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New Stadium Details And Discussions

Bulletspur

The Reasonable Advocate
Match Thread Admin
Oct 17, 2006
10,701
25,259
According to ImperialAero on SSC, the roof extensions in red, do not have to be lifted until much later when the rest of the roof has completed and the cranes in the NW and NE corners (orange) have been removed.
Which is contrary to what I read that the whole thing will be raised together in unison. It went on forward to say that it had to be this way in order for even torque, tension or whatever you want to call it
 

kmk

Well-Known Member
Oct 5, 2014
4,196
28,038
Which is contrary to what I read that the whole thing will be raised together in unison. It went on forward to say that it had to be this way in order for even torque, tension or whatever you want to call it

The diagram I posted shows that the two cranes are outside footprint of the cable net infrastructure which will go up.

The roof panels will only go on the cable net once the net has been lifted.

Image below copied from ImperialAero's post on SSC.

Qblfrgo.png
 

kmk

Well-Known Member
Oct 5, 2014
4,196
28,038
I'm still fairly underwhelmed by the 'grand entrance' to the West Stand. Looks like a random add-on to me that doesn't fit with the building.

Wait till its finished and all that though, I guess.....

From the renders, I think it looks great along with the glass and perforated aluminium cladding.

I am glad that it's not going to be a concrete eyesore like the previous design of NWHL.
 

mpickard2087

Patient Zero
Jun 13, 2008
21,889
32,560
From the renders, I think it looks great along with the glass and perforated aluminium cladding.

I am glad that it's not going to be a concrete eyesore like the previous design of NWHL.

It just looks random to me.

BIB:That was my next complaint :LOL: - the NW corner. Again, aesthetically I do not like the plans/layout and for some café to be shoved within the concrete structure for the steps, in slightly Brutalist fashion.

I say again, I'll wait for the finished article, but for what will be the main view of the stadium and the 'front door' for the world to see I think it could have been designed a bit better on that side.
 

danielneeds

Kick-Ass
May 5, 2004
24,181
48,812
It just looks random to me.

BIB:That was my next complaint :LOL: - the NW corner. Again, aesthetically I do not like the plans/layout and for some café to be shoved within the concrete structure for the steps, in slightly Brutalist fashion.

I say again, I'll wait for the finished article, but for what will be the main view of the stadium and the 'front door' for the world to see I think it could have been designed a bit better on that side.
I do agree. Externally I've never really liked this design, it looks like someone's gone Jackson Pollock on their design software.

Internally, it's beautiful though. And that's what counts.
 

tototoner

Staying Alert
Mar 21, 2004
29,401
34,108
I would have thought we'd get more than £400M over 20 years for Naming Rights

https://www.footballinsider247.com/levy-transatlantic-mission-seal-20m-year-tottenham-deal-insider/

Levy in transatlantic mission to seal possible £20m-a-year Tottenham deal – Insider

Tottenham are eyeing a £400million naming rights deal after a Daniel Levy-led delegation jetted out to the United States for high level talks with potential investors, according to a club insider.

The Lilywhite Rose Twitter account, which is a reliable source for Spurs news and broke a number of transfer stories in the January window, has claimed that the club could secure a £20million-a-year deal with a naming rights partner spread over 20 years.

In an exchange with the Charles COYS Twitter account about what Tottenham can potentially agree, Lilywhite Rose also reported that chairman Levy “didn’t bring all the henchmen” out to the US for talks for the less lucrative sum of £15million-per-season, equivalent to £300million in total over 20 years.

There has been speculation in recent times that Levy has held talks with potential investors across the globe, including in the Middle East, about becoming Spurs’ naming rights partner.

Stadium naming rights is an increasingly significant revenue stream available to Premier League clubs as they look to follow the United States model.

Arsenal, Man City, Leicester, Stoke and Brighton have all granted stadium naming rights to their grounds in recent years, and more are expected to follow if the potential sums on offer are considerably higher than previously.

The Sun, citing a study from finance experts Duff & Phelps, claim that Premier League naming rights have risen across the board in the four years from 2013 to 2017.

Duff & Phelps state in their study that Tottenham, who are scheduled to move to the newly built White Hart Lane for the start of the 2018-19 season, might generate £15.5million a year, fourth in the league behind only the two Manchester clubs and Chelsea.

Spurs need to secure a lucrative deal as the cost of their stadium has risen during the building process.

Tottenham have more than doubled the projected cost of their new stadium to £1billion, which will make it the most expensive in Europe.

Levy continues to talk with interested parties to help finance the record-breaking build, but the initial £400million cost has been hiked considerably.
 

Lilbaz

Just call me Baz
Apr 1, 2005
41,363
74,893
I would have thought we'd get more than £400M over 20 years for Naming Rights

https://www.footballinsider247.com/levy-transatlantic-mission-seal-20m-year-tottenham-deal-insider/

Levy in transatlantic mission to seal possible £20m-a-year Tottenham deal – Insider

Tottenham are eyeing a £400million naming rights deal after a Daniel Levy-led delegation jetted out to the United States for high level talks with potential investors, according to a club insider.

The Lilywhite Rose Twitter account, which is a reliable source for Spurs news and broke a number of transfer stories in the January window, has claimed that the club could secure a £20million-a-year deal with a naming rights partner spread over 20 years.

In an exchange with the Charles COYS Twitter account about what Tottenham can potentially agree, Lilywhite Rose also reported that chairman Levy “didn’t bring all the henchmen” out to the US for talks for the less lucrative sum of £15million-per-season, equivalent to £300million in total over 20 years.

There has been speculation in recent times that Levy has held talks with potential investors across the globe, including in the Middle East, about becoming Spurs’ naming rights partner.

Stadium naming rights is an increasingly significant revenue stream available to Premier League clubs as they look to follow the United States model.

Arsenal, Man City, Leicester, Stoke and Brighton have all granted stadium naming rights to their grounds in recent years, and more are expected to follow if the potential sums on offer are considerably higher than previously.

The Sun, citing a study from finance experts Duff & Phelps, claim that Premier League naming rights have risen across the board in the four years from 2013 to 2017.

Duff & Phelps state in their study that Tottenham, who are scheduled to move to the newly built White Hart Lane for the start of the 2018-19 season, might generate £15.5million a year, fourth in the league behind only the two Manchester clubs and Chelsea.

Spurs need to secure a lucrative deal as the cost of their stadium has risen during the building process.

Tottenham have more than doubled the projected cost of their new stadium to £1billion, which will make it the most expensive in Europe.

Levy continues to talk with interested parties to help finance the record-breaking build, but the initial £400million cost has been hiked considerably.

Real madrid wanted less than that for theirs and that fell through. They could also buy newcastle for less.
This would be a great deal. Remember arsenal was shirt sponsor aswell.

But this is a twitter rumour.
 
Last edited:

danielneeds

Kick-Ass
May 5, 2004
24,181
48,812
I would have thought we'd get more than £400M over 20 years for Naming Rights

https://www.footballinsider247.com/levy-transatlantic-mission-seal-20m-year-tottenham-deal-insider/

Levy in transatlantic mission to seal possible £20m-a-year Tottenham deal – Insider

Tottenham are eyeing a £400million naming rights deal after a Daniel Levy-led delegation jetted out to the United States for high level talks with potential investors, according to a club insider.

The Lilywhite Rose Twitter account, which is a reliable source for Spurs news and broke a number of transfer stories in the January window, has claimed that the club could secure a £20million-a-year deal with a naming rights partner spread over 20 years.

In an exchange with the Charles COYS Twitter account about what Tottenham can potentially agree, Lilywhite Rose also reported that chairman Levy “didn’t bring all the henchmen” out to the US for talks for the less lucrative sum of £15million-per-season, equivalent to £300million in total over 20 years.

There has been speculation in recent times that Levy has held talks with potential investors across the globe, including in the Middle East, about becoming Spurs’ naming rights partner.

Stadium naming rights is an increasingly significant revenue stream available to Premier League clubs as they look to follow the United States model.

Arsenal, Man City, Leicester, Stoke and Brighton have all granted stadium naming rights to their grounds in recent years, and more are expected to follow if the potential sums on offer are considerably higher than previously.

The Sun, citing a study from finance experts Duff & Phelps, claim that Premier League naming rights have risen across the board in the four years from 2013 to 2017.

Duff & Phelps state in their study that Tottenham, who are scheduled to move to the newly built White Hart Lane for the start of the 2018-19 season, might generate £15.5million a year, fourth in the league behind only the two Manchester clubs and Chelsea.

Spurs need to secure a lucrative deal as the cost of their stadium has risen during the building process.

Tottenham have more than doubled the projected cost of their new stadium to £1billion, which will make it the most expensive in Europe.

Levy continues to talk with interested parties to help finance the record-breaking build, but the initial £400million cost has been hiked considerably.
Christ, is this what passes for journalism these days?
 

tototoner

Staying Alert
Mar 21, 2004
29,401
34,108
Real madrid wanted less than that for theirs and that fell through. They could also buy newcastle for less.
This would be a great deal. Remember arsenal was shirt sponsor aswell.

But this is a twitter rumour.
fair enough
 

LexingtonSpurs

Well-Known Member
Aug 27, 2013
13,456
39,042
I would have thought we'd get more than £400M over 20 years for Naming Rights

That is a huge number. If Levy can get that - he has done exceptionally well.

By comparison in the US:

AT&T - Dallas Cowboys stadium - $400M/20 years
MetLife Stadium - NY Giants/NY Jets - $450M/25 years
Citi Field - NY Mets Baseball - $400M/20 years

Mercedes Benz - Atlanta Falcons/Atlanta United - $310M/27
Reliant Field - Houston Texans - $300M/30
 

tototoner

Staying Alert
Mar 21, 2004
29,401
34,108
That is a huge number. If Levy can get that - he has done exceptionally well.

By comparison in the US:

AT&T - Dallas Cowboys stadium - $400M/20 years
MetLife Stadium - NY Giants/NY Jets - $450M/25 years
Citi Field - NY Mets Baseball - $400M/20 years

Mercedes Benz - Atlanta Falcons/Atlanta United - $310M/27
Reliant Field - Houston Texans - $300M/30

OK, i was thinking about the stupid transfer fees going about just now, £400 M is probably what we'd get for Kane and Eriksen
 

Chris Flynn

Well-Known Member
Aug 3, 2012
1,459
3,988
OK, i was thinking about the stupid transfer fees going about just now, £400 M is probably what we'd get for Kane and Eriksen
Crazy that we could sell our first 11 and pay for an actual stadium with hotel and flats in London outright

Edit - and have enough good players and money left over to finish 6th
 

archiewasking

Waiting for silverware..........
Jul 5, 2004
7,861
11,692
Crazy that we could sell our first 11 and pay for an actual stadium with hotel and flats in London outright

Edit - and have enough good players and money left over to finish 6th

No deal. 6th will hopefully be for the Gooners, at best.
 

Chris Flynn

Well-Known Member
Aug 3, 2012
1,459
3,988
People complain about Levy being all business but when our current starting front 4 could easily clear half a billion quid and he's not contemplating it, even though that's most of the stadium paid for and we would still be fine and not have the debt so could plough more into the team moving forwards tells me he's as much a fan as a business man
 

mpickard2087

Patient Zero
Jun 13, 2008
21,889
32,560
A shorter naming rights agreement is probably more sensible than some 20 year agreement. That way can factor in events such as the club (hopefully) continuing on an upward trajectory on and off the pitch and things might change with the NFL profile and any possible team established over here.

I don't think it matters if the principal name of the stadium changes every x amount of years, as for me, and I'm assuming everyone else, it will still be The Lane.

Isn't Levy also trying to follow the American model and getting a load of smaller sponsors as well to maximise revenues? So like each stand, the tunnel club, sky lounges, fanzone etc etc. will all probably get slapped with a logo and more money in the coffers.
 
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