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Turf Moor is an association football stadium in Burnley, Lancashire, England, which has been the home of Burnley Football Club since 1883. This unbroken service makes Turf Moor the second-longest continuously used ground in English professional football .
The club was hopeful that the new stadium will be open for the beginning of the 2013–14 season, [306] however, in September 2012, Swann announced that the plans will be cancelled, due to his ill health. [307] The current plan is for Swann to buy the stadium from current owners the Blues Club, and spend £500,000 improving it. [308]
Entirely new stadiums under construction on the same site as a demolished former stadium, plus those planned to be built on the site of a current stadium, are included. However, expansions to already-existing stadiums are not included, and neither are recently constructed venues which have opened, even though construction continues on part of ...
The stadium project follows the county’s plan for a 47-acre park along the Boise River. It is still soliciting bids for that section of the former horse racing track and surrounding property.
Burnley's Turf Moor stadium became the 50th Premier League stadium when it hosted Burnley's first ever home Premier League fixture, against champions Manchester United, on 19 August 2009. [5] [6] The most recent venue to become a Premier League host is Kenilworth Road, which hosted its first Premier League fixture on 1 September 2023.
The turf at U.S. Bank Stadium will be replaced in early 2024 with a monofilament surface that has been shown to carry slightly lower injury risk than the version of artificial turf currently in ...
The Browns are moving out of their lakefront home. The team officially announced plans Thursday to leave their 25-year-old stadium on the shores of Lake Erie when the lease expires in 2028 and ...
Everton enquired into the possibility of co-financing Liverpool's Stanley Park Stadium, a proposed plan for a stadium that was scheduled to open in 2006, but the plan was cancelled in 2012 after new owners favoured the expansion of Anfield. [12] This idea was denied by Liverpool's former co-owner Tom Hicks. There was speculation at the time ...