Glasgow // Scotland
Home to: Celtic Football Club // Scottish Premier League // Football
We are looking for fan written profiles of club grounds.
Please click here to submit your contribution.Celtic Park is a football stadium in the Parkhead area of Glasgow in Scotland. It is the home ground of Celtic Football Club. The all-seater stadium is also known as ‘Parkhead’ (due to location) and nicknamed ‘Paradise’ by Celtic fans, an ironic tag used to denote its close proximity to Janefield Cemetery. It is the second-largest sporting arena in Scotland (after Murrayfield) and the second-largest club football stadium in the UK (after Old Trafford), with a capacity of 60,832.
Celtic moved from the original Celtic Park to the present ground in 1892. The main stand was designed by Archibald Leitch, the architect who also designed stadiums for Rangers, Hearts, Sunderland, Fulham and Everton, amongst others. The stadium has undergone numerous redevelopments; in 1988, Celtic’s centenary year, the red-bricked exterior to the main stand was added and in the mid-1990s, further development was undertaken to make the stadium comply with the Taylor report. Now the stands completely encircle the pitch and the stadium consists of a large double-tiered stand which extends around three-quarters of the pitch and a lower double-tier main stand, which contains the Celtic museum. There are two large screens inside the ground for showing highlights and replays on matchdays. In 2004, Celtic announced they were making improvements which were “part of the Club`s Five Year Stadium Refurbishment Plan and will ensure that we remain on track to achieve UEFA’s five star stadium status”.
The Jock Stein Stand [capacity 13,006], at the west end of the stadium, is the traditional ‘Celtic End’. Away fans are normally accommodated in part of the Lisbon Lions Stand [13,006]. The North Stand, on the site of the old enclosure known as “The Jungle” can house a further 26,970 fans, and the South or Main Stand holds 7,850. The North Stand alone has a greater capacity than 10 of the stadiums used in the Scottish Premier League and, in 2006-2007, five of those in the English Premiership.
Celtic have investigated the possibility of increasing the capacity of Celtic Park. Peter Lawell the Chief Executive said in April 2007 that the site of the Main Stand could be redeveloped to increase the capacity by 8,000, but at the moment it was considered too expensive.
In 1938 Celtic Park saw its largest attendance of 92,000 when Celtic played a First Division match against Rangers. During the 1990s, while the National Stadium at Hampden Park was undergoing redevelopment, Celtic Park hosted a number of cup finals, most recently hosting the Scottish Cup final of 1998, and Scotland internationals.
(source .. wikipedia) reproduced under GFDL
[ Anything to add? Spotted an error? Click here to improve this entry ]
![]()
![]()
![]()
Why not add your photos?
Some of the above images are reproduced from external sources under the license of the Creative Commons Project
Celtic FC official website
nottheview fansite
MonTheHoops fansite
Talk Celtic fansite
wikipedia entry
The Scottish FA
The Scottish Premier League
The Scottish Football League
Football Ringtones
Bet with Paddy Power[ Anything to add? Spotted an error? Click here to improve this entry ]




(14 votes 4.29/5)
Google Maps
Bing Maps
Yahoo Maps
Multimap











__
__




