From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
St Mirren Park
Football stadium in Paisley, Scotland
Football stadium in Paisley, Scotland
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | The SMISA Stadium |
| nickname | Greenhill Road |
| image | Greenhill Road - geograph.org.uk - 1160158.jpg |
| image_size | 275px |
| caption | View of the Main Stand facade |
| location | Greenhill Road, Paisley |
| pushpin_map | Scotland Renfrewshire |
| pushpin_mapsize | 250 |
| pushpin_map_caption | Location in Renfrewshire |
| pushpin_label_position | left |
| coordinates | |
| broke_ground | 7 January 2008 |
| opened | |
| surface | Grass |
| acreage | 12.5 |
| dimensions | 105m x 68m (115y x 74y) |
| scoreboard | Yes |
| owner | St Mirren F.C. |
| operator | St Mirren F.C. |
| record_attendance | 7,937 - St Mirren v Kilmarnock (22 April 2023) |
| construction_cost | £8 million |
| architect | Barr Construction |
| main_contractors | Barr Construction |
| public_transit | Paisley St James |
| tenants | St Mirren F.C. (2009–) |
| Scotland under-21 (2011–) | |
| seating_capacity |
Scotland under-21 (2011–) St Mirren Park, also known as The SMISA Stadium for sponsorship reasons, is a football stadium in Paisley, Scotland. It is the home of St Mirren F.C. The stadium is the sixth home of the club and replaced Love Street.
History

Talks over a new stadium began on 15 January 2003, when the club met representatives from Aldi and Lidl. The club were looking to sell their ground at Love Street for retail development. Selling Love Street would secure the necessary funding to build the new stadium. Planning applications for a retail development at Love Street were passed on 24 May 2005 and the club subsequently sold the ground to Tesco on 25 April 2007 for £15 million. The new stadium site broke ground on 7 January 2008 and was officially opened on 31 January 2009 at a cost of £8 million. Before the first game at the new stadium there was a parade from Love Street to Greenhill Road to celebrate the opening of the stadium. Club chairman Stewart Gilmour and First Minister Alex Salmond were also present at the first match at the new ground. Alex Salmond unveiled a plaque before the game to commemorate the opening. The game between St Mirren and Kilmarnock finished in a 1–1 draw, with the first goal at the new stadium being scored by Kilmarnock striker Kevin Kyle. Dennis Wyness scored St Mirren's first goal at the new ground, in the same match. The opening match set the record attendance of 7,542, and was only surpassed in the Scottish Premiership play-off match against Dundee United, when 7,732 fans attended on 26 May 2019. St Mirren Park has also become the regular home of the Scotland national under-21 football team.
In November 2015, St Mirren agreed a two-year sponsorship deal with Renfrewshire Council to rename the stadium as the Paisley 2021 Stadium. This was to promote Paisley's bid to become a UK City of Culture in 2021. In June 2018, the stadium was renamed as The Simple Digital Arena as part of a four-year deal with Glasgow-based IT firm Simple Digital Solutions.
In November 2020, the stadium was renamed The SMISA Stadium in reference to the St. Mirren Independent Supporters Association. The gesture is designed to mark what will be the last season before the club becomes majority fan owned in 2021.
Construction
St Mirren Park is built on a 12.5-acre site on Greenhill Road in the Ferguslie Park area of the town. The previously unused site is less than a mile from the club's former ground. Barr Construction were responsible for the design and construction of the stadium. Their design consisted of four grandstands with a total capacity of 8,023. The East Stand is the Main Stand. The North Stand is used by away fans. Larger away supports can also be seated in a section of the West Stand. The West Stand has the largest capacity of all the stands. Whilst the South Stand is the Family Stand.
- East Stand (Greenhill Road) – capacity 2,220. (Main Stand)
- West Stand (Craigielea Drive) – capacity 2,516. (2 sections for Away Stand Overspill or small away support)
- North Stand (Ferguslie Park Avenue) – capacity 1,633. (Away Stand)
- South Stand (Drums Avenue) – capacity 1,654. (Family Stand)
Since the stadium's construction, the capacity has been reduced to .
Facilities
On the outside of the stadium, promotional plaques have been constructed on the wall including fans names and loved ones. In the undercroft areas under each of the home support sections, large plaques dedicated to the members of the club's 'Hall of fame' have been erected by members of the supporters association and the website team, detailing player profiles and stats. Also, a 7-a-side pitch behind the North Stand is covered by the Airdome and can be hired by the public.
Transport
Paisley St James Railway Station, which is served by trains on the Inverclyde Line from Glasgow Central, is adjacent to St Mirren Park. Since the stadium opened, some supporters campaigned for the local transport authorities to rename the station to Paisley St Mirren. Following station improvements, the signage of the station was updated to read as "Paisley St James, alight here for St Mirren Park", as a compromise between supporter groups and the local transport regulators SPT. Paisley Gilmour Street is a 15-minute walk from St Mirren Park, but has a much more frequent service from Glasgow Central. The ground is very near to the M8 Motorway and is accessed via junction 29. Fans travelling from North Ayrshire can also access the ground via the A737 road. There is a car park at the stadium for permit holders, and street parking is also available.
References
References
- (2009-01-31). "St Mirren Park". Stmirren.info.
- "St Mirren Football Club | Stadium History". Saintmirren.net.
- (2005-05-24). "From St Mirren Park to St Mirren Park". Stmirren.info.
- (2008-12-15). "Alex Salmond to unveil plaque at St Mirren's new ground". The Daily Telegraph.
- "Scottish Football Ground Guide: New St Mirren Park, St Mirren Football Club". Footballgroundguide.com.
- (2009-02-03). "St Mirren fans' final march from Love Street | Football". STV.
- Campbell, Andy. (31 January 2009). "St Mirren 1-1 Kilmarnock". BBC.
- (26 May 2019). "St Mirren 1-1 Dundee United". BBC.
- (9 August 2011). "St Mirren Park becomes home to Scotland's Under-21 side". BBC.
- (2013-01-31). "Scottish Football Association". Scottishfa.co.uk.
- (16 November 2015). "St Mirren Park in line for temporary name change in culture city bid". BBC.
- (2018-06-13). "St Mirren rename stadium ahead of Premiership return". STV Sport.
- "St Mirren Park". The Stadium Guide.
- "ROMA Publications Ltd, UK - Publishing, Advertising, Graphic Design". Romauk.net.
- "Scottish Football Ground Guide: New St Mirren Park, St Mirren Football Club". Footballgroundguide.com.
- "St Mirren Park –". Stadiumdb.com.
- (2014-01-24). "St Mirren Football Club | Match Day Info – St Mirren v Partick Thistle". Saintmirren.net.
- "St Mirren Park –". Stadiumdb.com.
- "St Mirren Football Club". Scottish Professional Football League.
- (1 August 2012). "St Mirren". Duncan Adams.
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.
Ask Mako anything about St Mirren Park — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report