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Brentford Community Stadium
Football stadium in Brentford, London, England
Football stadium in Brentford, London, England
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Gtech Community Stadium |
| logo_size | 200px |
| logo_image | Brentford Community Stadium logo.jpg |
| fullname | Gtech Community Stadium |
| image | Brentford Community Stadium 2020.jpg |
| caption | View from the exterior of the stadium (2020) |
| image_size | 250px |
| address | 166 Lionel Road South |
| location | Brentford |
| London, England | |
| TW8 0RU | |
| broke_ground | 25 March 2017 |
| built | Spring 2018–Summer 2020 |
| opened | 1 September 2020 |
| operator | Brentford F.C. |
| surface | Desso Grassmaster |
| construction_cost | £71 million |
| architect | AFL Architects |
| structural_engineer | Arup |
| tenants | Brentford F.C. (2020present) |
| London Irish (2020–2023) | |
| capacity | 17,250 |
| record_attendance | (Brentford vs Liverpool, 18 January 2025) |
| dimensions | 105 x 68 m (association football) |
| 110 x 66m (rugby union) | |
| public_transit |
London, England TW8 0RU London Irish (2020–2023) 110 x 66m (rugby union) The Brentford Community Stadium, currently known as the Gtech Community Stadium for sponsorship reasons, is a football stadium in Brentford, West London that is the home of Premier League football club Brentford. The stadium has a capacity of 17,250 and is suitable for use for both association football and rugby union matches. Opened in 2020, the stadium is at the heart of plans to regenerate the surrounding area, including new homes and commercial opportunities. It was used during the UEFA Women's Euro 2022 (Euros), which was held in England.
History
Background

In October 2002 while still playing at Griffin Park, following several years of speculation about a possible relocation, Brentford Football Club announced plans to move to a 20,000-capacity stadium near Kew Bridge. This included an ambitious monorail proposal, which was later dropped from the scheme. After several years of uncertainty, the project was suddenly brought back to public attention in late 2007 when the club announced that it had secured an option on the site.
This was followed up in February 2008 when a partnership deal with Barratt Homes to develop the site was announced.
The club's plan to move to a new community stadium took a massive step forward when, on 28 June 2012, the club bought the 7.6 acre site in Lionel Road, Brentford, from Barratt Homes who had originally acquired the site in January 2008. The club aimed to build a 20,000-capacity stadium on the land in time for the 2016–17 season, with the option of extending to 25,000 seats. In December 2013 the club was given approval for the new stadium by Hounslow Council with further approval sought and received from the Mayor of London and the government in December 2013.
Attention then shifted to acquiring the remaining land, required for the enabling development of flats, and completing the development agreement. A Compulsory Purchase Order was approved for the remaining land in the summer of 2014 and although negotiations continued, a number of objections to the CPO resulted in a further hearing in September 2015. The development agreement was signed with Willmott Dixon in December 2014. The CPO was approved in April 2016 and the process completed on 1 September 2016.

Construction
Work on the new stadium officially started on 24 March 2017 with site clearance and preliminary works. The main works began in spring 2018.
On 30 August 2020, Brentford confirmed that the stadium was complete and ready to host football matches.
Further development
During the summer of 2022 the entire West Stand and the north east corner of the stadium were converted to rail-seating to allow safe-standing during matches. This was made possible following a change by the government to allow licensed safe-standing after a successful government-commissioned trial held during the previous season.
Sponsorship and naming rights
On 28 July 2022, Brentford announced a 10-year partnership with British technology manufacturer Grey Technology, which included naming rights to the stadium, which immediately became the Gtech Community Stadium.
Football at Brentford Community Stadium
The first football match at the stadium took place on 1 September 2020 when Brentford drew 2–2 against Oxford United in a pre-season friendly. Sergi Canos scored both Brentford goals to give the home side a 2–0 lead before Oxford United staged a late comeback. The first competitive match took place on 6 September when Brentford hosted Wycombe Wanderers in the first round of the EFL Cup. The match finished 1–1 after normal time, with Brentford's Ethan Pinnock opening the scoring. It took a penalty shoot-out to decide the match, which Brentford won 4–2. The first league game to take place at the stadium was a 3–0 win over Huddersfield Town on 19 September, with goals coming from Josh Dasilva, Bryan Mbeumo and Marcus Forss.
International football
UEFA Women's Euro 2022

The stadium was selected as one of several venues for the UEFA Women's Euro 2022 tournament. It hosted Group B fixtures Germany vs Denmark (8 July 2022), Germany vs Spain (12 July 2022) and Denmark vs Spain (16 July 2022) as well as Germany vs Austria in the quarter-final (21 July 2022).
| Date | Home | Away | Result | Attendance | Stage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 July 2022 | 4–0 | 15,736 | UEFA Women's Euro 2022 Group B | ||
| 12 July 2022 | 2–0 | 16,037 | UEFA Women's Euro 2022 Group B | ||
| 16 July 2022 | 0–1 | 16,041 | UEFA Women's Euro 2022 Group B | ||
| 21 July 2022 | 2–0 | 16,025 | UEFA Women's Euro 2022 Quarter-final |
Other
England hosted Australia in a women's international friendly match (11 April 2023). In 2025 the stadium hosted the Unity Cup, featuring Ghana, Jamaica, Nigeria and Trinidad and Tobago. The cup was won by Nigeria, following a penalty shoot-out. Two Brentford players played in the final representing Nigeria, Benjamin Frederick and Frank Onyeka.
| Date | Home | Away | Result | Attendance | Competition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11 April 2023 | 0–2 | 14,489 | Friendly (Women) | ||
| 17 October 2023 | 2–0 | 5,761 | Friendly (Men) | ||
| 27 May 2025 | 3–2 | Unknown | Unity Cup Semi-final | ||
| 28 May 2025 | 2–1 | Unknown | Unity Cup Semi-final | ||
| 31 May 2025 | 0–4 | Unknown | Unity Cup Third place play-off | ||
| 31 May 2025 | 2–2 (4–5) | Unknown | Unity Cup Final |
Rugby Union at Brentford Community Stadium
On 15 August 2016, rugby union club London Irish announced that discussions were ongoing with the borough for a move to the new stadium as tenants of Brentford. Irish played in Reading, Berkshire, but were hoping to move back to the capital. An amended application to use the stadium for rugby in addition to its main purpose of hosting football was passed on 9 February 2017, effectively allowing London Irish to play at the stadium. The move to Brentford from its opening season was later confirmed.
London Irish played their inaugural match at the stadium on 29 November 2020, when they beat Leicester Tigers 22–9. The first try was scored by Curtis Rona of London Irish.
London Irish were suspended from the league ahead of the 2023–24 Premiership Rugby season and subsequently entered administration meaning their future remains uncertain.
Location
The stadium is located on a 7.6 acre site off Lionel Road, adjacent to Kew Bridge railway station. It stands in the middle of a triangle of railway lines, some used for freight. There are proposals to re-open a passenger rail route from Willesden and Brent Cross through to Hounslow via a station at Lionel Road using one of these freight lines (the 'West London Orbital' scheme). Outline planning documents suggest a station could be built to serve the stadium on the Lionel Road site. The nearest station on the Transport for London network is Gunnersbury, served by the London Underground District line and the recently named Mildmay Line on the London Overground (Stratford to Richmond route). Kew Bridge railway station is adjacent to the stadium.
References
References
- (2014-07-15). "Regeneration Committee site visit to Brentford FC".
- (20 June 2013). "Brentford Community Stadium".
- (19 September 2020). "Arup's role on Brentford Stadium draws to a close".
- "Brentford FC New Stadium |".
- "The Gtech Community Stadium".
- (7 December 2007). "Brentford given new stadium boost". BBC News.
- "BRENTFORD FOOTBALL CLUB AND BARRATT HOMES TEAM UP TO ACQUIRE LAND FOR NEW COMMUNITY STADIUM – Brentford – News – Latest News – Latest News".
- (6 December 2013). "Brentford Football Club given Lionel Road stadium go-ahead". BBC News.
- (16 July 2014). "Compulsory purchase plans approved to secure Brentford stadium site". Get West London.
- (6 May 2015). "Public inquiry over Brentford FC stadium set for September". Get West London.
- (23 December 2014). "Brentford FC and Willmott Dixon sign Development Agreement for Brentford Community Stadium". Brentford FC.
- "News {{!}} Brentford Community Stadium". Brentford FC Ltd..
- "Work Underway".
- (7 April 2019). "Brentford new groundbreaking stadium: one year on". Pitchcare.
- "Brentford FC move in to new home".
- "Safe standing at football stadiums to be rolled out next season".
- (June 2021). "Oxford United the visitors tomorrow for first game at new stadium".
- "Opening competitive fixture at new stadium chosen for TV coverage".
- "Brentford FC 3–0 Huddersfield Town FC 19/09/2020".
- UEFA.com. (2022-04-04). "Event guide: London Brentford Community Stadium {{!}} UEFA Women's EURO 2022".
- (2023-04-11). "England 0-2 Australia".
- "London Irish could soon leave Madejski Stadium". Trinity Mirror Southern.
- "Approval for rugby".
- (18 December 2018). "Back in Town — The Irish are Returning to London!".
- (18 December 2018). "London Irish to move to Brentford Community Stadium in 2020". BBC Sport.
- "London Irish suspended from Gallagher Premiership and all leagues by RFU due to financial issues".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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