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Economic Development

Leicester City owners give update on King Power Stadium expansion plans

Aiyawatt 'Top' Srivaddhanaprabha says "ambitions and long-term objectives have not changed" but safety comes first

Jamie Vardy helped Leicester win the league in 2016

Leicester City – fresh from a fifth place finish in the Premier League – have brought in a “brief pause” to their stadium expansion plans in light of the coronavirus pandemic.

With the possibility of fans returning to stadiums in England from October, the club has revealed that it will restart discussions on increasing capacity by the end of the year.

City wants to refurbish the ground on the edge of Leicester city centre and increase attendance to around 42,000.

In the past couple of years the club has already spent millions improving its main hospitality areas and boxes.

The most recent accounts showed £2.6 million had been invested in drawing up plans for the redevelopment, but the pandemic has seen progress halted.

Last October a six-year loan of £91m was agreed between the club and King Power for infrastructure projects.

Meanwhile club chairman Aiyawatt ‘Top’ Srivaddhanaprabha – who is also chief executive of the Thai-based King Power duty free empire – said City’s new £100m base at Seagrave, near Loughborough, has also suffered a brief delay.

It was initially scheduled to be ready at the end of June but heavy rain earlier in the year and then the spread of Covid-19 has slowed work on the site.