Abstract

New professional sports stadia have been widely advanced as flagship developments that can generate jobs and wealth, support place branding and culture-led strategies, and host mega-events. Public funding for new stadia has been secured on these bases but also challenged as stadia costs are under-estimated and the benefits, particularly for lower income communities, exaggerated. Emerging in this context, community stadia are an intriguing phenomenon as they offer the potential for professional sports stadia to deliver on community aims alongside their sporting, commercial and economic development aims. Public funding has followed with a number of community stadia built or planned in the UK, yet with limited critical analysis of the stadium type and its impact. This paper helps to fill the literature gap by learning from two community stadia case studies: The Keepmoat Stadium, Doncaster and The Falkirk Stadium, Falkirk. It finds that community stadia have the potential to deliver across the four aims, with stadia’s association with the world of professional sport facilitating engagement with multiple, diverse and ‘hard to reach’ communities. However, they are also complex phenomena leading the paper to construct a 12-feature conceptualisation of community stadia that can advance practitioner and academic understanding of the phenomenon.

Highlights

  • Since the 1980s, the UK has experienced an unprecedented era of new or redeveloped professional sports stadia

  • Conceived as a stadium type in their own right, community stadia can be described as professional sports stadia with additional communityfacing aims, facilities and services that reflect the scale of the professional clubs they host and the towns and small cities in which they are situated (City of York Council, 2010; PMP, 2008; Sanders et al, 2014)

  • Doncaster and the Falkirk Stadium, Falkirk. Learning from these two stadia and their respective aims, services and facilities hosted, and communities served, this paper offers a conceptualisation of the community stadia phenomenon

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Summary

Introduction

Since the 1980s, the UK has experienced an unprecedented era of new or redeveloped professional sports stadia.

Results
Conclusion
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