Polytechnic Stadium (London)
Location | Chiswick, London |
---|---|
Coordinates | 51°28′33″N 0°16′07″W / 51.4759°N 0.2685°W |
Tenants | |
Fulham RLFC (1985-1990) |
The Polytechnic Stadium is a sports venue on Hartington Road, Chiswick, London. It is the centre piece of the Quintin Hogg Memorial Grounds (now known as University of Westminster Sports Grounds).[1]
In 1888 Quintin Hogg built a boathouse near
In 1938 the sports ground was extended for the stadium to be built by 7.5 acres.[3] The grandstand had a capacity of 658 spectators and contained a restaurant on the first floor. In July 1944 the stadium suffered bomb damage with all the windows blown out and the running track damaged.[3] Behind the stand there is a miniature railway.[5]
From 1938 until 1973 the
Primarily a track and field athletics venue, it hosted the field hockey preliminaries for the 1948 Summer Olympics.[8]
The grandstand is now a listed grade 2 protected structure, but is unused due to it not being able to meet modern health and safety criteria.[9]
It was the home stadium of rugby league team Fulham RLFC (now the London Broncos) between 1985 and 1990.
References
- ^ "POLYTECHNIC STADIUM, Hounslow - 1096141 | Historic England".
- ^ http://www.quintinhoggtrust.org/pdf/QHMF%20QHT%20BOARDS%20ROWING%20RUGBY%20LO_RES.pdf [bare URL PDF]
- ^ a b c d http://recordsandarchives.westminster.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/sites/70/2019/05/Chiswick-Research-Guide.pdf [bare URL PDF]
- ^ "History - Quintin Hogg Trust".
- ^ Hadfield, Dave (28 April 1999). "Rugby League: Broncos' rocky route to stardom". The Independent.
- ^ Hill, Dave (23 April 2016). "London Marathon: 35 years of change in 26.2 miles". The Guardian.
- ^ "Recognition at Last for an Overlooked American Marathoner". 9 November 2016.
- ^ 1948 Summer Olympics official report. p. 46.
- ^ http://democraticservices.hounslow.gov.uk/(S(andasi4544gnyd45ywlcb345))/documents/s3299/07%20Quintin%20Hogg.pdf [bare URL PDF]
External links
- ISBN 0-9526064-4-5.
- Polytechnic Stadium
- Video of Olympic athletics trials at the stadium
- Video of Windsor to Chiswick Marathon in 1950
- Jim Peters Marathon World Record