Coventry Building Society Arena
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Fortress Ricoh | |
Full name | The Ricoh Arena |
---|---|
Location | Rowleys Green, Coventry, England |
Owner | Coventry City Council and the Alan Edward Higgs Charity |
Capacity | 32,609[1] |
Field size | 105 x 68.6 metres |
Construction | |
Built | 2005 |
Opened | 2005 |
Tenants | |
Coventry City F.C. |
The Ricoh Arena, home to Coventry City F.C., is a stadium complex situated in the Rowleys Green district of the city of Coventry, England containing a 32,609 seater football stadium, a 6,000 square-metre exhibition hall, a hotel, a leisure club and a casino. The site is also home to Arena Park Shopping Centre containing one of the UK's largest Tesco Extra hypermarkets. The site was previously home to the Foleshill gasworks. It is named after its sponsor, Japanese company Ricoh.
The arena was opened officially by Dame Kelly Holmes and Sports Minister Richard Caborn on 24 February 2007. This was after the arena had been open for a year which included hosting a sell out England under 21 football match against Germany and a full season of Coventry City Football.
Location
The stadium is situated on the northern side of Coventry, less than 1 mile south of junction 3 of the M6 motorway, on the A444 road from Coventry to Nuneaton. Although officially designated as being situated in the Foleshill district, it is in fact located in the small suburb of Rowleys Green, between two larger suburbs, namely Holbrooks to the west, and Longford to the east. However, the stadium was constructed on the former site of the 'Foleshill' gasworks complex, although the Foleshill district itself begins more than a mile to the southeast. The stadium is located within yards of the boundary with Nuneaton and Bedworth and the county of Warwickshire.
Inaugural events
The arena became the venue for Coventry City FC's[2] home games at the start of the 2005-06 season, following 106 years at the Highfield Road stadium. The first competitive football match played at the Ricoh Arena was against Queens Park Rangers on 20 August 2005, in front of a reduced (for safety reasons) 23,012 capacity crowd. The game ended 3-0 to Coventry, with Claus Bech Jørgensen becoming the first player to score at the arena. Hull City became the first away team to win at the Ricoh, snatching a 2-0 win on 24 September 2005, with both goals coming from John Welsh.
The first concert held at the arena was Bryan Adams on 23 September 2005. The bar in the Eon Lounge, overlooking the pitch, was named 'The Bryan Adams Bar' after the Canadian rocker. Bon Jovi played there live on June 7 2006 (35,000 attendance), as did Red Hot Chili Peppers on July 2 2006 (40,000). For both the Bon Jovi and Red Hot Chili Peppers concerts, the fans were able to stand on the pitch. The venue played host to the Heineken Cup semifinal match between Northampton Saints and London Wasps on Sunday 22 April 2007. London Wasps (who went on to win the cup) also played at the Ricoh Arena in the Heineken Cup again against Munster on 10 November 2007 narrowly winning 24-23. Saracens have announced that they will play their semi final against Munster at the arena. The stadium hosted its first ever American football game on 6 May 2007, when the Coventry Cassidy Jets beat then British national champions London Olympians 27-20.[3] The Jets had hoped to play their inaugural EFAF Cup game against Madrid Bears on 29 April but they were forced to change venue. The Heineken Cup the previous week to the Madrid game had led to CCFC objecting in case of damage to the pitch.[4]
Further events
Local heros The Enemy are set to play a massive homecoming gig here this summer. Bon Jovi returned to the Ricoh on 24 June 2008. This was followed by a concert for the group Scouting for Girls on the 30 November 2008 held in the Jaguar Exhibition Hall. The EDF Rugby Semi-Finals took place at the arena on 28 March 2009. 2009 sees the Ricoh Arena hosting a series of concerts for Take That[5] who will play three dates at the arena from 8 June 2009 and also Oasis on the 7 July 2009, they will be supported by local Coventry band The Enemy.
Premier League Darts were held at the Ricoh on 21 February 2008 and returned on the 19 February 2009 as the Jaguar Exhibition Hall became the venue for the sport.
History and background
Permission for the ground's construction was given in the spring of 1999, with a targeted completion date of August 2001. This deadline was not met by almost four years.
The original design for the arena was for a state-of-the-art 45,000 capacity stadium with a retractable roof, and a pitch that could slide out to reveal a hard floor for concerts. After Coventry City's relegation, a number of contractor/financier withdrawals and England's bid to host the 2006 World Cup finals ended in failure, the plans were significantly downsized to reflect new realities.
On Friday 6 October 2006, the Arena hosted its first international football game when the England U-21 team played the German U-21 team in the first leg of a European U21 Championship qualifying play-off. England won the game 1-0, with the winning goal scored by Leighton Baines.
The name comes from a sponsorship deal, rumoured to be worth £10 million over 10 years,[citation needed] with camera and photocopier manufacturer Ricoh, though during construction the stadium was variously referred to as the Jaguar Arena, Arena Coventry and Arena 2000. The sponsorship deal with Ricoh came about after the stadium's initial sponsor, the motor firm Jaguar, was forced to pull-out due to the same financial difficulties that had caused the controversial closure of the large Jaguar assembly plant at the city's Brown's Lane, previously a major source of employment in Coventry.
The Arena is run by Arena Coventry Limited (ACL) and is separate from the running of Coventry City Football Club who are the Arenas first tenants. It was funded largely by Coventry City council & the Higgs Charity, a charity (of which CCFC and ACL director Sir Derek Higgs was a trustee), and includes shopping facilities, a casino, exhibition halls and a concert venue.
At the end of the 2006-2007 Championship season in May 2007, the stadium had still not achieved a capacity 32,600 crowd. In fact, the stadium's highest attendance for a home game had been some 4,000 short of full capacity back in February 2008 during an FA Cup match against West Bromwich Albion.
In July-August 2007, the stadium was to host pre-season friendly games against Spanish La Liga side (and 2007 UEFA Cup finalists) Espanyol and Italian Serie A side Udinese in a major coup for the club. The matches ended in a 1-1 draw with Espanyol and a 2-0 loss against the latter.
On 5 April 2008, local band The Enemy played at the stadium. After all 8,000 ticket allocations to the Jaguar Suite were sold instantly the Coventry band added a second date - 6 April 2008.
Highest attendances
- 31,407 Coventry 0 - 2 Chelsea (FA Cup Quarter Final)
- 30,919 England U21 1 - 0 Germany U21 (Qualifier)
- 30,325 Saracens 16 - 18 Munster (Heineken Cup) [6]
- 28,163 Coventry 0 - 5 West Bromwich Albion (FA Cup)
- 28,120 Coventry 1 - 1 Middlesbrough (FA Cup)
- 27,992 Coventry 1 - 1 Wolverhampton Wanderers (league)
Arena Park Shopping Centre
Main tenants:
Other tenants:
- Shoe Zone
- Thomson Holidays Travel Agency
- Clinton Cards Cards
- Tesco Travel Money
- Johnsons Cleaners UK Dry Cleaning
- Coventry Building Society Mortgages & Savings
- The Carphone Warehouse Mobile phones
- Phones 4U Mobile phones
- Elliot Reeve (Hairdressers)
- GAME
- West World Mobility
- Arena Park Library
- Antigo
References
52°26′53.2″N 1°29′44.2″W / 52.448111°N 1.495611°W
External links
- Stadium information from Coventry City official website
- recent photos at www.geograph.co.uk
- Arena Park Shopping Centre