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Spurs new stadium generates £800k in F&B per game


Having opened its £1bn 62,026-seat stadium this month, Tottenham Hotspur is now generating £800k in food and beverage revenue at each home game, according to The Sun.

Based on 19 Premier League games and a minimum of three Champions League group matches, that's an additional income of £17.6m, the newspaper stated.

The stadium, with the club's official catering partner Levy UK, offers a wide range of 65 food and drinks outlets; in the South Stand is the 'Market Place' with a range of food and drink outlets, and a selection of food outlets are also available in other stands.

Other features include an in-house bakery and the world's first microbrewery in a stadium, which can produce one million pints of craft beer a year and deliver up to 10,000 pints a minute.

There are a number of bars for fans on match day. In the South Stand is the Goal Line Bar, which at 65m is the longest in Europe. The White Hart and The Shelf are bars in the East Stand, while The Dispensary is found in the West Stand.

A range of hospitality facilities in the East and West Stands are provided for those with premium memberships. These include two Sky Lounges, with views over London and the pitch, the Sky Bridge, which is the world's first bridge to be suspended from the roof of a stadium, 65 suites, Michelin star level dining, and the Tunnel Club that allows its members to observe the players as they walk from the dressing room to the pitch through a glass-walled tunnel.

The stadium is intended to be active all year round as a sports and entertainment destination with conference and banqueting facilities. It offers visitor attractions such as a Sky Walk, whereby visitors may walk up the side of the stadium, right up to the roof, and it has a viewing deck over the South Stand where they may view the goal line from the roof or abseil down to the south podium. The East Stand includes a double-height banquet hall that may be used for conference events.

The stadium provides separate facilities for football and NFL players; these include changing rooms, medical facilities, restaurants, hydrotherapy pools, warm-up areas, pre-match players' lounge, as well as lounges and creches for their families.

On the northwest corner is M cafe, a media room that may be open to the public and used as a cafe on non-match days.

This is the country's first entirely cashless sports venue and is one of the largest stadiums in the Premier League, and the largest club stadium in London.

A retractable artificial surface that slides across the pitch is a nod to Tottenham's hopes of ultimately hosting the NFL's Super Bowl and its own London-based franchise, as well as major concerts and events.