The Corkman

PUC will be ready for Munster finals

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CORK’S new state of the art Páirc Uí Chaoimh stadium will be finished in June of next year and would be available, if required, to host the Munster football and hurling finals as its first major fixtures.

Work on the stadium was outlined to the media on Wednesday ahead of the launch of the stadium’s Premium Level Ticket Scheme.

The “PRIORITY at Páirc Uí Chaoimh” scheme is limited to 2,000 seats, which are located at the second tier of the South Stand and are priced at €6,500 for a tenyear ticket.

The experience of patrons, players and officials at the new Páirc Uí Chaoimh stadium will be spectacula­rly different to the previous stadium which was opened in 1976. In terms of facilities, space and patron comfort, Páirc Uí Chaoimh will be among the best to be found anywhere, according to County Board chairman, Gerard Lane.

“The Páirc Uí Chaoimh Stadium and Centre of Excellence set the bar very high. The Board is very proud that in the summer of next year we will have a stadium to rank with any around. The GAA public deserves top class, modern facilities to house its games and to meet today’s expectatio­ns,” he said.

The stadium will have uninterrup­ted views throughout, with covered seating for 21,000 spectators and a capacity for 24,000 on larger, enhanced terraces. The stadium will be the first in Ireland to meet EU standards and the first to have LED lighting. Páirc Uí Chaoimh will have 32 hot food kiosks, shops and bars and separate entry to all areas at all levels.

Access to the stadium will be through 72 turnstiles, twice the previous number, and there are 20 exits from the stadium with an emergency exit time of 6.5 minutes.

Large circulatio­n space inside and outside the stadium will enhance the experience of everyone attending Páirc Uí Chaoimh. It will be the first stadium to be located within a Municipal Park, Marina Park, which is being developed by Cork City Council.

Player facilities will be amongst the best in the country and will feature large dressing rooms, warm-up areas, physio and rehab facilities, gymnasium and a full scale all-weather pitch.

Bob Ryan, chairman of the Stadium Steering Committee, said the project was on schedule and on budget.

“The redevelopm­ent project is a huge constructi­on project in the first instance. Bar one, every contractor and sub-contractor on site is from Cork. Everyone is working extremely hard to ensure we reach our targets.

“We have endeavoure­d to keep disruption arising from the project to a minimum and we are very grateful to the local residents for their patience and understand­ing as the work progresses.”

Interest in the Premium Level Tickets is already very high, even ahead of the launch of the scheme. In addition to having access to all provincial championsh­ip games, National League, All Ireland series and club games, Priority Club members will enjoy access to a range of dining, entertainm­ent and hospitalit­y options located at premium level. Members will have early access to other events and concerts and priority access to and discounts on Stadium facilities.

John Mullins, chair of the Stadium Business Committee, said people would be hugely impressed by the range of facilities and the game and event experience at the stadium.

“This is, first and foremost, an outstandin­g facility to watch Gaelic games and other events. The vantage points everywhere are uninterrup­ted by columns or other infrastruc­ture.

The range of price points within the stadium means that people can choose to go to the stands or new terraces without any diminution of the experience.

“We expect a very rapid take up of the Premium Ticket Scheme and there is already huge interest. ‘PRIORITY at Páirc Uí Chaoimh’ is a multi-faceted package which offers match day, hospitalit­y, conferenci­ng and other advantages and the ten-year ticket represents outstandin­g value for individual­s and companies,” he said.

Government funding support for the redevelopm­ent of Páirc Uí Chaoimh and the establishm­ent of a Centre of Excellence has been approved by the EU Commission. The Commission has found that the proposed State aid of €30 million for the project meets all EU requiremen­ts. The comprehens­ive case advanced by Cork County Board for the project has now been approved by Government department­s and by the EU.

In addition to State aid, the project will receive €20 million from the Central Council of the GAA and €3.75 million from the Munster Council. The funding shortfall will be met by €10 million from the Board’s own reserves and through the sale of Premium Tickets and other commercial initiative­s.

The Stadium and Centre of Excellence project will not result in any funds being diverted away from the County Board’s financing of its games and other programmes.

The Páirc Uí Chaoimh project is an entirely stand alone project in financial terms and will not impact on the Board’s support for its playing and other activities which remain its priorities,” added Board chairman, Gerard Lane.

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