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The stadium at Paraopeba Avenue was a football ground in Belo Horizonte, Brazil, and was the home ground of Clube Atlético Mineiro from 1912 to 1929. It was the second ground at which the club played and its first proper stadium. The ground was located on Paraopeba Avenue (later Augusto de Lima Avenue), between Santa Catarina and Curitiba streets.

History
Founded in 1908, Atlético Mineiro played its first matches on improvised pitches at Belo Horizonte's Municipal Park. In 1909, the team for the first time had a proper ground, on Guajajaras Street, between São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro streets. The region had been previously levelled for the expansion of the street, and Atlético's members cleared the bushes in an unused land to make way for a pitch and installed wooden bars. This ground, however, was not officially recognised by the authorities.

In 1912, Atlético moved to a more a structured ground in Paraopeba Avenue, between Santa Catarina and Curitiba streets (some blocks away from its first one). Yale, another club from the city, also had a stadium in Paraopeba Avenue, and América in 1913 acquired a ground exactly across the street from Atlético's, making it the footballing centre of Belo Horizonte. Estimated attendances at the ground between 1914 and 1920 were between 1,000 and 1,500 people.

For the first few years, however, Atlético did not own the property in which the ground was located. In 1916, after an official requirement but the its associates, the city's Deliberative Council officially granted the land to the club by force of a municipal law. It stated that the property could be reclaimed by the municipality with reparation for the improvements, which happened in the late 1920s Through this transaction Atlético received another land in the Lourdes neighbourhood, in which it built the Estádio Presidente Antônio Carlos. Paraopeba Avenue was eventually renamed Augusto de Lima Avenue, and the site where the stadium once was is now occupied by Minascentro, a convention centre.