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A Spoked Wheel Structure for the World’s largest
Convertible Roof – The New Commerzbank Arena in
Frankfurt, Germany
Knut Göppert, Managing Director, Schlaich Bergermann und Partner, Stuttgart, Germany; Michael Stein, Vice President
Operations, Schlaich Bergermann and Partner, New York, USA

Introduction
The roof is a lightweight structure
consisting of three major parts:
− the edge panel supporting the compression ring (6000 m²);
− the fixed main roof (27,000 m²)
using radial cable trusses and two
tension rings and;
− the retractable inner roof (8,000 m²)
supported by radial cable trusses.
In the plane of the roof, the three components structurally exploit the principle of the spoked-wheel. In order to
adjust the roof geometry at the outer
corners of the stadium bowl, the circle
was modified to create a more rectangular form.
44 pairs of radial cables are connected
to the compression ring. To achieve
an out-of-plane stiffness for the roof,
the radial cables are spread vertically, leading to two tension rings at the
inner edge of the fixed roof portion.
The structure for the inner roof follows the same principle.
The retractable roof can be unfolded
by pulling its outer edges towards
the lower tension ring. Sitting in the
world’s largest convertible greatly improves the spectator’s experience at
the stadium (see Fig. 1a and 1b).
Keywords: cable truss; retractable folding fabric; compression ring; lightweight
translucent stadium roof systems.

General
As at the beginning of the seventies, a
series of new football arenas were built
between 1998 and 2005 after the successful German bid to host the Football World Cup. This move coincided
with a new direction in the design of
stadiums. The design moved from stadiums designed to host football and
track and field events to stadiums designed as multifunctional arenas or
purely to host football matches. With
this development, the proximity of the

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Fig. 1: (a) Aerial perspective (b) Inside view of stadium
(a) Photocredit: Max Bögl (b) Photographer: Martin Stahl

spectators to the pitch, the elimination
of the track for athletic events and the
optimal arrangement of VIP and Press
boxes were achieved.
A significant change in the structural
form is the result of the increasing orientation towards football stadiums. A
rectangular central space and rectangular roofing edge are becoming more
common along with a closer orientation of the exterior form to the playing
field. What at first appears to be a contradiction, can actually be combined:
the football stadium and the spoked
wheel principle.

Development of Spoked Wheel
Roof Structures
Roofing structures relying on the
structural behaviour of a horizontal wheel with inclined spokes have
been in use for many years. These
structures have been employed for
circular systems such as Madison
Square Garden or the Zaragoza Stadium.1
With the erection of the GottliebDaimler Stadium in Stuttgart, the
spoked wheel principle was greatly expanded (see Figs. 2a, b):2
− Instead of one compression ring
with a central spread hub, two
compression rings were employed

with the inclined spokes running to
a central point.
− Instead of connecting all the spokes
to one point, these are led to an
inner tension ring.
− The circular form became oval.
Following the construction of the Stadium in Stuttgart (Fig. 3a),3 numerous
other stadiums have been designed by
the Authors’ office with similar spoked
wheel roofing that are referred to as
cable ring structures.
The Malaysian National Stadium in
Kuala Lumpur4 and the Nigerian National Stadium in Abuja consist of
one compression ring and two spread
tension, all with an oval form. The Kuwaiti National Stadium has a single,
radial-tangential cable net. The difference in elevation along the compression ring creates the “structural
depth”.
The World Cup Stadium in Hamburg
(Fig. 3b)5 was the first approximation
of a rectangular opening for a cable
ring roof. The forces caused by directional change at the ring cables are
in equilibrium with the forces due to
directional change in the “rim”. The
force of directional change at the
inner tension ring corners are each
transferred by the three cables to the
compression ring with more constant
curvature.

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inside of the stadium and ending in
two parallel tension rings running on
top of each other. From there the radial cables of the inner roof start and
meet at the centre of the stadium at –
theoretically – one point. The vertical
components of the upper and lower
tension ring are balanced by means of
vertical struts.
The complete roof structure is supported by slender vertical columns
of 8,5 m height in each axis. The roof
therefore appears to be floating almost weightlessly above the stands
(see Fig. 4a, b).
The roof cladding consists of a combination of four different materials:

(a)

(b)

Fig. 2: Viable spoked wheel arrangements (Photocredit: sbp)

Fig. 3: (a) Gottlieb Daimler stadium (b) World Cup Stadium Hamburg
(a) Photocredit: Manfred Storck (b) Photographer: euroluftbild

In order to eliminate any important bending stresses in the rim under self weight,
the following conditions must be met:
− The self weight of the light structure
has a negligible impact on the forces
in the supporting elements.
− The form of the tension and compression chords are funicular with
respect to one another.
The possibilities opened up by this
construction principle can be further
developed and combined. Two current
examples of this further development,
in Durban, South Africa and Delhi,
India, are currently being designed and
executed in close collaboration with
the architects.

The Stadium Roof Structure
The compression ring along the circumference of the stadium bowl forms
the rim of the cable ring system. The
central hub is replaced by a cable ring
in which the tension forces are carefully balanced with the forces of the
compression ring. Radial cable girders
make up the spokes and connect the
rings.
In elevation, several combinations
of compression ring(s) and tension
ring(s) have been explored. The results
of detailed analysis led to a system
having one compression ring above
the outer edge of the bowl with radial cables spreading out towards the

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– The metal cladding at the outer
edge hides the slightly different
curvature of the stadium bowl and
compression ring. More curvature is
necessary for the compression ring
to create a viable structural system
with moderate forces. The edges
of the metal cladding are arranged
parallel to the bowl’s edges.
– The material of the fixed roof is a
PTFE (Polytetrafluoroethylene) coated glass fabric, which is located on
the lower cable level reducing the
vertical distance to the stands.
– To improve the interior lighting
situation, a 15-m wide area of polycarbonate sheets is arranged parallel
to the tension ring. These sheets
have a high level of translucency
(85%) whereas the roof achieves
15%. The polycarbonate also closes
the catenary-shaped gap between
the inner and outer fabrics.
– The material of the retractable roof
is PVC (polymer of vinyl chloride)
coated polyester with additional
PVDF (Polyvinylidene Flouride)
coating on the upper side. It is
situated at the lower cable level of
the inner roof.
In standard spoked wheel structures,
ring geometries and ring forces are
strongly dependent on each other and
cannot be chosen freely. The inner
roof of the Frankfurt Stadium helps to
overcome this design limitation.
The structure of the inner roof follows
the same principles as the outer roof,
resulting in two interlocked spoke
wheels with one outer compression
ring, two tension rings and the central hub. This combination allows a
choice of the geometry of the tension
ring freely as the balancing forces
for the compression ring could be assigned to the tension ring or the hub
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238,55
113,85

62,35

60,72

62,35

Compression Ring
1500 x 1000

78,70

8,90

Centrol node
Radia
Inne l cables
r roo
f

Radial ca
b
Outer ro les
of

Inner roof:
PVC/PES A = 8500 m2
Outer roof:
PTFE/GLASFASER A = 22000 m
Polycarbonate
A = 6000 m2
Metal cladding
A = 6200 m2

60,72

200,15

Membrane
fixed roof

(a)
240,50
58,90
8,90

61,34
Fixed roof

Inner roof
Upper ring cable
4xVVS
Flying mast
Lower ring cable
6xVVS

61,34

58,90
Inner roof

Fixed roof

8,90
Upper ring cable
Hanger cable
Membran - fixed roof
Lower radial cable Connection girder
Compression ring
+36,01

Central node
Videocube

Roof column +27,51
∅355,6

±0,00
(b)

Fig. 4: (a) Plan view (b) Section of stadium structure, Units: m (a+b Photocredit: sbp)

respectively. Not only the horizontal
position could be adjusted but also
the vertical shape of the roof, leading to several architectural options
as well as the possibility of arranging
the drainage in the corner areas of
the roof.

linear solvers as recommended for all
major tensile structures.

Structural Analysis

The columns and the compression ring
were modeled as beam elements, the
flying masts as strut elements and all
cables including the bracing diagonals
as cable elements. The covering as secondary element was not considered in
the global model.

All primary structural members, i.e. columns, compression ring, radial cables
and ring cables of the inner and outer
roof and the flying struts, were simulated in one computer model. Using a
high end software package, this model
was analysed using geometrically non-

The most important step at the beginning of the analysis of a tensile structure is the form-finding in which the
geometry and forces of the primary
elements are coordinated in the most
efficient way under a chosen loading
condition. The results of this iterative

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process, i.e. geometry and forces, constitutes the basis for all the following
calculations (see Fig. 5).
DIN German Standard was used to
define the standard loading provisions. The wind loads on the roof were
derived in a wind tunnel test considering local topography and urban environment. The retractable roof was
designed to withstand summer loading
conditions only as the roof should only
be deployed between May and October of each year. However, as extreme
summer conditions like hail storms
had to be considered in the design, the
load could only be reduced to 65% of
the full snow load. During the moving

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Upper/Lower
Radial cable inner roof
Hanger
Upper/Lower
Radial cable fixed roof

Connection girder
Upper ring cable
Column
Wind bracing
Compression ring 1500x1000
Lower ring cable
Flying mast
Central node

Fig. 5: Retractable roof area (Photocredit: sbp)

operation itself the loads due to wind
or rain were restricted to a practical
minimum. This requires responsible operational management to close the roof
for one event and includes contacting
the local meteorological institutions for
specific weather forecasts. As the moving operations take 15 minutes, these
provisions were found to be practical.
One of the most challenging parts of
the structural analysis is the stability
check for the compression ring, as standards or other provisions are hardly
applicable. The well-established process, which was used for the compression ring here, is to calculate maximum
stresses in the ring under factored loading including imperfections. The imperfections should be adopted by using the
scaled deflections under the first eigenfrequency of the system. Special attention is required to scale the deflections
carefully and coordinate them with the
specified tolerances. As a final step, a
standard buckling check was carried
out for each compression ring element.
Several sub-models were created to account for secondary structural systems
such as the structure of the inner and
outer roof, the catwalk including the
support structure for the polycarbonate cover and the video cube.
Special attention was given to the central hub, where a total of 96 cables
are connected in the minimum possible area. The maximum total force
which was introduced into the hub
was 30,000 kN from both main axes of
the stadium. One quarter of the node
was reproduced with a finite element
model using a Software and analysed,
considering the main cable forces from
the global model. Special welding and
erection procedures were developed
to guarantee the safe transmission of
the predicted forces.

Retractable Roof
The retractable roof can be unfolded
along the inner radial cables. The nondeployed position of the roof is folded
up in the central video cube of the stadium. The video cube and its roof have
to be designed properly to withstand
all possible loading conditions during the entire year and to protect the
membrane package from severe environmental conditions (Fig. 6).
The fabric is connected by means of
polyester straps to gliding steel trolleys in distances varying from approximately 6–9 m. The steel trolleys are
hooked to the primary steel cables of
the inner roof. These are double cables
spaced 250 mm apart to provide stable
gliding conditions. To avoid any direct
gliding of steel on steel, the trolleys are
equipped with hard-wearing blocks of
synthetic material at the contact zone
to the steel cables.
At the outer edges of the fabric, the
driving trolley is connected to an endless steel cable which is guided along
each radial cable and looped around
a winch located near the tension ring.
Using a motor-operated winch, the
cable can be moved, and so can the
driving trolley. When deploying the
roof, the driving trolley pulls all gliding trolleys, as they are connected via
the fabric. Folding the roof together
the driving trolley pushes the other
trolleys by direct contact (see Figs. 7
a,b).
The motor-operated winch allows fast
traveling, but cannot be used to introduce the prestress into the fabric,
required to provide a stable load carrying system. For this reason the driving trolley is mechanically locked to a
stressing device at the very end of the
deploying process. The stressing device

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Fig. 6: Retractable roof operation
(Photographer: Heiner Leiska)

consists of a pair of hydraulic cylinders.
These cylinders introduce high local
forces at the outer edge to stress the
entire fabric properly and to withstand
the concentrated local forces under
loading conditions.
The travelling process requires coordination between the 34 inner roof axes
to avoid uncontrollable side-effects due
to uneven driving velocities or local
interferences. The mechanical devices
and the software had to pass extensive
long term tests at the fabrication site
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(a)

(a)

(b)

Fig. 7 (a, b): Mechanical devices (Trolleys)
of retractable roof (a+b Photocredit: sbp)

before the system was approved by the
authorities and the engineers.
The required volume of the video cube
to store the folded package of the inner
fabric was investigated in three different ways:
− The physical model of the inner roof,
to get a deeper understanding of
the complex geometrical processes
during folding of the membrane
(Fig. 8a).
As for most scaled models, it is necessary to find a material with the correct
weight and the correct bending stiffness as the folding is strongly dependent on both parameters. Ultimately,
special fabrics from the apparel industry were used to obtain useful results.
− Computer model using software of
the automobile industry (airbag
folding).
To gain practical results with computer models, very detailed finite element systems are required. The finite
elements must be defined as contact
elements, simulating the folding process, not a standard software in the
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(b)

Fig. 8 (a, b): Scaled model and 1:1 Mock-up (a+b Photocredit: sbp)

construction industry. To reduce the
necessary calculation time, only half a
bay was modeled and calculated first.
This calculation proved the results of
the scaled physical model, so bigger
computer models were unnecessary.

repeated folding and unfolding on the
volume of the fabric package could not
be estimated exactly. Now, all testing
operations have certified the design
volume as adequate.

− Mock-up of one eighth of the roof
checking the folded condition
(Fig. 8b).

Fabrication and Erection

The final step was the 1:1 model with
part of the actual roof itself at the
fabrication site. This final check has
proved that the chosen volume of the
video cube could be considered as sufficient. Some uncertainty remained as
the influences of temperature and the

As the complete renovation of the stadium was performed while the stadium
was in service, well-coordinated erection procedures, not only for the stands
but also for the roof, were crucial for
the successful completion of the project. Increasing the amount of prefabrication and reducing the required
time at the site during erection, proved

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to be the right approach to the coordination problem. This led to unique
fabrication and erection methods.
To meet the assumptions of the structural analysis, the compression ring has
to be fabricated following strict tolerance requirements both in the length
of each element and angular deviation
of the end plates. One effective method, also applied in previous stadium
projects, is to sequentially machine the
end plates of each compression ring
element and to perform immediate
trial assemblies at the fabrication site.
Intolerable deviation at one element
can be settled by correcting adjacent
elements. This approach, which might
sound complex and costly with respect
to the fabrication, pays off during erection. The compression ring elements
can be quickly erected one after the
other and fixed together, after the columns and linking girders are installed
and temporarily fixed. The placement
is very precise and major surveying
during erection can be avoided by the
attention during fabrication, saving immense time and money at the site.
The complete compression ring must be
finished to start with the installation of
the cable structure. The cables are completely pre-fabricated, cut to extremely
tight tolerances, connected with the end
sockets and delivered at the site.
In the next step, the cables are laid out
on the stands and the field. All cables
are connected to each other with cast
steel clamps and ring connectors, producing one single cable net. The radial
cables are connected by means of temporary strands to lifting jacks fixed to
the compression ring. By pulling these
temporary strands, the complete cable
net can be lifted off the floor towards
its final position (Fig. 9a).
As all 44 axes are pulled at the same
time the jacks have to be carefully coordinated from a control panel, checking
geometry and the corresponding forces.
After a certain height is reached, the
flying masts are installed and the lifting
of the cable net completed (Fig. 9b).
During the complete lifting process the
cable net represents a stable structural
system. After the cable net is installed,

biggest convertible” it has proved itself
over the last two years in a series of
sports and other events including the
football World Cup in 2006.
The roof demonstrates that lightweight designs with modern materials
are definitely attractive alternatives to
standard structures. The final layout of
the structural members proved again
the tremendous adaptability of cable
supported roof structures.

References
[1] Göppert K, Schlaich J. The essence of Lightweight Structures. Brussels University Press,
2002.
[2] Bergermann R, Göppert K. Das Speichenrad–
Ein Konstruktionsprinzip für weitgespannte
Dachkonstruktionen. Stahlbau 2000; 69, Heft 8.
[3] Schlaich J., Bergermann R. Light Structures.
Prestel: München, 2003.

Fig. 9: (a) Central node before lift-off (b)
Radial cables during erection (a + b Photocredit: sbp)

the arches and the fabric are erected
bay by bay, following structural and
operational requirements. The catwalk, including the polycarbonate roof,
is erected in parallel. In the middle of
the roof the steel skeleton of the video
cube is connected to the central hub of
the cable structure and all mechanical
devices are installed and tested.
Finally, the inner roof is installed. It
was delivered in a single piece of approximately 8,500 m2. After waiting
for low winds and reconfirming the
weather conditions, the raising of the
entire inner roof is begun by connecting the polyester straps sequentially
to the trolleys located near the central
hub. The procedure is finished after an
uninterrupted construction period of
approximately two days.

Conclusion
The roof of the Commerzbank Arena
was a technical challenge requiring
the innovative solutions of all project
participants. Described as “the world’s

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[4] Schlaich J, Bergermann R, Göppert K. Textile
Überdachungen für die Sportstätten der Commonwealth Games 1998 in Kuala Lumpur/Malaysia. Bauen mit Textilien 1999; 2.
[5] Koch K-M, Habermann KJ. Membrane Structures. Prestel Verlag: München, 2004.

SEI Data Block
Owner/Client:
Waldstadion Frankfurt an Main,
Gesellschaft für Projektentwicklungen
mbH
Main Contractor:
Max Bögl Bauunternehmung GmbH
& Co. KG, Neumarkt
Architect:
von Gerkan, Marg und Partner, Berlin
Structural engineers of roof structure:
Schlaich Bergermann und Partner,
Stuttgart Knut Göppert, Michael Stein,
Markus Balz, Bernd Ruhnke,
Uli Dillmann
Structural engineers of r/c structure:
Krebs und Kiefer, Karlsruhe
Total Cost (USD millions):
200 USD Mill. for the total project / 30
USD Mill. for the roof structure
Service Date:

August, 2005

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