|
|
| After
nearly 80 years at Cold Blow Lane Lewisham Council announced plans to move Millwall on, to
a local playing field called Senegal Fields
whilst Millwall drew up their own plans to develop the Den |
| WE'LL
MOVE THE LIONS
(Jan 1989) |
Millwall soccer chief Reg Burr
yesterday poured cold water on controversial plans to move the First
Division club to a new £100 million sports complex.
By Will Smith
Lewisham Council's ruling Labour group
want to re-site the Den - the Lions' home for nearly 80 years - on
nearby parkland as part of an ambitious redevelopment scheme.

• Senegal Fields: New Home for the
Lions?
But Mr. Burr said, "In the
present economic climate I can't really see it coming off."
And he revealed the club has drawn up
its own plans to revamp the existing ground. The plan to move the Den
just a few hundred yards to Senegal Fields, Zampa Road, Rotherhithe, is
the brainchild of former council leader and Millwall director Dave
Sullivan.
The scheme would include a new
stadium, an all-weather pitch and sports hall. The old ground would then
be used for housing and an industrial development.
Mr. Burr said, "To call the
Lewisham scheme 'pie in the sky' would be unfair to Dave Sullivan and
the other people who have put a lot of hard work into it. '
"But it is a very complex scheme
and in the present economic climate I can't really see it coming
off." Furious Tory councillors claim the move would be subsidised
by between £4m and £5m of ratepayers' money.
Tory group leader Cllr. Maggie Punyer
said, "It is appalling that these plans have been kept quiet for so
long. Now I have discovered that Lewisham Council will be subsidising
the scheme I understand the reason for Labour secrecy."
"The idea of moving the club is a
good one, but I don't see why our rate payers should pay this much for
it - there must be another way to achieve the same end."
Lewisham already gives Millwall an
annual £70,000 grant under a unique partnership between the council and
the club launched in 1987.
Cllr. Sullivan was unavailable for
comment. But he told a Labour group meeting last month that the
development 'would trigger economic and social regeneration of the area,
providing a major leisure facility for community use and creating jobs. |
|
| Super
Den: Millwall unveil new stand plan (Jan
1989) |
Ambitious Millwall officials are
determined to improve facilities at the Den - and that could mean a new
multi-million pound grandstand on the north side of the ground.
By Rob Bowden
The high-flying First Division newboys
have also been holding detailed discussions with Lewisham Council over
plans for a £100 million sports centre, just a long free-kick away from
the Den.
That scheme would mean Millwall moving
a few hundred yards down the road 10 Senegal Fields, but the club's
board of directors feel the plan may be too complex, costly and
controversial to get off the ground.
"At the moment we are leaning
heavily towards redeveloping the present ground," admitted Millwall
chairman Reg Burr.
"That would mean a multi-level
stand on the north terrace side incorporating executive boxes,
sponsorship facilities, seating and terracing, as well as the offices
and dressing rooms, "We have already had some detailed drawings
done and we have just sent them back to the architects so they can
incorporate our specific requirements."
Burr is determined to bring the Den up
to First Division standards after almost 40 years of neglect.
Pledge
Bur the man who hauled Millwall back
from the brink of bankruptcy pledged, "We won't be developing the
ground at the expense of the team. "There is no way we are going to
end up with First Division facilities and Third Division side. We are
not that daft."
"Any developments we decide on
will have to be self-financing. For instance if the new stand included
30 executive boxes and we were able to lease them 10 years in advance,
as Arsenal have, it would pay for the whole scheme."
Burr and his fellow directors will
also be at pains to protect the unique character of the Den.
"If you could bottle the Den's
atmosphere and sell it you'd make a fortune, he stressed. "We
certainly don't want to destroy that."
Meanwhile, the Millwall board have
strengthened their position by buying the freehold of the ground from
former chairman Alan Thorne after 18 months of negotiations.
| Millwall
talk on Den move (The Standard Jan 89) |
|
| MILLWALL and
Lewisham Council are discussing plans for a new stadium with
an all-weather pitch on parkland at Senegal Field.
The London dockland club,
enjoying their first season in Division One, could receive a
£5 million local council subsidy for the move. But Tory
opposition councillors are opposed to the scheme. If
Millwall moved to a new complex, the Den site would be sold
for housing and Industrial development. |
|
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|
Lions New 45M Den (The Sun Jan 89) |
|
| THE Lions of
Millwall are set to quit The Den writes Alex Montgomery
Boss John Docherty's First
Division new boys are off lo a new home costing £45 Million.
The plan was leaked last night
by local councillors opposed to the new deal. But it looks certain
that Millwall will join the yuppie revolution in London's
Docklands. The deal would take them away from The Den to Senegal
Fields, beside South Bermondsey railway station.
They would have a modem luxury
stadium as part of an overall sports complex for the local
population, which could be completed within two years. |
|
|
| New Lions Den (The
Mirror Jan 89) |
|
| by Harry Harris
MILLWALL may leave The Den.
their home since 1910 as part of a new scheme being considered by
Lewisham Council.
The Council have drawn up plans
for a £100 million new sports complex at Senegal Fields, just a
Few hundred yards from The Den.
They hope that Millwall will
move to a 35,.000-capacity stadium in the complex.
Club chairman Reg Burr said the
Council would give Millwall financial support for joining in the
new venture. "It is going to cost a total of, I would say £100
million for the whole operation and we would be just one of the
landowners."
"It would involve exchange
of land and the grant of a substantial cash amount to us." |
|
|
| Den's
pride of the Lions (The Daily Star) |
|
| Defiant Millwall
chairman Reg Burr last night promised worried fans: "We are
not leaving the Den!" On the eve of the Lions TV debut
against Norwich he stormed: "Stories about us moving are
rubbish! They would have to drag me out screaming - never mind the
fans."
He spoke out after stories
linked Millwall to a new multi-million pound stadium - just a
stone throw away.
Burr confirmed that the club are
planning to carry out major work - but only on their existing
site.
Millwall's main worries come
along when Dave Stringer's Canaries fly in for a top of the table
showdown. And Norwich Striker Robert Fleck boasted; "We
have nothing to fear from Millwall, we're desperate to keep
pressure on Arsenal. |
|
|
|
| Then
in the aftermath of Hillsborough....a change of policy |
| Lions
to Quit The Den (April 89) |
|
|
MILLWALL are set to quit the Den and
step into the 21st century at a lavish, multi-million pound stadium just
a few hundred yards down the road.
By Rob Bowden
Lewisham Council's plans for a new
sports complex on Senegal Fields were first unveiled three months ago -
and initially got a lukewarm reception from Millwall officials.
But yesterday Lions chairman Reg Burr
admitted, "We are being offered the chance to step into the 21st
century, and we have got to take it."
"The only reason for us to stay
at the Den is an emotional one. I can understand how people who have
stood on the terraces week in, week out for 60 years may feel, and
leaving will be wrench."
"But we have got to move with the
times. A new purpose built stadium would help establish ourselves as one
of the top clubs in the country, and if it comes about, I think we'll
go,"
The result of a Department of Trade
and Industry feasibility study into the scheme is due at the end of the
month, and Burr is optimistic chat the Lions could move into their new
home in two years' time.
"I think the scheme is far more
likely to get off the ground now, than I did three months ago,"
stressed the Lions chief.
As well as a new home for Millwall,
the Senegal sports complex would also include a running track,
artificial all weather pitches, indoor cricket school, squash courts,
gymnasium, saunas and a |play area for children.
The whole scheme is still in its
infancy, but Burr admitted that he is excited by the sort of plans that
are being submitted, including one by a top German design company.
"Their proposals include a grass
pitch which can be lowered when it's not in use so that an artificial
surface can be constructed over the top."
"That is the sort of high-tech
proposals we are looking at and the beauty of some of these schemes is
that they are entirely self-financing."
So after some initial scepticism, what
convinced the Lions boss that a move to Senegal Fields might be in the
clubs best interests?
"I really made up my mind after
our FA Cup clash with Liverpool," he explained. "It was great
seeing the Den virtually full, but I realised that without moving that
was it, we couldn't go any further." |
|
"We
need to make another £½ a million if we are going to build on what we
have achieved over the last couple of seasons and there is no way we are
going to do that at the Den."
"We have got to look to generate
that money from all sorts of sources outside football - and we simply
don't have the resources to do that at the Den."
"This club had lo wall 103 years
for First Division football and we are not going to throw it away
lightly. Moving would help give John Docherty the resources he needs lo
go out and spend £800,000 or even £1 million on a player."
"What has happened to this club
over the past three years has been fantastic, a real fairytale. But we
are determined not to stand still, we owe that to the supporters, the
manager and the players who have pledged their futures at the
club."
The horrific scenes at Hillsborough
last weekend merely strengthened Burr's conviction that the time is
right for a move. Congestion inside and outside the ground has increased
dramatically since Millwall's promotion to the First Division, and Burr
believes a purpose built stadium with a large car park could solve these
problems at a stroke.
Lewisham officials also feel that
moving Millwall to Senegal Fields rather than upgrading the present
ground would have far reaching and beneficial effects for the whole
area.
The Lions board of directors are still
mulling over plan for a new stand on the north side of the present
ground - just in case Lewisham's ambitious scheme never gels off the
drawing board.
But Mr. Burr explained, "The
problem with that is that it would leave us with one super stand and
below par facilities on the other three sides of the ground."
"Thai might lead to a them and us
situation developing and that's something I definitely don't want to see
happen."
Burr knows that there is a very
special atmosphere down at the Den, but the Lions chairman is convinced
that moving half a mile down the road won't destroy that.
"When we stand looking at the
designs for a new ground that is something that we will take into very
careful consideration," he promised.
"I wouldn't want any new ground
to be all-seater because I know a lot of our supporters don't want in
sit down at matches, and we have got to respect their wishes."
"We'll take the good things we
have got at the Den - and leave the bad ones behind." |
|
|
| Dilemma
for Lions over Den future (April 1989)
|
|
|
By Tony Quested (Daily Star)
Millwall's future is in the melting
pot as the First Division surprise packets consider whether to quit
their home at The Den.
The Lions face the prospect of having
to move out within the next three years to keep pace with slick city
neighbours like Arsenal and Spurs.
Millwall are now being linked with two
sites - and one of them would literally involve selling their fans down
the river!'
It's been suggested that they could
move to a site on Isle of Dogs-the club's birthplace. Although the land
is the other side of Thames, a rail link could be provided through the
proposed Docklands Light Railway which would open access to Greenwich,
Lewisham and Deptford.
Millwall have already been asked by
Lewisham Council to leave The Den and build a new stadium half a mile
down the road on the Bermondsey border.
|
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|
|
Emotional
But directors are also considering
plans for a major revamp of The Den. Chief Executive Graham Hortop said
no decision has been taken. But he didn't think a move to the Isle of
Dogs was likely. "It would be a great emotional wrench. A move of
stadium is a big enough pull for supporters but the inconvenience, at
least, has to be kept to minimum, I don't think we would want to move
out of the area."
Lewisham Council has also pledge to
"move heaven and earth" to keep Millwall in the borough.
Hortop revealed that it was proving hard for the club to develop off the
pitch as quickly as the playing side.
"We are an established First
Division club and have to improve our facilities Our playing success has
taken off beyond all expectations, but it costs a lot of money to
redevelop a football stadium.
|
|
|
|
| Millwall to join Tottenham on the
stock market (Sept 89) |
|
| MILLWALL are to
become only the second Football League club to go public, with a
quotation on the Stock Exchange.
by Steve Stammers and Malcolm
Withers
And they intend to use the money
they will raise by Issuing shares to move to a new stadium and
challenge soccer's rich elite.

• Cold Blow Lane: The
Home of Millwall FC
The only other club to have gone
public are Tottenham, who did so in 1983. Now Millwall, the
Docklands club with the humble Image, are to forge an unlikely
association with the City.
In the next four weeks they will
announce ambitious plans aimed at raising £5 million by selling
25 million 20 pence shares.
Ronnie Jacobson, senior partner
for stockbrokers Jacobson, Townsley, and a Spurs supporter for 40
years, said today: "We hope to be offering the shares to the
public during October."
There will be special terms for
Millwall supporters, who will be able to buy a minimum of 500
shares costing £100.
The maximum holding allowed will
be 50,000 shares, costing £10,000. The cash will help to finance
the club's plans to move to a multi-purpose new stadium in the
next three years.
The new ground will be built
less than half-a-mile from the present home at The Den. The New
home will, with the co-operation of |
|
|
|
Lewisham Council, provide leisure
facilities which it would be Impossible to Install at The Den.
The Millwall chairman is Reg
Burr, who is financial consultant to Cleves Investment. Cleves
will be financial advisers to the newly named Millwall Holdings
PLC
"Nothing more can be done at The
Den," said Burr today. "The who Idea is to secure the future
of the club. Last season our income was just under £3 million of which
£1.2 million came through the turnstiles. If you wrote out a league
table of gates in the First Division at the end of last season, we would
have been fourth from bottom. If you then did another table of cash per
head from spectators, we would have been relegated."
"There were two steps we could
take. We could have stayed as we were and ended up in the Third Division
after having to sell our best players. Or we could raise additional
capital that would help us get new players and help the move to a new,
purpose-built stadium."
"This scheme is the only way that
we feel we can maintain our progress as a major football club by
increasing revenues."
"What we are aiming to do is
build a more broadly based leisure group."
But Burr Insists that the ordinary fan
will not be excluded from a stake in the future of the revamped
club."
"I will give them a chance to
have a say in the club - although I do hear their opinions every
Saturday!"
Burr is bracing himself for what he
regards as inevitable criticism from those who will suggest that he and
other board members are motivated by self-profit.
"I suppose we will get some stick
but really this is the only way for the club to go, The criticism will
come from ill-informed people. Personally, I am very excited about the
whole project. It will strengthen our financial hand."
And Burr made it clear that there will
be no ground sharing and no artificial surface.
|
|
|
|
| Don't
Be Afraid: The last thing I want is to change Millwall into a Yuppie
club. (Sept 89)
|
|
|
Lions chairman Reg Burr is already
assured a place in Millwall folklore as the man who master-minded the
club's triumphant march into the First Division after a 103-year wait.
By Rob Bowden
Now Burr is determined to safeguard
Millwall's coveted position amongst the country's elite, by dragging the
club, kicking and screaming into the 1990s.
Burr's ambitious plans include a £5
million share issue, and most controversially they mean moving from the
Den, Millwall's home for nearly 80 years.
The Lions chief is adamant it's the
only way forward for a club whose gale receipts will never provide them
with the son of resources enjoyed by Liverpool, Manchester United,
Arsenal and co. But his plans have already been slammed by some
supporters who fear that the club's unique spirit wouldn't survive a
move from the Den, and that a share issue will surrender Millwall into
the hands of business entrepreneurs more interested in profit than
success on the field.
Burr believer those fears are
groundless, born out of an understandable emotional attachment to the
Den and a lack of understanding about the club's financial problems.
In today's SLP Sport he spells out his
vision of the future and explains why the club must move from its
beloved New Cross home.
Instead of moving from the Den a lot
of supporters would rather see the ground improved and modernised. Why
isn't that possible?
"It simply isn't viable! The
Football League and Football Association have recommended that all First
Division grounds should be 60-75 per seated. If that recommendation is
included in Lord Justice Taylor's final report on the Hillsborough
tragedy it is likely to become law by 1992 or 1993."
"It throws up the possibility of
us being kicked out of the First Division, not because we aren't good
enough, but because our ground doesn't come up to scratch and that's
something I am determined to prevent."
"To bring the Den into line with
that all-seater recommendation would cost between £15 and £20 million
and there is simply no way we can raise that sort of money."
"When the idea of moving from the
Den was first raised I thought it was a pipedream which would never come
off, but now it's not an option it's absolutely imperative.
Do you understand why people are so
reluctant to leave the Den?
"Of course! I've had letters from
people who say that when they stand on the terraces at the Den they feel
the strength of their fathers and grandfathers."
"I can understand that, but would
those same people want to stand on the terraces and watch Third, Fourth
or even non-League football because that's what the future holds if we
don't move."
"Far too many people have worked
themselves into the ground to get this club into the First Division for
us to give up lightly."
THE Lions were highly successful
during their first season in the top flight, and you've started the
current campaign in similar fashion, so why are any changes necessary?
"John Docherty and his staff have
done an absolutely marvellous job. I'm the first to acknowledge that and
I for one don't think we have seen the best of this side yet.
"But the harsh facts are that
despite last season's success our total income was just under £3
million of which £1.2 million came through the turnstiles.
"Unless we have a decent Cup run
it is hard to envisage our gate receipts will increase dramatically this
season - and of course you can't budget on Cup runs."
"In today's transfer market
improving on our current squad would cost John £600,000 - £700,000 a
time minimum, on our current income that sort of money isn't readily
available.
"We've got a squad of players who
are tremendously loyal to this club. But if we don't match the wages
other people are paying we won't be able attract new players or keep the
ones we've got."
"If that happens the result,
inevitably, would be a decline in standards and a return to the Second
or Third Divisions."
"I'd love nothing better than to
be able to stay at the Den. I don't need all the work that moving to a
new ground will create."
|
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• Reg
Burr: "I can understand that (Supporters who say they
won't go to the new ground), but would
those same people want to stand on the terraces and watch Third, Fourth
or even non-League football because that's what the future holds if we
don't move."
"But unless someone can come up
with a way of dramatically increasing the revenue we get at the Den we
have got to go."
How will moving from the Den increase
the club's revenue?
"Moving from the Den wouldn't
necessarily improve our crowds, but the facilities we'd be able to offer
people would boost our income per capita."
"There would be restaurants,
bars, executive clubs and a whole range of other leisure facilities all
designed to provide extra revenue."
"You have acknowledged the
importance of the Den's special atmosphere. Would that survive if the
club moves down the road to Senegal Fields?
"I'm sure it would. I believe
that atmosphere comes primarily from the supporters and if we get the
plans for Senegal Fields right I'm confident it can be preserved."
"We have already rejected a
couple of plans because they are too 'high-tech' We don't want a state
of the art ground, we simply want a smart modern one where people can
watch football in comfort and safety."
"When the Den was built most
people had outside toilets. Our fans don't live in the same conditions
they did 60 odd years ago, so why should they have to put up with
ancient facilities when they watch a football match?"
"I believe people should have the
right to watch football standing up if they want to, so the new ground
won't be all sealer and it won't have a plastic pitch."
Will the money from the proposed share
issue be used to finance the new ground?
"No, that was what some papers
said when the story broke but it's not the case. I can't say much about
the share issue until all the technicalities have been sorted out but
basically we want Millwall Holdings PLC to develop into a broad based
leisure group."
Why do you think your proposals have
upset a section of the supporters?
"People are always afraid of
changes, but we have got to take some courageous decisions and move with
the times. I don't want to alter the character of the club. The last
thing I want to do is change Millwall into a yuppie club."
"What I do want is for us to
develop into a major force, a club which can be compared favourably with
the likes of Spurs and Arsenal."
|
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|
Football Club Studies plans for ‘Stadium on a Shoestring’ (BD
Magazine Nov 89) |
|
| By
Adrian Barrick
Scottish Architects The Miller
Partnership (RMJM) are testing the feasibility of a 'Shoestring'
football stadium costing just £12 million.
The Stadium for First Division
Millwall in Lewisham, South East London, will only go ahead if the
club can sell its existing ground with lucrative planning consent
for Housing.
Millwall Chairman Reg Burr told
BD this week that if negotiations broke down he would consider
taking the club out of Lewisham, possibly to nearby Southwark.
Miller and Engineers Thorburn
associates will present studies to Millwall next month indicating
the feasibility of an £8-12 million stadium with a 25,000-30,000
capacity at Senegal Fields, in New Cross, close to the club's
home, The Den.
Burr said: "We can't talk
about a hi-tech stadium with a retractable roof. That's all
nonsense. We want a bread and butter ground."
Millwall will meet Lewisham
officials next week to discuss a 'package deal', under which the
council will lease the 4.2 ha Senegal Fields to the club and grant
planning consent for the 'maximum possible' number of homes at The
Den. House builders Barratts and Fairview own land nearby and are
said to be interested. |
|
According
to a recent report for Lewisham council by Architects RMJM and
Surveyors Driver Jonas, The Den is worth £4.5 million.
The report also says the club
could raise £2 million from the sale of executive boxes at the
new ground and there may be grants available from the Sports
council, The Football Grounds Improvement Trust and possibly the
European Community. But DoE officials have told Burr there is no
chance of City Grant support.
The RMJM report, a copy of which
has been obtained by BD, examined the possibility of a 30,000
capacity stadium at Senegal Fields costing £16.6 million. This
would involve Lewisham selling land worth up to £10.4 million to
help fund the stadium, but this would still leave a £6 million
shortfall.
Lewisham officials say the
council cannot give Millwall either money or land under the new
Local Government Act, without setting aside more money to pay off
its huge debts.
Millwall are also considering a
RMJM proposal to phase the new Stadium, starting with a main stand
and temporary seats. But this may fall foul of safety guidelines
to be imposed next year as a result of the Hillsborough disaster,
which could insist on all-seater stadiums. |
|
|
|
| One
Step Forward! (Aug
1990) |
|
| Millwall could well
have taken the First step towards a move from Cold Blow Lane to a
new home at nearby Senegal Fields.
By Paul McCarthy
A meeting of the Lewisham
Council Environmental Services committee sat last night to
consider an interim report commissioned after Millwall approached
the Council with a view to a move from the Den.
In the light of the Taylor
report after the Hillsborough disaster. Millwall Chairman Reg Burr
claimed that a move from the Lions spiritual home was
'imperative'.
And the signs from the Council
are more than encouraging. Councillor Dave Sullivan, chairman of
the Environmental Services and a Millwall director, said, "We
want to help Millwall get the right location, preferably the in
the borough."
But he warned that Millwall
would have to take strict steps to ensure that the move gets the
full support of the local community.
|
|
Said Sullivan,
"We want to make sure that local people are fully consulted
and their comments are taken into account when we took at the
planning application.
"We will continue to help
the club investigate the feasibility of the move but reserve
judgement on the Final outcome until we have had full public
consultation and looked closely at the planning application when
we receive it."
The report fully backed
Millwall's claim that Senegal Fields, less than 5 minutes walk
from the Den, is the only site in Deptford that could house a new
Stadium.
The meeting last night looked
likely to back all the recommendations in the report and called on
Millwall to launch an investigation into the noise and traffic
levels.
And if everything went according
to schedule with no hold ups, the Lions could be playing at
Senegal Fields as early as 1992
|
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| Millwall
Move Hits Public Access Snag (Aug
1990) |
|
| Millwall
could be on the move, if they can sort out a slight transport
hitch.
By Peter Cresswell
According to a report published
this week concerns over access are the only thing standing between
the club and a brand new all-seater stadium by 1992.
Lewisham Council's Interim study
on the football club's proposed move from The Den to a modern
ground at Senegal Fields, half a mile away, outlines the serious
limitations of the nearest railway station, South Bermondsey.
The proposed stadium would hold
25,000 spectators all seated in line with the conclusions of the
Taylor report into the Hillsborough disaster.
The ground would feature five a
side pitches, indoor sports facilities, and up to 21,000 square
feet of offices and workshops.
The report considers that
converting The Den would be 'impractical and too costly'. The old
ground and car park could be used for new housing.
South Bermondsey station would
be 300 metres from the new site. At present only four trains per
hour pass through, two in each direction.
According to the report:
"The view of British Rail operations and Metropolitan Police
is that the station is totally inadequate and unsafe as a facility
for servicing a new stadium and coping with thousands of fans and
there is no holding area."
Senegal Fields is surrounded by
railway embankments and factories. The report stresses that
Millwall would have to buy land from British Rail to provide
suitable access on match days. The club intends to negotiate with
individual warehouse owners to increase the proposed 160 on site
parking spaces.
|
|
A recent Sports Council's
estimation is approximately £15 million for
building a stadium of similar size. The report does not rule out
ground sharing.
Barry O'Keefe, head of the
Independent Millwall supporters' Association said: "We have
to be realistic. The
supporters should be consulted at all stages. Personally, I've
never sat down to watch football before. A lot of people won't
believe it until it happens." |
|
|
| Millwall
unveil new stadium (Dec 1990) |
|
| by Rob
Bowden
This is the multi-million pound,
purpose built stadium which will become the Lions' new Den in time
for the start of the 1992-93 season.
Millwall's controversial plans
to quit their current home in Cold Blow Lane, New Cross and move a
few hundred yards down the road to Senegal Fields will be
discussed at a series of public meetings next week.
But the Lions board of directors
are convinced that if the club is going to survive and prosper,
they will have to say a sad farewell to their beloved Den.
"Its absolutely
imperative," stressed Lions chairman Reg Burr. "It just
isn't possible to convert our present ground into an all sealer
stadium with the sort of facilities we want and need if we are
going to be able to complete with the country's top clubs."
Representatives of the club, its
consultants The Miller partnership and Lewisham Council will be at
next week's public meetings.
"We know its a very emotive
issue," admitted Millwall's chief executive Graham Hortop,
"and that's why we hope as many people as possible will come
along."
The first meeting will be at
Scotney Hall, Sharratt Street, S.E.15, on Monday, January 7,
followed by Deptford Town Hall, New Cross,
SE.14, on Tuesday, January 8, and the Silwood Estate Community
Centre, Alpine Road, S-E.16, on Thursday, January 24. All three
meetings start at 7.30 p.m. |
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• The
proposed new development at Senegal Fields will include a 25.000
all seater stadium with restaurant and banqueting facilities, plus
a sports complex for use by the club and the local community.
• The sports
complex will include indoor and outdoor football pitches, plus
squash, badminton and a gymnasium, and it will be attached to the
main stadium by a walkway.
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| Coming Soon: More on
planning the move and financing the deal and more pictures of the
construction of the New Den or 'The New London Stadium' as the
project was called. Next Page the Architects Journal Review of the
Project and Stadium. |
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