Former names | Ricoh Arena (2005–2021) City of Coventry Stadium (2012 Summer Olympics) Coventry Stadium (2022 Commonwealth Games) |
---|---|
Location | Jimmy Hill Way, Rowleys Green, Coventry, England CV6 6GE |
Coordinates | 52°26′53″N 1°29′44″W / 52.44806°N 1.49556°W |
Public transit | Coventry Arena |
Owner | Frasers Group |
Operator | ACL (Arena Coventry Ltd.) |
Capacity | 40,000 (concerts) 32,753 (football and rugby matches) (Subject to segregation regime) |
Record attendance | 32,128 (England V Italy, Arnold Clark Cup, 19 February 2023) |
Field size | 120 m x 68 m |
Surface | XtraGrass (Hybrid grass) |
Scoreboard | Yes |
Construction | |
Built | 2005 |
Opened | 2005 |
Expanded | 2010 |
Construction cost | £113 million[1] |
Architect | The Miller Partnership |
Tenants | |
Coventry City (2005–2013, 2014–2019, 2021–) Coventry City Ladies (2014) Wasps (2014–2022) Wasps Netball (2017–2022) | |
Website | |
www |
The Coventry Building Society Arena (often shortened to the CBS Arena or just simply Coventry Arena, and formerly known as the Ricoh Arena) is a complex in Coventry, West Midlands, England. It includes a 32,609-seater stadium which is currently home to football team, Championship club Coventry City F.C. along with facilities which include a 6,000 square metres (65,000 sq ft) exhibition hall, a hotel and a casino. The site is also home to Arena Park Shopping Centre, containing one of UK's largest Tesco Extra hypermarkets. Built on the site of the Foleshill gasworks, it is named after its sponsor, Coventry Building Society who entered into a ten-year sponsorship deal in 2021.[2] For the 2012 Summer Olympics, where stadium naming sponsorship was forbidden, the stadium was known as the City of Coventry Stadium.[3][4]
Originally built as a replacement for Coventry City's Highfield Road ground, the stadium was initially owned and operated by Arena Coventry Limited (ACL), with Coventry City as tenants. ACL was owned jointly by Coventry City Council and the Alan Edward Higgs Charity.
Following a protracted rent dispute between Coventry City and ACL, the football club left the arena in 2013; playing their home matches in Northampton for over a year before returning in September 2014. Within two months, both shareholders in ACL were bought out by rugby union Premiership Rugby club Wasps, who relocated to the stadium from their previous ground, Adams Park in High Wycombe.[5] A further dispute with Wasps prior to the 2019–20 season saw Coventry City leave the Ricoh for a further two seasons.[6] In March 2021, Wasps and Coventry City agreed to a ten-year deal to return to the arena and the city of Coventry. The deal became null and void with Mike Ashley's Frasers Group's purchase of the arena.[7] In April 2023, it was announced Coventry City and Frasers Group had agreed a five-year deal for Coventry City to continue to play at the Arena.[8]
The stadium was the first cashless stadium in the United Kingdom, with customers using a prepay smartcard system in the ground's bars and shops.[9] Following this, the stadium concourse and bars have remained cashless.[10]
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