"The Glebe" | |
Location | Brechin, Scotland |
---|---|
Coordinates | 56°44′07″N2°39′23″W / 56.73528°N 2.65639°W |
Owner | Brechin City |
Capacity | 4,083 [1] (1,519 seated) [2] |
Surface | Grass |
Opened | 1919 |
Tenants | |
Brechin City (1919–present) |
Glebe Park (known as the "Carnegie Fuels Stadium at Glebe Park" for sponsorship reasons) is a football stadium in Brechin, Scotland, which is the home ground of Brechin City.
Glebe Park opened in 1919. [3] The ground had just one portable stand, which had been used at the Perth agricultural show. [3] Brechin City joined the Scottish Football League in 1929, when a pavilion was added and the Cemetery End terrace was covered. [3] The biggest ever attendance was 8,123, against Aberdeen in a Scottish Cup tie played on 3 February 1973. [3] This attendance was greater than the population of Brechin. [3] Floodlights were installed and used for the first time in 1977, in a match against Hibernian. [3]
The old stand was replaced by a new Main Stand, with 290 seats, in 1981. [3] Sponsorship by the Stewart Milne group and a Football Trust grant of £210,000 financed the construction of a 1,228 seat stand at the Trinity Road end of the ground. [3] This stand had double the capacity of Brechin City's average attendance, which attracted criticism from non-league clubs in England, who believed that the Football Trust should fund their developments instead. [3]
Unusually, the largest stand in the ground was built behind the goal, rather than the side opposite the Main Stand. [3] This was because that side is constrained by a terrace and the Glebe Park hedge, which runs past more than half of the pitch. [3] [4] [5] The hedge was threatened in 2009 because Glebe Park's pitch dimensions were too small for it to meet UEFA requirements, at just 67 yards wide. [3] [4] [5] A fine was suspended by the SFA because Brechin City carried out some work to resolve the problem. [6] There is a small training pitch behind the hedge.
Glebe Park has also been used for the reserve team matches of Scottish Premier League club Aberdeen.
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