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Casement Park : ウィキペディア英語版
Casement Park

Casement Park ((アイルランド語:Páirc Mhic Asmaint)) is the principal Gaelic Athletic Association stadium in Belfast, Northern Ireland, home to the Antrim football and hurling teams. Located on the Andersonstown Road in the west of the city, and named after the Republican revolutionary Sir Roger Casement (1864-1916), the ground has a capacity of 32,600.〔http://antrim.gaa.ie/uploads/documents/AntrimStrategy.pdf Antrim GAA - Strategic Plan 2006 - 2011〕
Casement Park, one of the largest stadia in Ulster, opened in June 1953, with Armagh Harps defeating St John’s of Antrim in the final of the inaugural Ulster Senior Club Football Championship. The newly opened Casement Park hosted the Ulster Championship final less than a month later, which saw Armagh overcome reigning All-Ireland champions Cavan.
In all, Casement Park has hosted eight Ulster football finals. However, the Antrim ground has not held the provincial showpiece since 1971, with St. Tiernach's Park in Clones hosting the final every year since except between 2004 and 2006 when it was moved to Croke Park such was the demand for tickets. A major facelift of the stadium took place in 2000, a move which saw more championship games played at Casement Park. In 2006, floodlights were added which allowed hurling and football to be played in the evening.
==Redevelopment==
In 2006, proposals were raised to build a new multi-purpose stadium on the site of the old Maze prison near Lisburn, which was intended to host soccer, rugby union and Gaelic games. However, opposition to the idea led to it being dropped in favour of a new venue in the Sydenham area of East Belfast. This led to Ulster GAA, which was one of the partners in the Maze project, to pull out in favour of remaining at Casement Park.〔(Plans for £128m Belfast stadium unveiled ) - The Independent, 25 March 2009〕
In 2011, the Northern Ireland Executive announced that it had granted £138m for various stadium redevelopment projects throughout Northern Ireland. Ulster GAA would receive £61.4m of this, which was to be used to redevelop Casement Park into a 40,000 all-seated stadium with £15 million of partnership investment from the Central Council of the GAA, making it the largest stadium in Ulster.〔(Stadiums fit for our heroes on way at last ) - Belfast Telegraph, 11 March 2011〕
In early 2012 it was announced that the redevelopment work would start at the end of 2013; this was expected to last two years with a view to having the new stadium open by September 2015. It was expected that, after its completion, Ulster GAA would move its headquarters from St Tiernach's Park in Clones to Casement Park,〔(Ulster Council rubber-stamps Casement Park stadium move ) - BBC News, 17 February 2012〕 which would then have a seating capacity of about 40,000.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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