Everton Stadium ‘Structurally Complete’



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New Everton stadium update February 2024 Image: Everton FC

The final concrete terracing panel has been installed to complete the structural work within the bowl of the new Everton Stadium.

Everton FC said that the final piece of the huge jigsaw was lowered into place in the east stand last week, ending 18-months of complex work since the first concrete terrace was positioned in August 2022.

And with all 1,988 double-stepped units now installed, on schedule, all four stands of the stadium are intact.

The 52,888-capacity Everton Stadium is a football stadium under construction in Liverpool, England (UK). It’s located on Bramley-Moore Dock in Vauxhall and will be the home ground for Everton FC, starting in the 2025-2026 season.

The stadium is being built to be one of the most environmentally-friendly football stadia ever.

Gareth Jacques, Laing O’Rourke’s Project Director, confirmed: “Structurally, that is the stadium bowl complete.

“When you consider that alongside the terracing, the team have also done the structural steel and precast concrete in the four stands, it is a fantastic achievement.

“Because we use modern methods of construction and need to fix our design to go to fabrication early, the team worked really hard in the early stages of the project.

“The rate of progress we have achieved within the stadium meant that we were nearly 40% ready to go with precast components when we took possession of the site, so it’s been a great piece of work and a great product from our supply chain partner Banagher, in Ireland.”

The terrace units, averaging just under 9.5 tonnes in weight, have each been meticulously lifted into place over the past 18 months, secured with a high-strength grout and then made weatherproof with a special sealant.

And the installation of the bespoke, double-stepped units – ranging from 0.73m to 14m in length – is a first for Laing O’Rourke, who pivoted from more traditional single-stepped blocks due to a combination of factors.

Jacques explained: “The double-stepped units are something we haven’t done before. In previous stadiums we have built, it has been a single-step arrangement, but there are a few reasons for developing the new method here.

“One was that we were always aware of the exposed location of the site, and plenty of our engineered solutions have been done to reduce the risk of weather and lifting.

“The double-stepped terracing significantly reduces the amount of lifts needed and cuts down the time working on site, often at heights.

“The by-product is that when you are building a football stadium, all the internal works and fit-out are generally underneath the terracing, so getting weathertight is on the critical path.

“The infill joints are really important and here at Everton we have 33km of Mastic sealant within the bowl, so by having double-stepped units we need less of that too.”

The latest developments follow from another significant development on site late last year as the final section of roofing was lifted into position.

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