It's utterly stupid that Everton and Liverpool don't get together and build a really spectacular massive stadium to share. Shared stadiums work perfectly well in other countries.
It's utterly stupid that Everton and Liverpool don't get together and build a really spectacular massive stadium to share. Shared stadiums work perfectly well in other countries.
It's utterly stupid that Everton and Liverpool don't get together and build a really spectacular massive stadium to share. Shared stadiums work perfectly well in other countries.
Poundland Spurs stadium
A historic sunken rotting shell dredged up from the depths, but still in no fit state to be of any use other than for a bit of nostalgia.
And probably paid for by the tax payer. And when it's no longer the best stadium in the country in a decade, no doubt the team will threaten to skip town again unless they build a better one. That's how it works in America.Typically American. Flashy brash and over the top.
Whatever they build I hope there's more leg room
Thankfully, most football fans disagree with you. It’s not about “Working well” as you put it.
Can't say I'm blown away by it tbh. A fairly generic modern stadium design, not particularly imaginative. I'm filing it under 'meh'.
Au contraire @East10 I like the glass roof although it won’t stay blue for long [unless guano is not a Liverpool issue...] and I love the brick facade.
Reminds me of the Genoa/Sampdoria stadium or Ibrox.
Inside yes it’s generic as hell but what are you gonna do?!
The fact it reminds you of a couple of very old stadiums speaks for itself. The design is quite generic and functional, nothing special or groundbreaking.
[MENTION=272]Gritt23[/MENTION] has given some examples of what CAN be achieved when stadium designers think outside the box a bit. We rarely seem to do that in this country though (the Spurs one perhaps being an exception, but then you'd hope so as well for a billion quid).
It's utterly stupid that Everton and Liverpool don't get together and build a really spectacular massive stadium to share. Shared stadiums work perfectly well in other countries.
Hmm maybe I’m just a traditionalist but I’d rather see bricks and mortar integrated with steel and glass over the cheap steel and corrugated plastic examples of the last 20 years.
The setting of this one in the docks is pretty cool as well. At least it’s not out of town.
I get recent stadium additions in the US have been incredible but they get huge local gov subsidies and much bigger corporate sponsorship deals and can therefore support the average build cost of c$1bln.
Football infrastructure spend in this country is bobbins by comparison.
Hmm maybe I’m just a traditionalist but I’d rather see bricks and mortar integrated with steel and glass over the cheap steel and corrugated plastic examples of the last 20 years.
The setting of this one in the docks is pretty cool as well. At least it’s not out of town.
I get recent stadium additions in the US have been incredible but they get huge local gov subsidies and much bigger corporate sponsorship deals and can therefore support the average build cost of c$1bln.
Football infrastructure spend in this country is bobbins by comparison.
Underwhelming. Spurs have set the bar. I guess having one large stand behind the goal would be seen copying the kop, however just looks like an upgrade on a few of the bowls around the country.
There's also an abundance of land in the US. Most cities here don't have the space for some of the colossal stadiums you'd see over in the States. Not without bulldozing a bunch of houses. Or moving the stadium miles out of town.
I agree this Everton stadium is certainly a step up from the boring flatpack shite built at Southampton, Boro and Leicester. But with a clean slate, starting from scratch, I'd like to see something a bit more....imaginative. Stadium porn this is not.