Stamford Bridge stadium
Stamford Bridge was built in 1876 and initially used for athletics, before becoming the home ground of Chelsea F.C. in 1905.
Redevelopment was of the stadium site was proposed in 2014, with several options explored, before a decision was made to revamp the existing stadium. Herzog & de Meuron, who previously designed the famous Beijing National Stadium, were appointed as architects.
The central features of the redevelopment, which was designed in collaboration with London-based architectural practice Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands, were the 264 brick piers, intended to completely encase the existing stadium, supporting a steel ring above the pitch, creating additional space for spectators, and increasing the capacity from 41,837 to 60,000.
The concept behind the brick pillars was to make the stadium more ‘at home’ with the brick architecture of the local area. It has been described as a ‘high-quality piece of design and a unique architectural solution… It would have the landmark qualities of a significant sporting venue with a clear identity, and would declutter and unify the site.’
In January 2017, planning permission was granted by the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham, and the £500 million project had been expected to be complete by 2021.
However, on 31 May 2018, Chelsea FC announced that they were putting the revamp plans on hold indefinitely.
In a statement they said that; 'no further pre-construction design and planning work will occur. The club does not have a timeframe set for reconsideration of its decision. The decision was made due to the current unfavourable investment climate.'
There was speculation that the decision was related to ongoing problems with the UK visa of Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich who has recently taken Israeli citizenship. It is thought that Abramovich's uncertainty over his access to the country may have influenced his decision to put the stadium work on hold.
Images © 2016, Herzog & de Meuron Basel.
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings Wiki
Featured articles and news
CIOB photographic competition final images revealed
Art of Building produces stunning images for another year.
Major overhaul of planning committees proposed by government
Planning decisions set to be fast-tracked to tackle the housing crisis.
Strategic restructure to transform industry competence
EBSSA becomes part of a new industry competence structure.
Industry Competence Steering Group restructure
ICSG transitions to the Industry Competence Committee (ICC) under the Building Safety Regulator (BSR).
Principal Contractor Competency Certification Scheme
CIOB PCCCS competence framework for Principal Contractors.
The CIAT Principal Designer register
Issues explained via a series of FAQs.
Conservation in the age of the fourth (digital) industrial revolution.
Shaping the future of heritage
Embracing the evolution of economic thinking.
Ministers to unleash biggest building boom in half a century
50 major infrastructure projects, 5 billion for housing and 1.5 million homes.
RIBA Principal Designer Practice Note published
With key descriptions, best practice examples and FAQs, with supporting template resources.
Electrical businesses brace for project delays in 2025
BEB survey reveals over half worried about impact of delays.
Accelerating the remediation of buildings with unsafe cladding in England
The government publishes its Remediation Acceleration Plan.
Airtightness in raised access plenum floors
New testing guidance from BSRIA out now.
Picking up the hard hat on site or not
Common factors preventing workers using head protection and how to solve them.
Building trust with customers through endorsed trades
Commitment to quality demonstrated through government endorsed scheme.
New guidance for preparing structural submissions for Gateways 2 and 3
Published by the The Institution of Structural Engineers.
CIOB launches global mental health survey
To address the silent mental health crisis in construction.
Key takeaways from the BSRIA Briefing 2024
Not just waiting for Net Zero, but driving it.