ЈON Stemp had never been to Manchester before September 2008 when he was hired to transform the infrastructure of the newly-rich Manchester City, yet his first day served as a perfect crash course in the city and its football teams.
His taxi driver at the train station asked him if he meant 'the f***ing council house' when he asked to go to the stadium, and once he arrived a City executive gave him a book covering 100 years of the club's history and a Jimmy Grimble DVD.
The message was clear: this club has existed long before you so learn about the history and leave it in a better place.
The job description was no less daunting. City's owners, having tried to improve what they had after their 2008 takeover, had quickly reached the conclusion that a new facility was needed to match their lofty ambitions and realised that they could come to a mutually beneficial partnership with a city council that was desperate to see regeneration in east Manchester.
So was born the 'World Leading Project, which saw Stemp and his colleagues go around the world for two years learning from what the top sporting organisations had got rightand wrong with their training grounds. One of the biggest lessons came from Arsenal, where Arsene Wenger admitted where they had gone wrong with London Colney in 1999. "We went and sat with him and he said: 'We realised the biggest mistake at our training ground on the day that we opened. We didn't leave room in our building design for what we didn't yet know. We designed for a moment in time," Stemp told the M.E.N.
"That resonated with us and when we designed the facility we had 12 teams of different age groups - there are 24 teams now and the reason why we can accommodate them is because we built in room for evolution and growth. Even now, it's starting to grow but because it's landlocked you can't really go bigger once you've locked your acreage in. It was vital that we left room for it to grow over time.
This story is from the December 09, 2024 edition of Manchester Evening News.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the December 09, 2024 edition of Manchester Evening News.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
'Unstoppable Ugarte finding his feet with standout showing in derby
BRUNO Fernandes described Manuel Ugarte as 'unstoppable' after the Manchester derby.
Rashford seeks a new challenge - but Amorim will have to replace him...
THE January transfer window is a fortnight away from opening - and United face a mammoth month following Ruben Amorim's first few weeks in charge.
Pep must rediscover spark to motivate City squad that has already made history
BOSS HAS TO FIND TARGET TO GALVANISE PLAYERS
Guardiola has seen greats come and go but this rebuild will be his toughest yet
AS Christmas comes into view City will be hoping for a couple of presents in the January transfer window.
Stokes will never hold himself back
ENGLAND captain Ben Stokes promised there will be no \"holding back\" when he recovers from his latest injury problems, insisting he is ready to keep digging deep for his country.
Station will close to allow £10m upgrades
NO TRAINS WILL CALL FOR TWO MONTHS NEXT YEAR
'His death could have easily been avoided'
FIRM FINED AFTER CONNOR CRUSHED TO DEATH
Crooked ex-bank boss to learn his fate after £100,000 fraud
A SENTENCING date has been set for a former Co-op bank boss who admitted a catalogue of fraud worth almost £100,000.
Ex-detective is banned from policing after cocaine shame
A POLICE detective quit the force after a routine drugs test revealed traces of cocaine in her urine.
Please, Swear!
SCHOOL STAFF ACCIDENTALLY RECORD FOUR-LETTER COMMENTS ABOUT PUPILS