The Loft | |
Loftus Road in 2010
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Full name | Loftus Road Stadium |
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Location |
Shepherd's Bush London, W12 England |
Coordinates | 51°30′33″N 0°13′56″W / 51.50917°N 0.23222°WCoordinates: 51°30′33″N 0°13′56″W / 51.50917°N 0.23222°W |
Public transit | White City |
Owner | Queens Park Rangers Football & Athletic Club Ltd |
Capacity | 18,439 |
Record attendance |
35,353 including standing (Queens Park Rangers v Leeds United, 27 April 1974) 19,002 all seated (Queens Park Rangers v Manchester City, 6 November 1999) |
Field size | 112 by 72 yards (102 by 66 m) |
Surface | Grass |
Scoreboard | Electronic |
Construction | |
Built | 1904 |
Opened | 1904 |
Tenants | |
Shepherd's Bush F.C. (1904–1915) Queens Park Rangers F.C. (1917–31, 1933–62, 1963–present) London Wasps (Guinness Premiership) (1996–2002) Fulham F.C. (2002–2004) |
35,353 including standing (Queens Park Rangers v Leeds United, 27 April 1974)
Loftus Road Stadium is a football stadium in Shepherd's Bush, London, which is home to Queens Park Rangers. In 1981, the ground became the first stadium in British professional football to have an artificial pitch of Omniturf installed, which remained until 1988.
Rugby union team London Wasps shared the ground with QPR between 1996 and 2002 and Premier League football club Fulham shared it from 2002 to 2004 while Craven Cottage was closed for reconstruction. Other users of the stadium have included the Jamaican and Australian national football teams. In 1985, Barry McGuigan defeated Eusebio Pedroza for the World Boxing Association featherweight championship at the stadium.
The ground was first used on 11 October 1904 by Shepherd's Bush F.C., an amateur side that was disbanded during the First World War.QPR moved to Loftus Road in 1917, having had their ground at Park Royal commandeered by the army in 1915. At that time the ground was an open field with a pavilion. One stand from Park Royal was dismantled and re-erected forming the Ellerslie Road stand in 1919. This stand remained as the only covered seating in the ground until 1968 and was replaced in 1972. It had a capacity of 2,950.