Hammersmith
& Fulham Council have unanimously approved planning permission for Chelsea to redevelop Stamford Bridge. The
proposed rebuild to increase capacity to 60,000 was presented in model form at
a hearing at Hammersmith Town Hall on Wednesday.
The council
had already initially recommended that the application be approved and,
after a three-hour meeting attended by Blues chairman Bruce Buck and director Eugene
Tenenbaum, permission was granted. The Mayor of London Sadiq Khan now has 14 days to call in the verdict, should he wish
to, on a stadium expected to cost £500m and take three years to build.
In a
statement, Chelsea said “We are grateful
that planning permission was granted for the redevelopment of our historic
home. The committee decision does not mean that work can begin on site. This is
just the latest step, although a significant one, that we have to take before
we can commence work, including obtaining various other permissions.”
Rather than
move site and build from scratch, though, the club have decided that
redeveloping Stamford Bridge is their preferred option. The main
point of discussion is likely to be the ground's proximity to transport, with
the new prospective capacity of 60,000 making the distance of underground
and railway lines paramount and the main challenge facing the project.
The project
will also mean that the club will need to find a temporary home due to the
complex nature of the build, with a lowering of the arena and excavation likely
to achieve the desired capacity on the 12-acre site.

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