Port Vale FC versus Chasetown FC in the FA Cup in 2007 | |
![]() Interactive map of Vale Park | |
| Full name | Vale Park |
|---|---|
| Address | Hamil Road Burslem Stoke-on-Trent ST6 1AW Staffordshire England |
| Coordinates | 53°2′59″N2°11′33″W / 53.04972°N 2.19250°W /53.04972; -2.19250 |
| Elevation | 520 feet (160 m)[1] |
| Owner | Port Vale F.C. |
| Capacity | 16,800[2] |
| Record attendance | 49,768 v.Aston Villa 20 February 1960 |
| Field size | 114 yards (104 m) x 77 yards (70 m) |
| Surface | Grass |
| Scoreboard | Yes |
| Construction | |
| Broke ground | 1944 |
| Built | 1950 |
| Opened | 24 August 1950 |
| Renovated | 1989–98 (converted to all-seater stadia) |
| Expanded | 1954 (Railway Stand) 1989 (Disabled Stand) |
| Construction cost | £50,000 |
| Tenants | |
| Port Vale F.C. (1950–present) | |
Vale Park is afootball stadium in the area ofBurslem,Stoke-on-Trent,Staffordshire, England, and it has been the home ground ofPort Vale Football Club since its opening in 1950. It has a capacity of 15,695 for unallocated seated games, rising to 16,800 for matches with allocated seating, having been renovated during 1989–1998 to become anall-seater stadium.
The ground has seen its capacity go up and down, its official peak being 42,000 in 1954 againstBlackpool, although a club record 49,768 managed to squeeze in for a 1960FA Cup fifth round fixture againstAston Villa. The highest recorded all-seated attendance at Vale Park is currently 16,326 for a League Cup tie against Arsenal on 24 September 2025[3]
At 525 feet abovesea level, it is the eleventh highest ground in the country and second-highest in theEnglish Football League. Thepitch isclay underneath the grass, rather thansand. These two factors make the pitch vulnerable to freezing temperatures.[4] It is an extremely dry pitch, which often makespassing football quite difficult.[5] There is also acoal seam under the pitch, and numerousmine shafts dotted around the local area, including many under the park opposite the ground.[6]
The Vale Park pitch is one of the widest in the Football League.[7] The pitch was originally laid over a filled-in marl hole and does not have a subsoil structure so is liable to flooding as it lacks proper drainage; a complete re-laying of the pitch would be needed to fix the issue (the club were quoted£450,000 for this work in 2014[8]).[9] Denis Dawson was head groundsman from 1966 to 1975; he succeeded Len Parton and was followed by Graham Mainwaring.[9] The head groundsman from 1992 to 2022 was Steve Speed.[10][11] He was succeeded by Steve Alderson, who oversaw extensive pitch renovations financed by the Shanahan family.[12]
Following the club being informed that they would be evicted from theOld Recreation Ground by Stoke-on-Trent City Council, plans for a new stadium in a new area began.[13] In 1944, Hamil Road – the site of a former clay pit – was chosen,[14] a site opposite Burslem Park, where the club had played its football in the early years of its existence.[13] The development became known asTheWembley of theNorth due to the planned size of the stadium,[15][16] plans which included an 80,000 capacity with room for 1,000 parked cars.[13] The club's leadership had not allowed the club's third-tier status or lack of money to curb their ambition.[13] Lifetime seats were sold for £100 (the price of admission for roughly 200 matches), but fewer than 100 fans bought them.[13] Also costing £100, the pitch was the most expensive ever laid in the country at the time.[13]
The ground opened in 1950, having eventually cost £50,000, and boasting a capacity of 40,000 (360 seated).[13] The original ground consisted of just two stands, the Railway stand and the Lorne Street main stand, with banks of terracing at the Bycars and Hamil ends of the ground. The Bycars end was originally the Swan Passage stand from the Old Recreation Ground, which was taken apart, moved across the city and re-erected as the funds for an entirely new stand had run out.[17] The first match was a 1–0 victory overNewport County on24 August 1950 in front of 30,196 rain-soaked spectators.[13]Walter Aveyard took the honour of being the first to score at the ground. The stadium's name was revealed for the first time on the same day: Vale Park.[13] The club considered naming the stadium after chairman Alderman William Arthur Holdcroft, whose persistence and vision had been central to its development.[18]
Vale Park initially had problems with drainage, causing many games of the1950–51 season to be postponed.[19] The problem was finally resolved insummer 1960 when new drains were installed to help ease the winter mud spots.[19]
Insummer 1951, 578 seats were installed on the Railway Terrace, bringing the seated capacity of Vale Park to 1,010.[19] In 1954, the all-seater Railway Stand was built, as capacity gradually increased to 50,000 by the decade's end.[13] On24 September 1958, Vale Park saw its first match under the new £17,000floodlights, as the club beatWest Bromwich Albion 5–3.[19]
Insummer 1973, the club erected a 2.5 feet high steel fence around the Bycars End to help combat hooliganism.[20] A rare event occurred on17 January 1976, when the Vale directors permittedrivals Stoke to play a home game againstMiddlesbrough at Vale Park.[20] This happened because a severe gale severely damaged theVictoria Ground; whilst the gale also caused £2,000 worth of damage to Vale Park, the damage to Stoke's ground was much more severe.[20] A crowd of 21,009 saw Stoke win 1–0.
Insummer 1985, new safety regulations reduced Vale Park's capacity to 16,800 and later again to 16,300.[21] Thesummer of 1988 saw Vale Park given a £40,000 upgrade to repair the floodlights and a £20,000 electronicscoreboard was installed at the Hamil End.[21] Three executive boxes were also purchased fromNewcastle United, whilst facilities were opened to the local community.[21] Thefollowing year the stadium was upgraded for £250,000. However, grants helped to halve the cost for the club itself.[21] In November 1989, a £100,000 disabled stand was installed –the country's first purpose-built enclosure.[22] Despite this effort, inspectors closed the Bycars End down due to safety issues and reduced the stadium's capacity to 12,000 after cutting the capacity of the Railway Paddock by two-thirds.[21]
Insummer 1990, 3,750 yellow and white seats were fitted in the Railway Paddock, and 1,121 seats were added to the upper tier of the Bycars End.[21] The Bycars End roof was also removed for safety reasons, whilst a police box was constructed between the Railway Paddock and the Hamil End.[21] The paddock at the front of the Railway Stand was later made into an all-seated area, with just the Lorne Street side left as a standing area. Vale fans stood for the last time on Lorne Street at the end of the1997–98 season, with the stand being demolished before work began on a new £3 million structure. Work has yet to be finished due to a lack of finances and a change in club ownership. Despite the building work remaining uncompleted, the work done on the stadium underBill Bell from 1985 had vastly improved the ground, as proven by the fact thatsheep were once housed in the Railway Paddock toilets and allowed to graze on the pitch in the night; the toilets were notoriously unhygienic and were replaced underBill Bratt's reign in 2006.[23]
The Valiant 2001 Charter stated that Bratt's management team would invest £400,000 to install under-soil heating in mid-2002, and to also quickly complete the Lorne Street stand.[24] However, it took until 2020 for the seats to be installed.[25] ChairmanNorman Smurthwaite separated Vale Park from Port Vale after taking the club out ofadministration in 2012.[26] New high-tech floodlights were fitted in March 2019, paid for by the club's shirt sponsor.[27] The stadium's ownership was returned to the club after Smurthwaite sold the club toCarol and Kevin Shanahan in May 2019.[28] Five months later it was declared an "asset of community value status" by Stoke-on-Trent city council.[29] The Shanahans spent £500,000 on ground improvement by summer 2021.[30] Another £1.2 million was spent the following summer in order to make Vale Park aChampionship standard ground.[31]

The current stadium includes around 19,000 seats of which 16,800 are available for spectators and has four stands: Lorne Street opposite to the Railway Stand/Paddock, and the Bycars End facing the Hamil Road End.[32][33] The Lorne Street Stand is relatively new, with 2,045 useable seats and 48 executive boxes that host 711 people.[34][35] It was not completed when it opened in 1999, and although 1,500 missing seats were finally installed in April 2020 to visually complete the stand, over 2,000 seats remain unusable for spectators pending the reinstatement and fitting out of spectator concourse facilities in the Hamil half of the stand. The stand acts as the ground's grandstand,[13] containing the stadium's main entrance, dressing rooms, club offices and enterprise centre.[36] The Hamil End has 4,514 seats with the blocks nearest the Lorne St side allocated as the Family section, and a Fanzone area housed behind the stand. The Railway Stand has a capacity of 2,094[35] and for most matches with unreserved seating, the Railway Paddock has a capacity of 2,862.[35] The 3,363 capacity Bycars End has housed away supporters since 2023.[35][37] The Accessibility Stand located between the Lorne Street Stand and the Bycars End has room for 106 spectators[35] whilst the former Family Stand located between the Bycars End and the Railway Stand has been unused for spectators since 2023 when a large video screen was installed there.
On 1 August 1981, Vale Park hosted a one-off rock concert, Heavy Metal Holocaust,[38] featuringMotörhead,[39]Ozzy Osbourne Band,[40]Mahogany Rush,Triumph,Riot andVardis. Around 20,000 attended the concert, raising £25,000 for the club.[13]Lars Ulrich was also in attendance, months before he co-foundedMetallica.[41]
In 1985, the Stoke SpitfiresAmerican football team used the ground for matches.[13] The stadium has hosted threeEngland under-18 games. The first was a 7–2 win overSwitzerland in November 1992 (which saw aRobbie Fowlerhat-trick); the second was a 1–1 draw with Romania in September 1993; and the third was a goalless draw with Norway in June 2005.[42] It also hosted a full international women's match on 7 April 2017, whenEngland playedItaly.[43]
A club record 49,768 attended a 1960FA Cup fifth round fixture againstAston Villa.[13] Other historic matches include the defeat of two reigning FA Cup champions in the competition, asStanley Matthews'Blackpool were beaten 2–0 in February 1954, and then 42 years later holdersEverton were dumped out 2–1.[13][44] The biggest victory in a competitive match came in December 1958 whenGateshead were beaten 8–0.[13]