Work restarts on ‘world’s greatest football stadium’ that had been abandoned for 16 years as £250m revamp is agreed

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VALENCIA are set to restart work on their Nou Mestalla stadium… 16 years after they were supposed to move in.

The skeleton of what was meant to be the “world’s greatest football stadium” has been lying dormant since work was halted in 2009.

Aerial view of Nou Mestalla Stadium.
Valencia have recommenced work on Nou Mestalla
Illustration of Nou Mestalla Stadium's interior, showing a spacious lobby with a spiral staircase and a car display.
The LaLiga club have unveiled a new design
Aerial view of Nou Mestalla Stadium at night.
Stunning images have been released
Illustration of a packed stadium with two fans watching a game.
The stadium will eventually hold more than 70,000 people

The LaLiga side had been hoping to move out of their traditional Mestalla home in 2009.

But after gathering debts of more than £350million by 2008, the project was sidelined.

After many false dawns, plans to recommence construction work are finally gathering speed.

Valencia have unveiled their latest new design for the stadium – the sixth since 2006.

Club president Lay Hoon Chan boldly proclaimed: “We’re not just building a stadium, we’re building a monument.”

The Singaporean, 60, also added that the stadium will act as a “beacon of hope” for the city.

Valencia are working with the same contractor as they agreed a deal with in 2007.

They hope for the new stadium to be ready in time for the 2027-28 season.

Aerial view of the unfinished Nou Mestalla stadium in Valencia, Spain.
Nou Mestalla has been lying abandoned for 16 years
Illustration of Nou Mestalla Stadium's interior with restaurants.
Valencia want the stadium ready for the 2027-28 season
Illustration of Nou Mestalla Stadium's design, showing balconies connecting the stadium to the city.
They also hope to be included in the 2030 World Cup
Illustration of a lounge area overlooking a stadium.
There will be 3,000 hospitality seats

It will boast a capacity of 70,044 – significantly more than their current 49,000-seater home.

Around 3,000 VIP seats will be included, and the stadium will be able to host top events by meeting Uefa‘s highest criteria.

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Valencia are said to be taking out a new £270m loan from Goldman Sachs in order to help finance the project.

They plan to begin paying back their loan in 2027, across a period of 20-25 years.

Valencia has so far missed out on being one of 11 host cities for the 2030 World Cup.

But tournament chiefs could slip them in at the last minute, should Nou Mestalla be built according to plan this time.

On the pitch, Valencia have suffered badly in recent seasons.

Not long ago mainstays of Uefa competitions, they currently find themselves languishing bottom of LaLiga with just two wins from 19 games.

Last month, club icon Ruben Baraja was sacked as boss.

They moved quickly to replace him with West Brom manager Carlos Corberan, who has now been tasked with keeping the fallen giants in LaLiga.

Carlos Corberan, head coach of Valencia CF.
Carlos Corberan is Valencia’s new boss
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