Richmond Park (football ground)
Richmond Park is a football stadium in Dublin, Ireland. Situated in the Dublin suburb of Inchicore, it is the home ground of League of Ireland side St Patrick's Athletic F.C. (also known as St Pat's). The area where the ground now stands was formerly used as a recreational area by the British Army, who were stationed at the nearby Richmond Barracks, both named after Charles Lennox, 4th Duke of Richmond the barracks having since been demolished.
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![]() ![]() Richmond Park Location within Dublin | |
Full name | Richmond Park |
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Public transit | Goldenbridge Luas stop (Red Line) Emmet Road bus stop (Dublin Bus 13, 40) |
Owner | St Patrick's Athletic F.C. |
Operator | St Patrick's Athletic F.C. |
Capacity | 5,340 (2,800 seated) |
Field size | 108 x 64 m |
Construction | |
Built | 1925 |
Opened | 1925 |
History
After the creation of the Irish Free State, and therefore the removal of the British Army, the ground lay idle for 3 years before League of Ireland club Brideville began using the ground in 1925. In 1930 Brideville were forced to move to Harolds Cross Greyhound Stadium to accommodate St Patrick's Athletic moving in. St. Pats continues to use and develop the ground until 1951 when they entered the League of Ireland. The league deemed the ground unsuitable and St. Pats were forced to use a variety of grounds in Dublin as they fought to upgrade Richmond Park. In 1960, after serious development, the ground played host to St Pats first home league game in Inchicore. The ground closed for redevelopment in May 1989, however due to St Pats hitting financially difficulties they did not return until 5 December 1993.
The ground lies behind a row of terraced housing in a natural valley and is often used for Republic of Ireland underage and women's teams. It staged the League of Ireland Cup final in 1982 and 2003. It has played host to a two Leinster Senior Cup finals, as well as many junior and intermediate finals. In 2001, 2002, 2003 and part of 2004 Shamrock Rovers played their home games in Richmond Park as tenants of St. Pats. In 2005, Dublin City played the first 10 games of their season in the ground, under a similar arrangement. Richmond Park is usually used by non-league clubs in surrounding areas when they qualify for the FAI Cup.
It staged its first European game in July 1996 when Slovan Bratislava visited in a 1996-97 UEFA Cup tie.[1]
In 2005, the board of St. Patrick's Athletic F.C. spoke to their fans about a potential move to a new municipal stadium in Tallaght where they would share with Shamrock Rovers. Outraged by this, the club's fans revolted and a pressure group called 'Pats for Richmond' was set up to mobilise and organise opposition to the plan. In July 2006, St. Pats board of directors gave a clear indication of staying put by purchasing local pub Richmond House (also known as McDowells) in order to give the club's fans a social base.
In 2006 the club qualified for Europe for the first time since 2002 via the 2006 FAI Cup Final and with the club needing a bigger seating capacity to play in the UEFA Cup, the grass bank behind the Inchicore End goal was dug up and levelled out with concrete and a new temporary stand was built made up of a metal frame and wooden boards. In 2011, at the UEFA Europa League clash between Pats and ÍBV of Iceland, a supporter fell through one of the wooden boards while celebrating a goal. This led to the top half of the stand being closed for the next round against Shakhter Karagandy from Kazakhstan and the stand being closed entirely for the remainder of the 2011 season. Before the start of the 2012 season, any wooden boards that were deemed dangerous were swapped with safe ones from the top half of the stand that remained closed, and the bottom half of the stand was reopened for the Saints 5-1 hammering of Shamrock Rovers and remained open for the rest of the season. There was only two games that were an exception to the stand being open, the Europa League game, once again against ÍBV, when the UEFA delegate deemed the stand unsafe to use for supporters and the next round of the Europa League against Bosnian side Široki Brijeg when once again the UEFA delegate deemed the stand unsafe, but his decision was overruled by An Garda Síochána due to overcrowding in the Main Stand as a result of the tickets being oversold. Midway through the 2013 season, the St.Pat's Supporters Club, the Patron Saints, donated €50,000 to the club for the stand to be dismantled and rebuilt using metal flooring instead of wooden. The first time the new stand was used was a sold out fixture against Lithuanian side Žalgiris in the UEFA Europe League on 11 July 2013. the stand was officially opened on 27 July 2013 in front of Supporters, Players and Management and given the official name of 'The Patrons' Stand'.[2]
On 11 April 2018, St Patrick's Athletic announced plans to leave their Richmond Park home in favour of a move across the road to the St Michael's Estate site, with plans to create a 12,000 seater state of the art stadium and shopping facility with the working name of the Richmond Arena, hoping to be ready to play in by 2022 pending Dublin City Council's decision on the site and planning permission being granted.[3][4]
Facilities
The main stand seats 1,800 people. Behind one goal, at the Inchicore end, the space was constructed into a new uncovered stand in time for the 2007 UEFA Cup campaign of St Patrick's Athletic F.C. This stand seats 1,000 and is known as the West (or 'New') Stand. The hardcore St. Pat's supporters have traditionally gathered at the other end, in the 'Shed End', though in more recent times the Shed has housed the away supporters while the more vocal Pat's fans have moved to the main stand. Although known locally as the "Shed End" the official name is the John Minnock stand, as it was financed with money received from his transfer to Charlton Athletic. It was originally a fully covered terrace, before half the roof was removed in the early 2000s and the other half in early 2020, leaving it as an uncovered terrace.[5][6] The camac terrace, across from the main stand, is used by home fans, and named after the river that runs behind it. The Camac holds the ground's TV gantry.

Other uses
Richmond Park hosted Ireland's first ever outdoor rock festival on 4 September 1970. Headlined by Mungo Jerry, the lineup also featured one of the earliest performances of the then recently formed Thin Lizzy. A crowd of several thousand had been expected but, in the event, widespread rumours of a Garda drugs bust and poor weather kept the attendance to an estimated 800.[7]
Notable players
List of full international players to have played at Richmond Park.
UEFA Internationals
Egzon Binaku
Syarhey Ignatovich
Timofei Kalachev
Uladzimir Karytska
Michy Batshuayi
Ricardo Baiano
Jure Ivanković
Dalibor Šilić
Nikola Vasiljević
Vedran Ješe
Mateo Kovačić
Radek Černý
Jiří Jarošík
Johan Absalonsen
Hans Henrik Andreasen
Jonas Borring
Anders Møller Christensen
Andreas Christensen
Thomas Helveg
Ulrik Laursen
Tammy Abraham
Gordon Banks
Ross Barkley
Darren Bent
Barry Bridges
Michael Carrick
Gary Charles
Joe Cole
Michael Dawson
David Dunn
Rio Ferdinand
Anthony Gardner
Frank Lampard
Mason Mount
Danny Murphy
Neil Ruddock
Jonjo Shelvey
Trevor Sinclair
Bobby Tambling
Terry Venables
Nigel Winterburn
Sander Puri
Gunnar Nielsen
Simon Skrabb
Tiémoué Bakayoko
Olivier Giroud
Younès Kaboul
Marc Keller
Kurt Zouma
Steffen Freund
Gunnar Már Guðmundsson
Guðmundur Þórarinsson
Þórarinn Ingi Valdimarsson
Andy Boyle
Synan Braddish
Ray Brady
Robbie Brady
Liam Buckley
Graham Burke
Jack Byrne
Noel Campbell
Ciaran Clark
Séamus Coleman
George Cummins
Greg Cunningham
Ronan Curtis
Damien Delaney
Kevin Doyle
Damien Duff
Eamon Dunphy
Tommy Dunne
Keith Fahey
Curtis Fleming
David Forde
Shay Gibbons
Johnny Giles
Eamonn Gregg
Alfie Hale
Eoin Hand
Joe Haverty
Jonny Hayes
Jackie Hennessy
Daryl Horgan
Conor Hourihane
Alan Judge
Robbie Keane
Mick Kearin
Alan Kelly Jr.
Shay Keogh
Mick Leech
Shane Long
Dinny Lowry
Paddy Madden
Sean Maguire
James McClean
Paul McGrath
Liam Miller
Barry Murphy
Troy Parrott
Joe O'Cearuill
Eamonn O'Keefe
Frank O'Neill
Stephen Quinn
Conor Sammon
Enda Stevens
Freddie Strahan
Keith Treacy
Stephen Ward
Ronnie Whelan Snr
Shaun Williams
Fabio Borini
Emerson
Jorginho
Maksat Baizhanov
Aleksandr Mokin
Sergei Khizhnichenko
Aleksandr Kirov
Ulan Konysbayev
Zhambyl Kukeyev
Kairat Utabayev
Bersant Celina
Aleksandrs Fertovs
Gints Freimanis
Vladislavs Gutkovskis
Kaspars Ikstens
Vjačeslavs Isajevs
Ņikita Ivanovs
Andrejs Pavlovs
Andrejs Perepļotkins
Renārs Rode
Igors Tarasovs
Oļegs Timofejevs
Daniils Turkovs
Artūrs Karašausks
Andrejs Kovaļovs
Aleksejs Višņakovs
Deividas Česnauskis
Karolis Chvedukas
Mindaugas Kalonas
Mantas Kuklys
Ramūnas Radavičius
Vaidotas Šilėnas
Andrius Skerla
Egidijus Vaitkūnas
Gediminas Vičius
Armantas Vitkauskas
Artūras Žulpa
Ricardo Delgado
Marc Oberweis
René Peters
Edmond Agius
Gilbert Agius
Steve Bezzina
Jacob Borg
Roderick Briffa
Luke Dimech
Dyson Falzon
Jamie Pace
Kenneth Scicluna
Sead Hakšabanović
Jordi Cruyff
Javairô Dilrosun
Patrick van Aanholt
George Best
Liam Boyce
Liam Coyle
Keith Gillespie
Billy Hamilton
Felix Healy
Aaron Hughes
Damien Johnson
Daniel Lafferty
Kyle Lafferty
Alan Mannus
Paddy McCourt
Niall McGinn
Rory Patterson
Michael Smith
Gerry Taggart
Danny Trainor
Trevor Wood
Stig Inge Bjørnebye
Rafał Boguski
Arkadiusz Głowacki
Krzysztof Mączyński
Patryk Małecki
Arkadiusz Onyszko
Mariusz Pawełek
Marek Zieńczuk
Paulo Ferreira
Ricardo Rocha
Anton Bobyor
Vladislav Ignatyev
Oleg Ivanov
Roman Shishkin
Christophe Berra
Don Cowie
Christian Dailly
Craig Gordon
Ryan Jack
Jimmy Johnstone
Neil Martin
Jamie McAllister
Robbie Neilson
Matt Ritchie
Barry Robson
Lawrence Shankland
Dušan Petronijević
Marcos Alonso
Alvarito
César Azpilicueta
Pedro
Denni Avdić
Emir Bajrami
Fredrik Berglund
Mathias Florén
Alexander Fransson
Kalle Holmberg
Stefan Ishizaki
Oscar Jansson
Jordan Larsson
Teddy Lučić
Daniel Mobaeck
Lasse Nilsson
Viktor Noring
Christoffer Nyman
Isak Pettersson
Anders Svensson
Simon Thern
Johan Wiland
Gareth Bale
Nathan Blake
David Partridge
CAF Internationals
Rudy
Romuald Boco
Aime Kitenge
Joseph N'Do
Roberto Lopes
Jacques Maghoma
José Mukendi
Christian Atsu
Esmaël Gonçalves
Jorginho
Didier Zokora
George Miller
Mohamed El Monir
Éamon Zayed
Frédéric Kanouté
Samir Boughanem
Adel Taarabt
Efan Ekoku
Dominic Iorfa
Mohamed Diamé
Reyaad Pieterse
Cyril Guedjé
Ayman Ben Mohamed
Abel Dhaira
Tony Mawejje
Charles Mbabazi Livingstone
Henry McKop
CONCACAF Internationals
Eric Lavine
Alvin Rouse
Dante Leverock
Tomer Chencinski
Jeff Clarke
Tyson Farago
Ben Fisk
Kris Twardek
Christian Bolaños
Pascal Millien
Regillio Nooitmeer
Michael Hector
Romeo Parkes
Frank Sinclair
Ryan Thompson
Kupono Low
Wesley Charles
Daniel Carr
Avery John
Gavin Glinton
Ed McIlvenny
Bobby Smith
DeAndre Yedlin
AFC Internationals
CONMEBOL Internationals
Gallery
- Welcome to Richmond Park
- The Shed End
References
- https://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/archive/1996/0719/Pg019.html#Ar01900:5881195AC12E5161E65391FB69B2556AD263
- Club News : Patrons' Stand Open!
- https://www.stpatsfc.com/news.php?id=7783
- https://www.rte.ie/sport/soccer/2018/0411/953609-st-pats-unveil-proposal-for-new-12-000-seater-stadium/
- https://www.the42.ie/the-shed-st-patricks-athletic-4998761-Feb2020/
- https://www.irishmirror.ie/sport/soccer/soccer-news/st-pats-shed-end-no-21437778
- From Thin Lizzy Guide