And finally… World’s first wooden football stadium edges closer

Plans by Forest Green Rovers to build the world’s first football stadium made almost entirely out of wood has been given the nod from the English Football League (EFL).

And finally... World's first wooden football stadium edges closer

Designed by world-renowned Zaha Hadid Architects and with a capacity of 5,000, Eco Park will be sited in parkland close to Junction 12 of the M5 near Stonehouse and Stroud where some five hundred trees and 1.8km of new hedgerows would be planted.

The EFL approval means the League Two club can now advance its plans after it gained planning permission in December 2019.



The application also includes landscaped parking and two pitches, a 4G playing surface with access for the local community. The pitches will be organic and free of pesticides, fertiliser and chemicals with the grass tended by an electric lawnmower powered by solar energy.

The stadium itself will be 159m long, 144m wide and 19.5m in height.

The proposals were first tabled in 2017 as part of a wider “Gateway to Stroud” scheme by green electricity company Ecotricity.

The Gateway to Stroud scheme consists of a green technology business park with sustainably built commercial offices and light industrial units, alongside the new 5,000 seater stadium for Forest Green Rovers. New training pitches and a sports science hub will also be built adjacent to the stadium.



Ecotricity claims that by using timber a significant carbon saving could be made.

“Unlike most buildings, around three quarters of the lifetime carbon impact of any stadium comes from its building materials, while the opposite is true for residential and business buildings, where three quarters of the lifetime carbon impact come from the operation of the building,” a company spokesperson said.

“The importance of using ethically sourced wood, is not only that it’s a naturally occurring renewable material, but that it has very low embodied carbon compared to alternatives such as concrete and steel. So the stadium will have the lowest embodied carbon of any sports stadium in the world.”


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