Its present capacity is 34,742 all seated. Designed by prominent stadium architect Archibald Leitch, the 38,419-seater arena (it held 73,000 at its peak) was the Gunners’ home until 2006. On the morning of 26 April 1997, Albion were 92nd in the league – but valedictory victory sent them above Hereford, where they drew the following week to survive. Thanks to his vainglory, in 2003 Darlington left behind a delightful little ground, where the club had comfortably resided since their formation in 1883. As if in thrall to that immortal moment, between Walsall's finest hour and the demolition of the stadium in 1990, the fabric of the ground essentially remained the same. Boothferry Park it stood out as a beacon of newness when it opened in 1946, and Hull fans immediately took to their new home – 55,019 of them turned out for an FA Cup tie with Manchester United in 1948-49. Simply click on the Fluid Capacity Lookup button below, and then follow the directions to prepare a complete and printable list of filters and fluid capacities for your vehicle. Swansea’s long-time home also hosted 18 Wales games. Create an account or log in to oneBoro to join in the discussion with likeminded Boro fans, receive great conversations to your inbox, personalise your oneBoro experience, and follow discussions that you love. Connect with friends faster than ever with the new Facebook app. After entering through the turnstiles, home supporters walked past the cricket pitch which predated the football ground – and for many years, fans could switch ends at half-time. . The enormous embankment at the town end of the ground was the site of a 1946 disaster which claimed 33 lives; four decades later, half of it was sold to a supermarket to stave off bankruptcy. Saltergate’s record attendance was set in 1938, when 30,561 supporters filled the terraces for an FA Cup tie with Tottenham. West Ham’s final game at the ground was a dramatic 3-2 defeat of Manchester United in May 2016. 4 900 seats were built in the north and west corners. Brian Clough often spoke about keeping the ball on the ground, but that was easier said than done on some of the mudheaps his Derby side were forced to play on at the Baseball Ground. Arsenal moved from south London to north when Highbury opened in 1913, with the original lease including terms which forbade the sale of “intoxicating liquor” at the ground. Ayresome Park was demolished in 1997 as Middlesbrough moved to the Riverside Stadium and there is now a housing estate on the site of the old ground. Saints beat Brighton United 4-1 in the inaugural game at The Dell in 1898; three years later, England triumphed over Ireland in the first international held at the south coast stadium. Neil Cox signing autographs outside the gates of Ayresome Park, in August 1994. 44) Ayresome Park, Middlesbrough (1992-93) Capacity: 26,667. Football statistics of the stadium Ayresome Park. The record attendance of 67,037 was set in 1932 for an FA Cup tie against Arsenal, led by former Town title-winner Herbert Chapman. Photo by Paul Thompson Ayresome Park had a brief afterlife as Boro’s training ground, but is now a housing estate. Leeds very Lucky not to be 2-0 down..  Part of that is due to the incongruous location and design of a ground initially built for the 2012 Olympic Games, but much of the fans’ unhappiness stems from what was left behind. Just over a decade later, in 1997, the club relocated to outlying Lostock and the shining edifice of the ground initially known as the Reebok Stadium. During the construction of the new Wembley stadium the English nationalteam toured the country. Eastville was much more than a football stadium: as well as providing a home to Bristol Rovers for over a century, the ground also hosted speedway, greyhound racing and, for a short period in the 1980s, American football. Deeply indebted and equally unpopular, the board had sold the Goldstone without fan consultation. The club would have to spend two years groundsharing at Gillingham and then another 12 at the Withdean athletics stadium. Planning permission has been granted to raise the capacity further, to around 42,000, should the need arise! Away fans who risked the sometimes threatening trip down the narrow Millmoor Lane would be rewarded with the Railway End’s superb acoustics and pleasing view of a typical 20th-century English ground: large home end (with glimpses of local buses flying upwards past the roof), ageing main stand and curious “other side” (of which the roof covered only about a third), all tightly packed up against one of the country’s smallest pitches.