
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-68459160
The new stadium to be built at Casement Park in west Belfast will have a smaller initial capacity than originally planned.
There will be room for 30,000 spectators when it first opens, rather than 34,500.
However, the plan is to increase the capacity after the Euro 2028 soccer tournament.
Questions remain about whether the stadium will be built in time for the event.
An official estimate puts the cost of the redevelopment project at about £308m and the funding currently is not available.
Nonetheless, preparations for the stadium reconstruction continue and there has been a re-think in terms of the initial configuration of the seating.
Rather than build a 34,500 capacity stadium with 26,000 seats and 8,500 standing, the plan is to initially make it all-seater.
The organisers of Euro 2028, Uefa, require all-seater stadiums.
An aerial view of the previous Casement Park GAA stadiumImage source, Inpho
Image caption,
Casement Park has not been in use for 10 years
Casement Park is one of 10 venues in the UK and Ireland chosen to host matches in the tournament.
The redevelopment project is being overseen by the Department for Communities.
A spokesperson said: “Work is ongoing with all partners to initially deliver the stadium to meet UEFA specifications.
“A stadium configuration of 30,000 seats will be provided for the Euro tournament, which will be returned to the Gaelic games configuration after the tournament, to provide 26,000 seats plus an 8,500 capacity standing terrace.”
Casement Park standing terrace artist’s impressionImage source, GAA
Image caption,
An artist’s impression of the stadium showed initial plans for terracing at one end of the ground
It had been thought it would happen the other way, with the larger capacity first, and then the reduction before the Euros.
Given the fact that the building of the stadium has not yet begun, it may have been decided there is insufficient time to carry out the capacity reduction before the soccer tournament.
When planning permission for the stadium was granted in 2022 the capacity quoted was 34,578.
The reduced capacity at the Euros will ease traffic and parking issues around the west Belfast venue.
Media caption,
GAA fans hopeful as Casement work begins
The stadium will primarily be for GAA (Gaelic Athletic Association) games but the design will allow it to host other sports, including soccer and rugby.
If built, it will be the only stadium in Belfast with more than 20,000 seats.
If funding issues scupper the redevelopment, the city will miss out on the Euros as no other stadium could host matches in the tournament.
Uefa wants the stadium ready by mid-2027 at the latest, so that there is time to carry out test events at the venue before the tournament.
by HeWasDeadAllAlong
5 comments
>Rather than build a 34,500 capacity stadium with 26,000 seats and 8,500 standing, the plan is to initially make it all-seater.
What brain-dead primate thought 8,500 people standing was a good idea to begin with? That’s asking for a stampede.
I don’t know the whole picture nor series of events, but I think the construction of Casement Park needs to be outsourced to more capable people.
EDIT: Turns out I’m wrong.
Don’t Uefa mandate that all their competitions be all seated so the GAA terraces will need temporary seating as happens in plenty of other stadiums? Failing to see what the story is here.
Does anyone actually believe theres even the slighest chance of this being ready for 2028?
If you told the DUP, that if casement doesn’t get build, if Northern Ireland were to qualify , they would potentially have to play their euro 2028 games in Dublin, they would support this 😂😂
Honestly there’s no need to increase the capacity, 30,000 for a GAA stadium is massive, and makes Antrim’s stadium only smaller than Cork’s and Dublin’s I believe