Nottingham Forest City Ground expansion: design and crowd-flow notes for engineers
Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

First reported on The Construction Index
30 Second Briefing
Nottingham Forest has submitted new plans to expand the City Ground from 30,445 to about 52,000 seats, replacing last year’s approved but smaller 35,000-capacity scheme focused on rebuilding the Peter Taylor Stand. The revised project team is led by KSS Design Group, with Buro Happold, Gleeds and Savills advising, and owner Evangelos Marinakis committing “significant investment” for a “sustainable and iconic” redevelopment. For civil and structural engineers, the jump to a 52,000-seat bowl signals substantially larger crowd loading, egress, services and transport interface requirements on an already constrained riverside site.
Technical Brief
- Previous 35,000-capacity consent, centred on demolishing the Peter Taylor Stand, has been formally shelved.
- KSS Design Group brings recent UK stadium expansion experience from Anfield and Elland Road schemes.
- Architect Konstantinos Chatzimanolis, ex‑Foster & Partners, has been developing expansion concepts with Forest since April last year.
- Multi‑authority coordination (Mayor of the East Midlands plus three councils) implies complex transport, access and environmental interfaces.
Our Take
Within our 345 Infrastructure stories, only a small subset involve football stadia in the United Kingdom, so the City Ground scheme places Nottingham Forest Football Club alongside higher-profile redevelopments at venues like Anfield and Elland Road in terms of complexity and stakeholder scrutiny.
The involvement of firms such as KSS Design Group, Buro Happold, Gleeds and Savills signals that the Peter Taylor Stand and wider City Ground works are likely to be treated as a major urban regeneration asset in the East Midlands, with planning risk spread across Rushcliffe Borough Council, Nottingham City Council and Nottinghamshire County Council rather than a single authority.
Given the article’s Sustainability tag, the use of multi-disciplinary consultants already active on other UK stadia suggests that any near‑term expansion at City Ground will probably need to meet higher performance standards on energy, transport access and community impact than legacy stands built under older regulations.
Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.
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