2018 World Cup Host Cities and Venues

 2018 World venus and host cities

Then there are the host cities. These may be the 11 most distinctive cities that have ever hosted a World Cup together. From the European feel of beautiful St. Petersburg to the quintessential Russian capital of Moscow to the beaches of Samara and Sochi, each city will welcome visitors with its own unique experiences.
The 11 host cities and their 12 venues for the 2018 World Cup are worth getting excited about. Russia is eager to impress and it’s making a monumental effort to do so. Fans at this epic event will be treated to some of the newest and most modern stadiums anywhere. Six of the 12 venues are being built specifically for the World Cup, with the remaining six being rebuilt or renovated to improve the fan experience. There’s no doubt these venues will be a highlight.
       

Kaliningrad Stadium

Despite the fact that its emotional history backpedals more than 750 years, the city of Kaliningrad was to a great extent wrecked amid World War Two. It was quickly modified and had an imperative impact wide open to the harshe elements War. Accordingly, the design is a fascinating blend of old and new with the most established building going back to the thirteenth century. The city of very nearly 460,000 is rich in culture with various exhibition halls and theaters. Its allure reaches out to nature sweethearts too, as the locale has a lot of immaculate shorelines and untouched backwoods. Its area only south of Lithuania on a channel of the Baltic Sea brings about a gentle atmosphere, with June and July advantageously being the best time to visit. 

Fans taking in a diversion in Kaliningrad will be dealt with to a fresh out of the box new setting, Kaliningrad Stadium. The plan of the new stadium depends on Allianz Arena in Munich, which facilitated some World Cup recreations of its own in 2006. As of now under development, the 35,000-situate, outdoors stadium will have an emphasis on green innovation and is planned for finish in late 2017.

2018 World Cup Host Cities

  • Kaliningrad
  • Kazan
  • Moscow
  • Nizhny Novgorod
  • Rostov-on-Don
  • Saint Petersburg
  • Samara
  • Saransk
  • Sochi
  • Volgograd
  • Ekaterinburg
  • Map of Moscow


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