Rodney Parade





















Rodney Parade

West Stand, Rodney Parade, Newport.jpg
Rodney Parade West Stand

Location
Rodney Parade
Rodney Road
Newport NP19 0UU
Coordinates
51°35′18″N 2°59′16″W / 51.58833°N 2.98778°W / 51.58833; -2.98778Coordinates: 51°35′18″N 2°59′16″W / 51.58833°N 2.98778°W / 51.58833; -2.98778
Public transit
Newport railway station
Newport bus station
Owner
Welsh Rugby Union
Operator
Welsh Rugby Union
Capacity
8,700 (7,850 for football)[1][2]
Surface
Desso Playmaster (Hybrid grass)
Construction
Opened
1877
Architect
Thomas Douglas-Jones
Tenants

Dragons
Newport RFC
Newport County A.F.C.

Rodney Parade is a stadium in the city of Newport, South Wales, owned and operated by the Welsh Rugby Union. It is located on the east bank of the River Usk in Newport city centre. The ground is on Rodney Road, a short walk from the city's central bus and railway stations via Newport Bridge or Newport City footbridge. There is no spectator car park at the ground but a number of multi-storey car parks are nearby.


Rodney Parade is the home ground of Dragons regional rugby union team and rugby union club Newport RFC.[3] It is also the home ground of Newport County football club, and is the second-oldest sports venue in the Football League, after Deepdale. However, stadium capacity is reduced for football matches.


Newport Squash Club has four courts at Rodney Parade.




Contents





  • 1 Layout


  • 2 History


  • 3 International matches


  • 4 See also


  • 5 References


  • 6 External links




Layout




Rodney Parade viewed looking eastwards from Newport Cathedral across the River Usk




Rodney Parade memorial gates




Rodney Parade East Gate, Corporation Road


Rodney Parade has two covered stands: the two-tier Hazell Stand (west) and the Bisley Stand (east) which are along the touchlines of the pitch. The upper tier of the west stand is seated with 1,996 seats, including 40 Press seats and the lower tier is a standing terrace. The east stand is all-seated with a 2,526 capacity including 144 seats in 13 hospitality boxes,[4] food/drink outlets and a gantry for television cameras. The cameras are therefore pointing westward and often show the sun setting over Newport city centre.


The North Terrace is uncovered standing and adjoins the uncovered standing terrace on the west touchline alongside the west stand. The south end of the stadium houses players' changing rooms, a media centre and the small uncovered Sytner stand with 222 seats for away football fans. Away football fans are also sited in block F of the east stand giving a total capacity of 1,300 for away football fans. A large video screen was erected at the south end in December 2013.


The hospitality suite is located in the north end of the east stand on the upper level.


The rugby ticket office and club shop is located at the north end of the East Stand next to Gate 4 accessed via the main gates to the grounds off Grafton Road. The Newport County ticket office and club shop is a separate building just inside the main gate to the ground.


To the north of the North Terrace is a floodlit grass training area. Further north, parallel to Grafton Road, is the Rodney Hall function room and the rugby clubhouse/office facilities.



History


In 1875, the Newport Athletic Club was created, and two years later they secured the use of land at Rodney Parade from Godfrey Morgan, 1st Viscount Tredegar for their cricket, tennis, rugby and athletics teams. In October 1879 Newport RFC played Cardiff RFC in a floodlit game at Rodney Parade; the first ground to have floodlights installed in Wales.[10] Newport rugby club enjoyed six highly successful seasons, having been unbeaten for six consecutive seasons. Newport sustained their first defeat in the 1870s, they were again unbeaten in seasons 1891-2 and 1922-3. Monmouthshire County Cricket Club played at Rodney Parade from 1901 to 1934. Newport RFC provided internationals for every one of the four home countries at Rodney Parade, as well as South Africa. Newport were once scheduled for a regular fixture, against Bristol - a team drawn from Welsh, English, Irish and Scottish internationals. The powerful All Blacks of 1924, and the strong Springboks of 1960 were considered fortunate to evade defeat at Rodney Parade.


The cricket ground which was on the south of the site no longer exists as the new Maindee primary school was built on the site in 1993 and Newport Cricket Club relocated to Newport International Sports Village.


Following the introduction of regional rugby union teams in Wales the Newport Gwent Dragons regional team were formed on 1 April 2003 and shared Rodney Parade with Newport RFC for the 2013-14 season onwards.


On 4 September 2007 it was announced that the Rodney Parade site was due to be redeveloped into a 15,000-capacity stadium by the beginning of the 2010-11 rugby union season. The redevelopment was backed by Newport City Council, Newport Unlimited, Newport RFC and Newport Gwent Dragons. The application received planning consent on 11 March 2009. The plan included construction of covered stands at the north and south ends and to provide cover on the currently uncovered stretch of the west touchline terrace. In August 2010 it was announced that the target finish date for the first phase had been put back to the beginning of the 2011–12 rugby union season with the full redevelopment planned to take several years.[5] The new east stand was opened in October 2011 and named the Bisley Stand for sponsorship purposes.


In May 2012 it was agreed that Newport County football club would relocate from Newport Stadium and play its home fixtures at Rodney Parade in an initial three-year deal, the first time that the stadium would host association football matches on a regular basis. In February 2013 Newport County agreed a further 10-year lease to play at Rodney Parade.[6]


In April 2013 Newport Athletic Bowls Club relocated from Rodney Parade to Caerleon.[7]


In the summers of 2013 and 2014 new drainage and irrigation systems were installed under the grass playing surface.[8] Despite that, serious drainage problems occurred at the end of 2016. Newport County's matches against Barnet on 3 September and Morecambe on 10 December were abandoned at half-time because the pitch was waterlogged and the English Football League stepped in to help identify the problem.[9]


In March 2017 sale of the ground to the Welsh Rugby Union was agreed following a vote of Newport RFC Shareholders.[10] The deal included the WRU wholly owning both the ground and the regional rugby union team which was renamed from Newport Gwent Dragons to Dragons. The takeover was completed on 27 June 2017 and work started to install a hybrid grass pitch for the 2017-18 rugby and football season.[11]



International matches


Rodney Parade has played host to six full-cap Wales rugby union international matches:





























Date
Part of
Opponent
Final score
12 January 1884

1884 Home Nations Championship

 Scotland
0G, 0T - 1G, 1T
4 February 1888

1888 Home Nations Championship
0G, 1T - 0G, 0T
3 January 1891

1891 Home Nations Championship

 England
3 - 7
3 February 1894

1894 Home Nations Championship

 Scotland
7 - 0
9 January 1897

1897 Home Nations Championship

 England
11 - 0
25 March 1912
Friendly

 France
14 - 8

It will host a national women's football match in August 2018.










Date
Part of
Opponent
Final score
31 August 2018

Women's World Cup Qualifier

 England


See also



  • List of rugby league stadiums by capacity

  • List of rugby union stadiums by capacity


References




  1. ^ "Sytner End Expansion Complete – News – Newport County". newport-county.co.uk. Retrieved 13 October 2017. 


  2. ^ "Dragons hoping for late ticket flurry for crunch Euro derby at Rodney Parade". South Wales Argus. Retrieved 13 October 2017. 


  3. ^ "Dragons". pro12rugby.com. 1 August 2016. Retrieved 13 October 2017. 


  4. ^ "Rodney Parade Bisley Stand". newportgwentdragons.com. Archived from the original on 23 August 2012. Retrieved 13 October 2017. 


  5. ^ "Work to start on Rodney Parade development". South Wales Argus. Retrieved 13 October 2017. 


  6. ^ "Newport County extend Rodney Parade stay". 28 February 2013. Retrieved 13 October 2017 – via www.bbc.co.uk. 


  7. ^ "'Community destroyed' as Newport bowls club turfed out after 100 years". South Wales Argus. Retrieved 13 October 2017. 


  8. ^ Prior, Neil (12 August 2013). "Warning over Rodney Parade pitch". Retrieved 13 October 2017 – via www.bbc.co.uk. 


  9. ^ Phillips, Rob (2016-12-13). "Newport County to get Rodney Parade pitch help from Football League". BBC Sport. Retrieved 2016-12-13. 


  10. ^ WRU buy Rodney Parade.


  11. ^ "Tough start fine by Exiles boss as pitch work is set to begin". South Wales Argus. Retrieved 13 October 2017. 




External links




  • Rodney Parade on cricinfo.com

  • Newport City News









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