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Easter Road
The Leith San Siro
Easter Road
Location Edinburgh
Scotland
Broke ground 1892
Opened 1893
Renovated 2001
Owner Hibernian
Surface Grass
Capacity 17,500
Tenants
Hibernian (1893–present)
Raith Rovers (1995, one game)
Edinburgh Rugby (1998–1999)

Easter Road is the home ground of Scottish Premier League football club Hibernian. Located in the Leith area of Edinburgh, the stadium has a capacity of 17,500.[1] This means that it is presently the seventh largest stadium in Scotland and the largest stadium used primarily for football in Edinburgh. It is affectionately known by Hibs fans as "The Leith San Siro".[2]

Hibs first played at the present site of Easter Road in 1893. The record attendance of 65,860, when the stadium had vast terracing sections, was set by an Edinburgh derby on 2 January 1950.[3][dead link] The stadium was long noted for its pronounced slope, but this was removed at the end of the 1999–00 season.[4]

Contents

[edit] History

When Hibs were formed in 1875, the club played its matches on the Meadows to the south of the Old Town of Edinburgh. The club first moved to the Easter Road area in 1880, which was on the outskirts of Edinburgh at the time, to a ground known as Hibernian Park. When Hibs suffered financial difficulties in the early 1890s, the lease on Hibernian Park expired. The club then leased the present site in 1892, played their first match there the following year and have played their home games there ever since.

Easter Road in the 1950s
The most modern stand at Easter Road, the West Stand

Before the Taylor Report demanded that the stadium be all-seated, the ground had vast banks of terracing on three sides,[5] which meant that it could hold crowds in excess of 60,000. Easter Road's record attendance of 65,860, which is also a record for a football match played in Edinburgh,[5][6][7] was set by an Edinburgh derby played on 2 January 1950.[8][9]

After Sir Tom Farmer took control of Hibernian in 1991,[10] the stadium underwent major redevelopment in order to comply with the Taylor Report. Stands behind each goal (the Famous Five Stand and the South Stand) were built in 1995, replacing covered terracing at the north end (known as the Cowshed[11]) and open terracing at the south end (known as the Dunbar End).

The West Stand, which has a capacity of 6,500 and is similar in design to the North and South Stands, was built in 2001 to replace the ageing main stand.[12] The stadium has dining and conferencing facilities within the West and Famous Five Stands.[13] The Behind the Goals bar in the Famous Five Stand is one of the largest match-day bars in the United Kingdom.[14] An electronic scoreboard was installed between the two tiers of the South Stand during the 2005–06 season.

[edit] Future

The East Terrace, which is proposed for redevelopment.

The East Stand was a large terrace which has been greatly reduced, roofed and made all seated. Views of the pitch from this stand are somewhat restricted by the supporting pillars. The club has planning permission to replace this stand with a modern facility similar to the other three stands. Hibs chairman and then chief executive Rod Petrie said in October 2006 that the development of a training ground was the first priority for the club. That facility was opened by Sir Tom Farmer on 19 December 2007.[15]

Petrie announced during the annual general meeting in October 2007 that the club would hold a consultation process[16] on the redevelopment of the east side of the ground, which began during April 2008.[17] Hibs have announced plans which would mean increasing the capacity of the stadium to just over 20,000 and widening the pitch by three metres, making the stadium fully compliant with UEFA regulations.

After posting their accounts for the year ended 31 July 2008, however, Petrie stated that the development was on hold until sufficient cash resources could be obtained to finance the project.[18] After completing the consultation process, Hibs found that a single tier stand would be cheaper and more popular with the supporters.[19] Consequently the board submitted an application to alter the existing planning permission, which had allowed for a two tier stand to be constructed.[19]

Rod Petrie then announced at the club's 2009 AGM that the club would conduct minor building work in order to activate the planning consent, while also entering negotiations with building contractors to establish an updated cost for rebuilding the stand.[20]

[edit] Uses other than Hibs matches

[edit] Club football

Raith Rovers used Easter Road once, for a UEFA Cup tie against Bayern Munich in 1995.[21] The match was moved from Rovers' normal home ground of Stark's Park due to Easter Road's greater capacity.[22]

Easter Road has sometimes played host to Scottish League Cup semi-final matches. Recent examples of this include Dunfermline 1–0 Livingston in 2006, Hearts 2–3 Motherwell in 2005 and Livingston 1–0 Dundee in 2004.

[edit] International football

Scotland have played four full international matches at Easter Road, all since 1998. These have been friendly matches against less attractive opposition where a relatively small crowd is expected, and it has therefore been unnecessary to play the match at Hampden Park. The Scotland under-21 team also sometimes play matches at Easter Road. This happened most recently when Scotland beat Lithuania under-21s 3–0 in October 2007.[23]

The most recent full international played at the stadium was a friendly match played between South Korea and Ghana in advance of the 2006 World Cup.[24] This match came about because South Korea (coached by the former Rangers manager Dick Advocaat) had used Rangers' training ground as a pre-tournament training base, and wanted matches to complete this training process. This match meant that international stars such as Michael Essien, Stephen Appiah and Park Ji-Sung played at the ground. Ghana won the match 3–1.[25]


22 April 1998
Scotland  1–1  Finland International Challenge Match
Attendance: 14,315
Referee: Herman van Dijk (Netherlands)
Jackson Goal 16' (Report) Johansson Goal 10'

15 October 2002
Scotland  3–1  Canada International Challenge Match
Attendance: 16,207
Referee: L Huyghe (Belgium)
Crawford Goal 11' Goal 73'
Thompson Goal 49'
(Report) De Rosario Goal 9' (pen)

30 May 2004
Scotland  4–1  Trinidad and Tobago International Challenge Match
Attendance: 16,187
Referee: Pieter Vink (Netherlands)
Fletcher Goal 6'
Holt Goal 12'
Caldwell Goal 23'
Quashie Goal 35'
(Report) John Goal 55'

This match had an unusual occurrence: when Gary Caldwell was substituted, he was replaced by his brother, Steven Caldwell.


17 November 2004
Scotland  1–4  Sweden International Challenge Match
Attendance: 15,071
Referee: Jaroslav Jara
(Czech Republic)
McFadden Goal 77' (pen) (Report) Allbäck Goal 27' Goal 49'
Elmander Goal 72'
Berglund Goal 73'

4 June 2006
Korea Republic  1–3  Ghana International Challenge Match
Attendance: 7,600
Referee: Dougie McDonald
(Scotland)
Lee Goal 49' (Report) Gyan Goal 35' (pen)
Muntari Goal 62'
Essien Goal 81'

[edit] Rugby Union

Easter Road viewed from Arthur's Seat, with Leith, the Firth of Forth, Inchkeith and Fife in the background.

Easter Road was briefly the home ground for the Edinburgh Rugby professional rugby union team in the late 1990s.[26][27][dead link] It was reported by the Edinburgh Evening News in 2006 that Scottish Rugby Union officials wanted to use Easter Road as Edinburgh's home ground,[26] but nothing came of this. Hibs were concerned at the time that playing rugby would damage the quality of the Easter Road pitch.[26] It was reported in the summer of 2007 that Edinburgh Rugby looked into the possibility of using Easter Road again[citation needed] due to a rift betweent the club and the Scottish Rugby Union,[28] the owner of Murrayfield Stadium. The dispute was resolved,[29] however, and Edinburgh Rugby played their matches in the 2007–08 season at Murrayfield.

[edit] Music

Sir Elton John performed Easter Road's first rock concert on 25 June 2005.[30] This had a detrimental effect on the quality of the pitch throughout the following season, and it is doubtful whether further concerts will be held at the stadium.[citation needed]

[edit] Boxing

One of the hospitality suites within the stadium staged an amateur boxing show on 15 November 2009.[31]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Easter Road Stadium, www.stadiumguide.com
  2. ^ Hibernian Football Club (Hibs), Easter Road Stadium
  3. ^ History of Easter Road, Scottish Premier League official website.
  4. ^ Hibs bid farewell to slope, BBC Sport, 29 April 2000.
  5. ^ a b Hibernian Football Club (Hibs), Easter Road Stadium, www.easterroad.com
  6. ^ Magical Barça to cast spell before Hearts' record crowd, The Scotsman, 28 July 2007.
  7. ^ Hearts heading for a home record, BBC Sport, 27 July 2007.
  8. ^ Mon 02 Jan 1950, London Hearts.
  9. ^ Crowd picture, London Hearts
  10. ^ Hibs reveal Farmer stake, BBC Sport, 30 July 2003.
  11. ^ Last home game before the cowshed was demolished, Picasa Web Albums
  12. ^ Time-lapsed film of the West Stand construction on YouTube.
  13. ^ Conferencing & Banqueting at Easter Road Stadium, Hibernian F.C. official site.
  14. ^ Carling ‘Behind the Goals’, Hibernian F.C. official site.
  15. ^ Photographs of the training ground, Hibernian F.C. official site.
  16. ^ Supporters views are vital, Hibernian F.C. official site.
  17. ^ East Stand Consultation, Hibernian F.C. official site.
  18. ^ Hibs accounts delay stand plans, BBC Sport, 14 September 2008.
  19. ^ a b East Stand Project Update, Hibernian F.C. official site.
  20. ^ Hibernian to reconsider East Stand plans for Easter Road, Daily Record, 8 October 2009.
  21. ^ Bayern ruin all Raith's dreams, The Independent, 18 October 1995.
  22. ^ Dancing in streets of Raith again, The Independent, 30 September 1995.
  23. ^ Hibernian official site
  24. ^ [1], Hibernian F.C. official site.
  25. ^ Korea.net
  26. ^ a b c Gunners eye Easter Road, Edinburgh Evening News, 16 January 2006.
  27. ^ 2Rugby.com
  28. ^ Edinburgh face SRU closure threat, BBC Sport, 5 July 2007.
  29. ^ Edinburgh back in union control, BBC Sport, 12 July 2007.
  30. ^ Elton John set for Hibs & Killie, BBC Sport, 20 January 2005.
  31. ^ Boxing bound for Easter Rd, Edinburgh Evening News, 24 October 2009.

[edit] External links

Buildings and Structures in Edinburgh
Public Buildings: Bute House | Edinburgh Royal Infirmary | Edinburgh Waverley Railway Station | McEwan Hall | New College | Old College | Parliament House | Scottish Parliament Building | St Andrew's House

Churches and Cathedrals: Duddingston Kirk | Greyfriars Kirk | Kirk of the Canongate | St Andrew's and St George's Church | St Mary's Cathedral | St Giles' Cathedral | Tron Kirk

Visitor Attractions: Balmoral Hotel | City Observatory, Edinburgh | Dean Gallery | Dugald Stewart Monument | Edinburgh Castle | Edinburgh International Conference Centre | Edinburgh Vaults | Edinburgh Zoo | Greyfriars Bobby | John Knox House | Museum of Scotland | National Gallery of Scotland | National Library of Scotland | National Monument | Ocean Terminal | Our Dynamic Earth | Palace of Holyroodhouse | Royal Museum | Royal Observatory | Royal Scottish Academy Building | Scott Monument | Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art | Scottish National Portrait Gallery |

Sports: Murrayfield Ice Rink | Murrayfield Stadium | Tynecastle Stadium | Easter Road

Performing arts: Edinburgh Festival Theatre | The Hub | Traverse Theatre | Usher Hall

Coordinates: 55°57′42″N 3°09′56″W / 55.96167°N 3.16556°W / 55.96167; -3.16556




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