The guy doing the stadium tour Saturday mentioned that the Ellerslie Stand could be extended fairly easily and suggested that this is a real possibility. He also said that plans were already drawn up with regards to a museum at the back of the Loft.
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"No New Stadium Whilst I'm Manager" Says NW
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Originally posted by Cambs Hoops View PostThe guy doing the stadium tour Saturday mentioned that the Ellerslie Stand could be extended fairly easily and suggested that this is a real possibility. He also said that plans were already drawn up with regards to a museum at the back of the Loft.
Would love to see the plans for it.
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Without expanding or move to a bigger stadium, this club will just stagnate then.Last edited by Scarlet pimple; 07-03-2011, 12:15 PM.They seek him here.................
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Originally posted by Cambs Hoops View PostThe guy doing the stadium tour Saturday mentioned that the Ellerslie Stand could be extended fairly easily and suggested that this is a real possibility. He also said that plans were already drawn up with regards to a museum at the back of the Loft.
David
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Originally posted by Nodge70 View PostNot without costing an absolute fortune. Purchasing the entire row of housing would be just the start. Most have been converted into flats, each costing around £200k - There's £15m for starters without even putting any foundations in.
Would love to see the plans for it.
We can't extend backwards only upwards so I don't see why we would need to purchase any housing.
David
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Originally posted by davidla80 View PostWe can't extend backwards only upwards so I don't see why we would need to purchase any housing.
David
If QPR win promotion, they will need a much bigger capacity then Loftus Road will ever realistically hold and 23,000 will not be suitable to fund a premiership club that wants to be anything more than a perenial struggler. QPR could easily find themselves doing a Portsmouth who also have a small outdated stadium.
QPR could easily have sold more than 20,000 for the Leicester game if the seats provided a reasonable view. Just imagine how many tickets QPR could sell as a top 10 Prem side against Arsenal, Chelsea, Spurs, West Ham, Man U or Liverpool etc. For starters these clubs would sell out the away end and buy many in the other stands too, just as they did last time QPR were in the Prem League.
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Originally posted by davidla80 View PostWe can't extend backwards only upwards so I don't see why we would need to purchase any housing.
David
Plus the cost of any extension for such a small level of extra capacity renders the whole thing economically unviable, even if somehow you could crowbar in some corporate hospitality areas. We missed the boat with the School End.
In fact, the Ellerslie in it's current form, wouldn't even get a safety certificate if it was being built today.Last edited by Guest; 07-03-2011, 02:29 PM.
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Gotta do something. Heard Harry Redknapp interview recently where he said Spuds simply could not compete with top 4/5 on crowds of 36K.
Same logic will apply to us - we won't be able to compete with likes of West Ham, Wolves, Bolton, Fulham etc on crowds of 18K; it's just not sustainable.
Plus, I'd like to endure in the prem and aspire to much more than finishing 17th every year (which seems to be sum total of many clubs' ambition).
I cannot see how any redevelopment of LR could possibly achieve more than a few thousand additional seats and it'd take years to overcome the inevitable residents' opposition every inch of the way.
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Originally posted by Hoopla73 View PostIn the post match interview, NW made a comment which implied a decision having been made for Rangers to remain at Loftus Road rather than build a new stadium.
This might be part of Bernie's decision to sell up?
What are the options for redeveloping part(s) of Loftus Road, as capacity clearly isnt enough to support the team (we can't continue to have 10m pound plus losses)?
Does anyone know what the breakeven crowd would be, based on our current wage structure? According to the accounts, matchday revenue was only 2.5m last year, or around 110,000 to 130,000 per year, out of total turnover of 14m pounds. It's striking that ticket revenue is less than a third of total revenue. Do those figures add up, as they imply that the meagre average ticket price is less than 15 pounds per game?
If we sold out every game for a season 18,000 x 20 pounds per ticket,= 360,000 per match x 20 premier league games = 7.2m revenue. Gates of 25,000 would raise 10m revenue per season.
Is that extra £10 million a year in revenue starting to sound like a **** in the ocean now
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