Didn't Heck say they are doubling the size of the existing club shop? Seems to rule out rebuilding further back on the current site?
Bit of a tangent, but 3 years ago this week (according to my Facebook memories), we played at Fulham and they were just starting to build their new Riverside stand. 3 years on and it’s still not fully opened. Shocking.
Quote from: PeterWithesShin on January 05, 2024, 12:46:53 PMI reckon that the odds of us spending 3-4 years playing at another ground while VP is completely rebuilt are zero.Why would it have to be that long? The Spurs ground was shifted slightly off its original footprint so that construction could begin with the old stadium still in use. They then knocked all of WHL down in June 2017. The stadium was built by September 2018, but problems meant it wasn't properly open until April 19. Without the electrical problems it would have been a year, but even so it was still less than two.
I reckon that the odds of us spending 3-4 years playing at another ground while VP is completely rebuilt are zero.
Quote from: chrisw1 on January 05, 2024, 12:39:58 PMI think you're going to be very disappointed ADS.Why do you think Comcast investment vehicle has bought into the parent group? Do you find it coincidental that the plans are almost immediately halted to rebuild the North? Did you believe the rebuild would provide parity with Everton/Spurs?For avoidance of doubt, Oliver Stone is a crank and LHO shot Kennedy on his own, like the good Marine marksman he was. But this doesn't require a 200 ticket Zapurder film on the grassy knoll in Aston Park.
I think you're going to be very disappointed ADS.
Initial work prepping the site started a couple of years before. Everton stadium will be 4 years. Emirates took over 2 years to build but that was just the stadium build on a blank site, it didn't include actually clearing the site. We are so hemmed in that early work would most likely be minimal. And regardless of build time, it's years away from being possible because of Witton Lane and the houses.
Quote from: London Villan on January 05, 2024, 12:07:05 PMThe only comparison I can think of is somewhere like Wrigley Field in Chicago, where seats have been shoehorned onto the roofs of adjacent buildings to increase the capacity and make the most of the properties overlooking the field. This could be done in the corners...This is one of my favourite photos ... from Dundee United when their stand was under construction ...
The only comparison I can think of is somewhere like Wrigley Field in Chicago, where seats have been shoehorned onto the roofs of adjacent buildings to increase the capacity and make the most of the properties overlooking the field. This could be done in the corners...
Since when did scaling back require extra investment? We'll find out, but logically, the timing, the parties involved- it makes no sense to believe the 200 ticket nonsense.
The pre-war Norwich ground, The Nest took some beating: