Celtic Park (Derry)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Celtic Park
Páirc na gCeilteach
Celtic Park, Derry, August 2009.JPG
Celtic Park is located in Derry
Celtic Park
Celtic Park
Location within Derry
LocationDerry, Northern Ireland
Coordinates54°59′36″N 7°20′1″W / 54.99333°N 7.33361°W / 54.99333; -7.33361Coordinates: 54°59′36″N 7°20′1″W / 54.99333°N 7.33361°W / 54.99333; -7.33361
Public transitWaterside railway station
Clarendon Manor bus stop (Foyle Metro route 10A)
OwnerDerry GAA
Capacity18,500[1]
Field size138 m × 84 m (453 ft × 276 ft)
Construction
Renovated2009

Celtic Park (Irish: Páirc na gCeilteach) is a GAA stadium in Derry, Northern Ireland. With a capacity of about 18,000,[2] the ground is the main home of Derry's hurling and Gaelic football teams.

Home football games are also sometimes held in . Hurling games on occasion take place at Lavey or Fr. McNally Park, Banagher.

As well as staging inter-county matches, it is often used for hosting Derry football and hurling games at club level. The Derry Senior Football Championship final has in recent years usually been held at the ground. The ground also hosts the Derry Intermediate Football Championship final plus the final.

History[]

It was previously used for association football as the home of Derry Celtic F.C. in the Irish League from 1900–1913. Derry Celtic were the forerunner to Derry City, who had the opportunity to purchase the ground in 1933, but hesitated on a decision and the Derry County Board bought it ten years later.[3]

The venue has been hosting Derry inter-county games since the 1930s. Over the years Dean McGilnchey Park in Ballinascreen hosted most Derry football games, but since the 1990s Celtic Park has established itself as the county's primary stadium.[citation needed]

Recent redevelopments[]

Floodlights were officially unveiled at the venue in February 2008

Floodlights were erected over the end of 2007 / start of 2008 and were first used for the National League game between Derry and Mayo on 2 February 2008.[4] The official unveiling of the lights was held a few weeks later during the National League tie against Tyrone on 5 April.[5]

In the last couple of years, despite being able to hold more, the capacity had been limited to 13,000 for safety reasons.[6] However, this was not set to change with the venue currently undergoing a £1.8 million revamp.[6] Work on a new all-seater stand on the Lone Moor Road side of the ground started a few days after the final.[6] It was to hold 3,600 people, bringing the total stadium capacity to 18,000[7] or nearly 20,000.[6] Other new developments in the revamped stand include a control room, TV gantry, media room, stewards' room, extra exit gates, improved disabled access and improved toilet facilities.[6] The developments will make the stadium "among the best in Ulster".[6]

The developments were not completed until the start of the Summer (2009), therefore Derry's home 2009 National League games had to be played elsewhere, most likely Glen or Ballinascreen.[8] The renovations were completed in time for Derry's Ulster Senior Football Championship game with Monaghan (24 May).[7]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Squareball - Celtic Park
  2. ^ "Derry GAA profile". Breakingnews.ie. Retrieved 24 May 2008.
  3. ^ Chalkie (2006). "Derry City FC - A Concise History". Official Derry City F.C. website. Archived from the original on 18 April 2008. Retrieved 24 May 2008.
  4. ^ "Celtic Park to light up for NFL". Official Ulster GAA Council website. 14 January 2008. Archived from the original on 5 May 2008. Retrieved 10 December 2008.
  5. ^ McCann, Chris (8 April 2008). "Bradley's sparkling seven-up sees of Tyrone". County Derry Post. pp. 94–95.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Rodgers, Alan (10 October 2008). "Covered stand for Celtic Park". Gaelic Life. p. 9.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b Scott, Ronan (30 January 2009). "Celtic Park may miss deadline". Gaelic Life. p. 7.
  8. ^ "Lights out for NFL champions?". Gaelic Life. 7 November 2008. p. 4.
Retrieved from ""