Roma’s new stadium project at Pietralata continues moving through the final administrative stages, with another important green light arriving from the city authorities.
According to a report from ANSA, the Capitoline Giunta has approved another key step tied to the urban planning convention for the new stadium project, bringing Roma closer to the decisive authorization phase.
The project, strongly backed by the Friedkin ownership, is expected to involve an investment exceeding €1 billion and would create one of the most modern stadiums in Europe.
The next steps in the process include additional technical and administrative approvals before the final Conference of Services, which will ultimately determine whether construction can officially begin. Rome mayor Roberto Gualtieri recently confirmed that the project has entered its “last authorization phase.”
The planned stadium would hold around 60,000 spectators, including a massive Curva Sud expected to become one of the largest single-stand supporter sections in Europe.
Roma’s ownership hopes construction can begin during 2027, although timelines remain dependent on bureaucracy, archaeological studies, and the completion of all remaining approvals.

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