HOME > AFP-JIJI PRESS NEWS JOURNAL > Article
Manchester United to leave Old Trafford for new 100,000-seat stadium
Manchester United on Tuesday announced plans to build a new 100,000-capacity stadium close to their historic Old Trafford home, with co-owner Jim Ratcliffe promising it would be the world's greatest football ground.
The momentous decision by the Premier League club comes after an extensive consultation process on whether to develop their creaking current ground or move.
The stadium, which will be built on land surrounding Old Trafford, will cost around £2 billion ($2.6 billion) and the timescale for the project is five years.
United, 20-time English league champions, are one of the world's most iconic football clubs but have fallen behind rivals such as Manchester City and Liverpool over the past decade.
They are having a dismal season under current manager Ruben Amorim, languishing 14th in the Premier League table and knocked out of both domestic cup competitions.
British billionaire Ratcliffe himself this week told the BBC some of the club's players are not good enough and some are overpaid.
Scaled models and conceptual images for United's new stadium were revealed on Tuesday at the London headquarters of architects Foster + Partners, appointed in September to design the stadium district.
Today marks the start of an incredibly exciting journey to the delivery of what will be the world's greatest football stadium, at the centre of a regenerated Old Trafford, Ratcliffe said in a club statement.
Our current stadium has served us brilliantly for the past 115 years, but it has fallen behind the best arenas in world sport.
United said the stadium and a wider regeneration project had the potential to deliver an additional £7.3 billion per year to the UK economy, including the possible creation of 92,000 new jobs.
A joint task force was created last year to explore options for regenerating the Old Trafford area of Greater Manchester, with the stadium development at its heart.
It was led by Sebastian Coe, president of World Athletics and chief organiser of the 2012 London Olympics, and also included the mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham.
Omar Berrada, United's chief executive, said the club's long-term objective was to have the world's best football team playing in the world's best stadium, promising further consultation with fans.
Old Trafford, United's home since 1910, is England's biggest club ground with a capacity of around 74,000 but criticism of the stadium has grown in recent years, with issues including a leaking roof.
The proposed new stadium will rank as Europe's second biggest, behind only Barcelona's Camp Nou, which will accommodate about 105,000 fans once an upgrade is completed.
- Ferguson backing -
The move to a new ground has been backed by former United boss Alex Ferguson, who won 13 Premier League titles during his reign of nearly 27 years that ended in 2013.
Old Trafford holds so many special memories for me personally, but we must be brave and seize this opportunity to build a new home, fit for the future, where new history can be made, he said.
United, whose struggles on the pitch are matched by problems off it, are around £1 billion in debt and have yet to say how they will pay for the new stadium.
But Berrada said Tuesday he was confident the club would find a way to finance the stadium as it was a very attractive investment opportunity.
Foster + Partners designed the new Wembley stadium and the Lusail stadium in Qatar, which hosted the 2022 World Cup final.
Norman Foster, founder of Foster + Partners, said United's new stadium would feature an umbrella design sheltering a public plaza that is twice the size of Trafalgar Square in London.
The design will feature three masts described as Trident, which the architects say will be 200 metres high and visible from 40 kilometres (25 miles) away.
The Manchester United Supporters' Trust said it was vital that fans were consulted throughout the process.
The group said in a statement: Will it drive up ticket prices and force out local fans? Will it harm the atmosphere, which is consistently fans' top priority in the ground?
Will it add to the debt burden which has held back the club for the last two decades? Will it lead to reduced investment in the playing side at a time when it is so badly needed?
(2025/03/12 17:01)
Click Here for Japanese TranslationAFP-JIJI PRESS NEWS JOURNAL
- 03/12 17:18 US unable to stand up to Trump, says French senator after viral 'Nero' speech
- 03/12 17:12 Trove of dinosaur footprints found at Australian school
- 03/12 17:05 Oil companies greet Trump return, muted on tariffs
- 03/12 17:02 EU foreign affairs chief slams rise of the 'rule of force'
- 03/12 17:01 Manchester United to leave Old Trafford for new 100,000-seat stadium
- 03/12 17:00 Trump's 'The Apprentice' re-runs hit Amazon
- 03/11 17:55 Arrest of pro-Palestinian activist sparks outrage, Trump says 'first of many'
- 03/11 17:41 Maradona medical team on trial four years after icon's death
- 03/11 17:24 Trump says will buy a Tesla to show support for Musk
- 03/11 16:51 Guatemala volcanic eruption deemed over after spewing lava, evacuations
- 03/11 16:49 Moscow targeted by 'massive' Ukrainian drone attack
- 03/11 16:48 Art lovers mob Paris's Pompidou Centre ahead of five-year closure
- 03/10 17:23 After Poland spat, Musk vows Ukraine can keep Starlink
- 03/10 17:11 Russia claims counter-offensive into Ukraine's Sumy region
- 03/10 17:02 Syria vows accountability after reports of mass killings
- 03/10 16:58 Ailing pope thanks doctors as condition improves
- 03/10 16:57 Man with Palestinian flag arrested after scaling London's Big Ben
- 03/10 16:56 Barca Liga match postponed after club doctor dies
- 03/07 19:01 Game, set, hate-- WTA stars reveal fears after Raducanu's Dubai shock
- 03/07 18:59 Deja vu on the Moon-- Private US spaceship again lands awkwardly
- 03/07 18:07 US offers $10mn reward for Canadian Olympic snowboarder turned drug lord
- 03/07 18:04 Saudi PIF to pay 'up to 12 months maternity leave' for tennis players
- 03/07 17:00 California's Democratic governor says trans women in sports 'unfair'
- 03/07 16:59 Prosecutors demand Rubiales forced kiss trial be re-run
- 03/06 17:54 Christie's first AI art auction sees hits... and plenty of misses
- 03/06 17:52 Trump warns Gaza 'you are dead' if hostages not freed
- 03/06 17:49 Russian missile strike on Zelensky's hometown kills three
- 03/06 17:12 Trump assails Democrats who heckled him during speech
- 03/06 17:10 Australian tennis great Fred Stolle dies aged 86
- 03/06 16:59 Greenland rejects Trump pledge to make the island American
- 03/05 17:14 'Stranded' NASA astronaut backs Musk in rescue row
- 03/05 17:05 Raducanu 'couldn't see ball through tears' in Dubai stalker scare
- 03/05 17:04 Trump govt walks back order to mass fire new federal employees
- 03/05 16:43 World's biggest iceberg runs aground, sparing wildlife haven island
- 03/05 16:41 Milan mayor aiming to sell San Siro to Inter and AC Milan by the summer
- 03/05 16:38 Vance denies criticizing British, French armies
- 03/04 20:15 AI, trade tensions mark Barcelona mobile industry meet
- 03/04 20:12 Pope has two episodes of 'acute respiratory failure'-- Vatican
- 03/04 17:56 Trump warns will not 'put up with' Zelensky
- 03/04 17:54 Ski crash almost killed me, says French racer Sarrazin
- 03/04 16:53 UK's Royal Society of top scientists mulls call to oust Elon Musk
- 03/04 16:50 Hong Kong opens sports park with 50,000-seat stadium
- 03/03 17:57 Zelensky says 'will not be simple' to replace him as Ukraine leader
- 03/03 17:55 Rower plucked from path of tropical cyclone off Australia
- 03/03 17:53 FIFA president Infantino defends Saudi World Cup, Trump relationship
- 03/03 17:52 Released Israeli hostage recounts hunger, chains that 'cut into your flesh'
- 03/03 17:07 Private US company aces lunar landing on first mission
- 03/03 17:03 Over 200 damaged Paris Olympics and Paralympics medals to be replaced