Kingsmeadow

This article is about the football stadium in Kingston. For the school in Gateshead, see Kingsmeadow Community Comprehensive School.
Kingsmeadow
Fans' Stadium[1]
Full name Kingsmeadow
Location Jack Goodchild Way, 422a Kingston Road, Norbiton, Kingston upon Thames, KT1 3PB
Owner AFC Wimbledon
Operator AFC Wimbledon
Capacity 4,850 (2,265 seated)
Field size 110 x 75 yards
Surface Grass
Construction
Built 1989
Opened 1989
Tenants
Kingstonian F.C. (1989–)
AFC Wimbledon (2002–)
Kingsmeadow in 2011

Kingsmeadow (known as the Cherry Red Records Stadium for sponsorship purposes)[2] is an association football stadium in the area of Norbiton, Kingston upon Thames, London, which is used for the home matches of both AFC Wimbledon and Kingstonian. It has a capacity of 4,850 with 2,265 seats.[3]

Ownership

The freehold of the site is owned by Kingston Council. The leasehold, which safeguards the site for the borough's football team, was originally held by Kingstonian FC but is currently owned by AFC Wimbledon, having been purchased from the previous owners in March 2003. A condition of the lease is purportedly a renewable 25-year sub-lease to Kingstonian, who are also guaranteed the first pre-season friendly of AFC Wimbledon's first team squad as a home fixture for Kingstonian. The idea is the takings from that first fixture should cover Kingstonian's rent, which is reportedly fixed for the term of the sub-lease.

Current stands and capacity

Kingsmeadow comprises the following stands:

As of October 2012, the stadium has a capacity of 4,850. It originally was designated to have a 6,299 capacity before modern safety requirements and ground improvements (such as re-profiling the Athletics End terrace and replacing the original terraced paddock in front of the main stand with seats) required the capacity to be reduced. Kingstonian's highest attendance at Kingsmeadow was 4,582 v Chelsea (friendly) on 22 July 1995. AFC Wimbledon's highest attendance at Kingsmeadow was 4,784 against Liverpool on 5 January 2015 which set the record attendance at Kingsmeadow.[6]

History

The stadium has been the home of Kingstonian since 1989, when they built the entire complex on the site following the sale of their traditional Richmond Road ground. Kingstonian opened the ground with a friendly against Queens Park Rangers. Following relegation from the Conference, Kingstonian went into financial administration and both the club and ground were purchased by Rajesh Khosla and his son Anup. A large part of Kingstonian's support were alienated as they believed the Khoslas were business rather than football oriented.

Kingsmeadow in 2003

After one season as tenants of the Khoslas, AFC Wimbledon undertook to buy the leasehold to the ground. The club's owners, the Dons Trust, launched a share issue to finance the purchase, which was closed the following summer. The club subsequently arranged for a commercial loan to clear the remaining debt to the Khoslas. Upon taking over the ground, its name was changed to the Fans' Stadium which remains the nickname of the ground today.

AFC Wimbledon kept Kingstonian on as tenants and charged them a lower rent than they themselves had been charged by the Khoslas, with both gate receipts and bar takings at Kingstonian games being retained solely by Kingstonian (which continued to be Khosla-owned until 2005). An annual friendly between the two clubs is also intended to defray the cost of the rent.

AFC Wimbledon have played at the stadium since they were founded in 2002, after the original Wimbledon club was given permission to move some 56 miles from South London to the town of Milton Keynes.[7] They were in the Combined Counties League at this time, but in 2011 reached Football League Two.

References

  1. Thomas, Aled. "AFC Wimbledon cannot face MK Dons". When Saturday Comes. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
  2. "Stadium name changes". AFC Wimbledon. Retrieved 22 July 2013.
  3. 1 2 3 "Football Ground Guide: AFC Wimbledon". FootballGroundGuide.com. Retrieved 7 July 2013.
  4. "An awesome stand for John". AFC Wimbledon. Retrieved 15 July 2015.
  5. "EcoHouse deal for Dons". AFC Wimbledon. Retrieved 24 July 2013.
  6. "AFC Wimbledon 1–2 Liverpool". BBC Football. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  7. Wimbledon F.C. moved in September 2003 and became Milton Keynes Dons in June 2004.

External links

Coordinates: 51°24′18.3″N 0°16′55.0″W / 51.405083°N 0.281944°W / 51.405083; -0.281944

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