All you need to know about the venue of City's biggest match for a generation - Wembley Stadium.

- Wembley Stadium is located in the London Borough of Brent and is owned by The Football Association via its subsidiary Wembley National Stadium Limited.

- Originally opened in 1923, the 'old Wembley' was built by Sir Robert McAlpine for the British Empire Exhibition of 1923, at a cost of £750,000.

- The 'old Wembley' was demolished in 2000 after England lost 1-0 to Germany.

- City played in the 'old Wembley' three times in finals; 1986 vs Bolton, 1987 vs Mansfield and 2000 vs Stoke.

- The new-look stadium was officially opened in 2007, with an Under-21 match between England and Italy which ended 3-3.

- The stadium has 90,000 seats and is the second largest capacity in Europe behind Barcelona's Nou Camp. However, it is the largest stadium in the world with every seat under cover.

- The stadium is the most expensive stadium ever built - costing an amazing £798m!

- The stadium has a circumference of 1 km.

- There are 107 steps in the trophy presentation route - the old stadium had 39 steps.

- The stadium's iconic arch is 133 metres above the level of the external concourse. With a span of 315 metres, the arch is the longest single span roof structure in the world.

- At Wembley there are: 90,000 seats, 310 wheelchair spaces, 400 press seats. Plus 34 bars, eight restaurants, 98 kitchens,
688 food and drink service points. Also there are 2,618 toilets, 47 retail units (programmes, merchandise, betting), 164 turnstiles, 26 lifts and 30 escalators.

For more about Wembley visit wembleystadium.com.