The Kingston Communications Stadium
, often shortened to KC Stadium
or just the KC
, is a multi-purpose facility in the city of Kingston upon Hull (Hull), England. Conceived as early as the late 1990s, [1] it was completed in 2002 at a cost of approximately GB£44 million. It is named after the stadium's sponsors, telecommunications provider Kingston Communications. The stadium is owned by Hull City Council and operated by the Stadium Management Company (SMC).
The bowl-shaped stadium contains a continuous single tier of seats with a second tier on the west side. Its current capacity is 25,404. The stadium accommodates fans of its two tenants, association football club Hull City A.F.C., which moved there from Boothferry Park, and rugby league football club Hull FC, relocated from the Boulevard. [2] The ground also hosts international association football and rugby league football competitions and acts as a venue for concerts by musical artists, such as Elton John and The Who.
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KC STADIUM TICKETS
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History
The idea of a new stadium for
Kingston upon Hull was first mooted in 1997, but funds to finance such a project only became available when the
city council sold a portion of its holdings in
Kingston Communications.
The council provided most of the funds, more than GB£42 million, with the rest stemming from government single regeneration budget grants and from the Football Stadium Improvement Fund.
The council appointed John Topliss to head the stadium construction project.
He and his team partnered with consulting firm
Drivers Jonas to explore preliminary issues such as stadium location, seating capacity, and facilities offered. Stated Mr. Topliss: "We had a totally blank canvas and, working with consultants, made a thorough assessment of what was needed."
The project team considered over a dozen sites, inside and outside of the city, before settling on The Circle in West Park.
Factors contributing to the decision include transport guidance, central government planning guidelines, existing athletic facilities, isolation from residential areas, and council ownership.
The final recommendation of
Drivers Jonas included additional facilities for both indoor and outdoor sports for the people of West Hull in addition to the main stadium, planned to seat from 25,000 to 30,000 spectators.
Professional services firm
Arup Associates provided initial concept proposals for the stadium.
The Miller Partnership, an architectural and interior design firm, adopted these proposals during the stadium's design.
Outline planning permission for the project was granted in December 2000, with Birse Construction Limited named as the main contractor the following year.
[3]
In spite of a number of obstacles during the course of the project, including
Hull City A.F.C.'s receivership in 2001 (just after the granting of planning permission),
the stadium complex was completed on time (in fourteen months)
and on budget (at approximately
GB£44 million).
The stadium opened its doors on
December 18 2002. Hull City beat
Sunderland A.F.C. 1–0 in a
friendly match to mark the occasion.
[4] Steve Melton scored the goal, the first at the KC Stadium.
[5]
Structure and facilities
| Stand
| Location
| Capacity
|
| Smith & Nephew [6]
| North
| 4,000
|
Ideal Standard
| East
| 6,000
|
MKM
| South
| 4,000
|
deVries Honda
| Lower West
| 6,000
|
| Upper West
| 5,000
|
The all-seater stadium consists of a single-tier, asymmetrical bowl that can seat approximately 20,000,
with a second tier on the deVries Honda West Stand that can seat approximately 5,000.
Current capacity is 25,404.
Plans provide for future expansion to a capacity of approximately 30,000 by the addition of a second tier on the Ideal Standard East Stand.
Each stand has a name for corporate sponsorship purposes.
Corporate hospitality is provided by 28 executive boxes located between the two tiers of the deVries Honda West Stand,
while security of the stadium is handled using 57 closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras that cover the stadium.
Over the summer of 2007, SMC installed an LED
[7] screen in the Smith & Nephew North Stand to replace the old electronic scoreboard.
[8] The screen has an area of approximately 40 m² (430 ft.²) and displays such content as live home game feeds, match highlights, interviews, and action replays.
The stadium's seats are mostly black, with a band of white and amber seats around the circumference.
White and amber seats form the word
Hull
in the north and south stands. In the Ideal Standard East Stand, the seats form an image of a
coronet,
a symbol of the city that also appears in the club crest for
Hull FC and in the
coat of arms of the city council.
[9] Black, white, and amber were chosen in order to remain neutral toward the colours of its two tenants: black and white for
Hull FC and black and amber for
Hull City A.F.C. The blue and gold of owner
Hull City Council appear in the stadium's four external columns.
The size of the playing surface is 114 x 74 metres (125 x 81
yd)
and made of rye grass with a 3% additive of artificial grass.
This provides ample room for a
FIFA-regulation
association football pitch of 105 x 68 metres (115 x 74
yd)
and a standard
rugby league football pitch of 100 x 68 metres (109 x 74
yd).
The playing surface has an automated watering system and below-surface heating.
Set within Hull's West Park, the stadium is the first in
England to be built in a parkland setting.
[10] The stadium complex also includes the 1,500 seat
Gemtec Arena, a
skate park, two multi-use all weather pitches, a community learning zone complete with classrooms, a health & fitness suite, a
cyber cafe, and a
library.
The KC Stadium has received several honours. It was named the chief new development in Yorkshire at the
Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors Pro-Yorkshire Awards
[11] It was also on the shortlist for the Prime Minister's Award for Better Public Building
and received a high commendation in the British Construction Industry Awards in the Best Value category.
In a 2005 poll that was carried out by
Drivers Jonas and decided by football fans from across the country, the KC Stadium was rated highest in comfort, services and view among all grounds in the Football League
[12] and was also rated the most-improved venue.
Tenants
| Season
| League
| Attendance
|
| 2007–08
| Championship
| 18,024
|
| 2006–07
| Championship
| 18,583
|
| 2005–06
| Championship
| 19,841 [13]
|
| 2004–05
| League One
| 18,027 [14]
|
| 2003–04
| Division Three
| 16,846 [15]
|
Hull City A. F. C.
The stadium replaced
Boothferry Park as home to
Hull City A.F.C., and was the backdrop for the club's recent climb through the English
Football League.
It first hosted the club's home games during the second half of the
2002–03 season; the first competitive match was against
Hartlepool United, a game that Hull City won by a score of 2–0.
[16] Hull City, nicknamed
the Tigers
, attracted an average attendance of almost 17,000 in their first season at the KC Stadium.
[17] This figure is more than three times the average Division Three attendance for that season, and was only matched or exceeded by clubs in the
Premiership and the
First Division.
[18] However, the level of support was not matched by on-field performances; the Tigers finished thirteenth in their first season at the KC Stadium.
[19]
However, in
2003–04 (their first full season at the new ground), the Tigers won promotion as
Division Three runners-up, securing their place in the newly-named
Football League One (previously Division Two).
A second successive promotion to the
Football League Championship, again as runners-up, followed in
2004–05.
Attendances for Hull City's league games at the KC Stadium have averaged above 16,000 in each full season they have played there, peaking just short of 20,000 in their first season in the Championship.
[20] The record attendance, for a
Premiership league match, is 24,845
[21] on
21 September 2008 for the visit of
Everton, beating the previous month's record of 24,525
on
16 August 2008 against
Fulham. While playing in the
Championship the record stood at 24,350 on
26 April 2008 for the visit of
Crystal Palace [22] beating that of 24,311 on
30 January 2007 for the visit of local rivals
Leeds United.
The stadium hosts
Premier League football for the
2008–09 season, with the 20,500 available
season tickets selling out shortly after Hull City's Championship
play-off victory at
Wembley.
[23]
| Season
| Attendance
|
| 2008
| 13,432
|
| 2007
| 14,606
|
| 2006
| 10,866 [24]
|
| 2005
| 10,604
|
| 2004
| 11,458
|
| 2003
| 11,598
|
Hull FC
Hull FC play their home games at the stadium, having relocated from
the Boulevard.
During their time at the KC Stadium, they have consistently ended each season on a high note: in 2003, the team just missed play-off qualification; in 2004, the club finished third.
They finished fourth in 2005, and enjoyed even greater success in the
Challenge Cup, in which they beat the
Leeds Rhinos in the final.
[25] Hull FC reached the
Super League Grand Final in 2006.
[26] Attendances average around 14,000,
but are often well above that figure when the club hosts local rivals
Hull Kingston Rovers,
[27] this
local derby producing a record crowd of 23,004 for the
2 September 2007 fixture.
Other sporting events
The stadium has hosted several
England Under-21s association football games; in fact, a crowd of 25,280 attended one under-21 match between England and the
Netherlands in early 2004.
[28] The KC Stadium is now also a regular venue for international
rugby league games, and has hosted
Great Britain matches in both the
Tri-Nations and the
Ashes [29] competitions. The stadium hosted the 2004 Tri-nations match in which New Zealand lost by a score of 26–24.
[30] The stadium also hosted the Tri-Nations game between Great Britain and Australia in 2005; the final score was 26–14 to Australia.
[31] It is rumoured that
World Wrestling Entertainment will be bringing their flagship
Raw program to the stadium in
2009.
Concerts
As well as serving as a sporting venue, the KC Stadium also hosts musical events, including such artists as
Sir Elton John,
[32] Bryan Adams,
R.E.M. and
The Who.
[33] However, while performances by such artists as Elton John and
Neil Diamond have sold out, other acts, such as R.E.M. and
Bon Jovi, have failed to play to capacity crowds.
[34] As a result, stadium management is considering an end to the KC Stadium as a concert venue.
Photo gallery
References
- Full Circle
- Club History 1950 - 2002
- Circle construction log
- Home From Home
- History Of The Tigers
- Tickets
- Scotland v Italy
- Big Screen Installed
- College of Arms Newsletter, August 2004: Recent Grants of Arms
- About the stadium
- Another award goes to...
- City has 'best' football stadium
- Football League: FLC Attendance, 2005-2006
- Football League: FL1 Attendance, 2004-2005
- Football League: FLD3 Attendance, 2003-2004
- 2002/2003: Hull City: Match: Fixtures & Results
- Football League: FLD3 Attendance, 2002-2003
- Average Attendances - English Football Divisions - 1994/95-2005/06
- 2002/2003: Hull City: Match: Table
- Football League: FLC Attendance, 2006-2007
- Fixtures
- Football League: FLC Attendance, 2007-2008
- Hull City sell out season tickets
- Super League Statistics - Hull FC
- Club History 2003 - To Date
- 2006 Super League Grand Final
- Fixtures/Results 2007
- Football Ground Guide: Hull City
- What are the Ashes all about?
- Gillette Rugby League Tri-Nations 2004
- Gillette Rugby League Tri-Nations 2005
- Concert Gallery
- The Who Return To Rock Europe
- Who Enjoyed the Gig?