of the San Siro,
currently occupied by matchday car parking and a local park, where a modern
71,500-capacity arena will be built.
Once the new ground is constructed, San Siro will be almost
entirely demolished to make way for new parkland, office space and
entertainment facilities with everything to be designed by architectural firms Foster
and Partners and MANICA.
It will still be some years before the bulldozers come for
the current San Siro, where Inter and AC Milan will continue to play their
matches to crowds of up to 75,000 until 2031 when the clubs hope to have the
new stadium finished.
The clubs and Sala were helped by the abstention of
councillors from the right-wing Forza Italian party founded by deceased former
prime minister and ex-AC Milan owner Silvio Berlusconi.
The other opposition parties, the hard-right League and
Brothers of Italy, both voted against the proposal, as did a number of
councillors from the left-leaning majority which backs Sala's local government.
There has been anger across the political spectrum in Milan
at what councillors see as a bypassing of local democracy with Sala trying to
avoid being the mayor who allowed two of the world's biggest football clubs to
leave Milan.
The proposal was criticised by some members of the council
for not containing any details of the development of the new stadium and
surrounding area, while the price was also blasted as being too low for a prime
area of real estate.
The vote will please Italy's football federation (FIGC) as
Milan is one of the potential candidates to hold matches at Euro 2032, which is
set to be jointly hosted by Italy and Turkey.
The FIGC needs to communicate to UEFA its five official
picks for stadiums for the tournament by October next year, when it can present
new venues or ones which need to be redeveloped as long as works begin by March
2027.
Only one of Italy's 14 potential candidates -- Juventus'
Allianz Stadium in Turin -- is currently in line with the criteria set by
European football's governing body.
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