Luton have formally submitted plans to build a new 25,000-seater multi-purpose stadium

  • Kenilworth Road has been Luton’s home since 1905 and has a 12,056 capacity
  • The Hatters submitted plans for a new multi-purpose to the council on Friday
  • LISTEN NOW: It’s All Kicking Off!, available wherever you get your podcasts. New episodes every Monday and Thursday

Luton Town have formally submitted plans to build a new 25,000-seater multi-purpose stadium. 

The hybrid application for the stadium, which will be on the Power Court site, includes an updated outline submission for a hotel and music venue. 

Plans were delivered to Luton Borough Council on Friday and the club hope it will help ‘regenerate’ the whole town.  

Gary Sweet, chief executive of Luton and the club’s development company, 2020 Developments, said: ‘This important announcement is a pivotal moment for all supporters, residents and businesses of Luton.

‘Once our lives changed 16 months ago with promotion at Wembley, concurrent to the gargantuan task of getting Kenilworth Road Premier League ready – which naturally dominated our workload for most of last year – we decided to reassemble a design team to take a fresh look at the whole Power Court project from foundations upwards.

Luton have formally submitted plans to build a new 25,000-seater multi-purpose stadium

Luton have formally submitted plans to build a new 25,000-seater multi-purpose stadium

Plans were delivered to Luton Borough Council on Friday, with a 2027 completion targeted

Plans were delivered to Luton Borough Council on Friday, with a 2027 completion targeted 

‘All in light of the new ambition, we wanted to embrace for our club going forwards, demonstrated by the proposal to build to a 25,000 stadium capacity in one phase.’

Kenilworth Road has been Luton’s home since 1905, but had a capacity of just 10,356 until last season. 

The Championship side, following their promotion to the Premier League last year, had to upgrade their stadium to meet the league’s requirements for broadcasters and capacity went beyond 11,300.

Even in the second-tier, Kenilworth Road remains the smallest stadium in the division, with Oxford United’s Kassam Stadium coming closest with 12,500 seats. 

Luton hope to complete the stadium, which will be built in the ‘heart of Luton town centre; within three years. 

Kenilworth Road has been Luton's home since 1905 and it's the smallest stadium in the Championship

Kenilworth Road has been Luton’s home since 1905 and it’s the smallest stadium in the Championship 

Meanwhile, Rob Edwards’ men sit second from bottom in the Championship table following a winless start to the season. 

Luton have lost three of their four matches so far and will hope to change their fortunes when they travel to Millwall on Saturday.  

Luton TownFootball League Championship

You May Also Like

Lionel Messi guides Inter Miami to second trophy of MLS club’s history as they seal Supporters’ Shield in fiery 3-2 win over Columbus Crew

The boots of Lionel Messi produced magic once again as the Argentine…

Furious Erling Haaland insists Man City were ‘not good enough’ after his first-half brace went to waste in Monaco – as frustrated star gives hilariously-blunt verdict on Eric Dier’s late penalty

By JACK GAUGHAN and BEN WILLCOCKS, ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR Published: 18:21 EDT,…

Why Wayne Rooney is struggling as a pundit, Man United fans’ views on Arne Slot are absurd – and screaming Pep Guardiola must be charged: IAN LADYMAN on My Premier League Weekend

Liverpool are in desperate trouble but it would be an awful lot worse…

Access Restricted

Access Restricted Associated Newspapers Ltd Access Restricted Thank you for your interest.…