Donegal Community Stadium

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Donegal_Community_Stadium an entity of type: Thing

The Donegal Community Stadium is a stalled construction project in Stranorlar, Ireland. The stadium was initially intended to have a capacity of 6,800 spectators, and proposed as an association football venue to replace Finn Park as the home stadium of Finn Harps F.C. Planning permission was granted in June 2007, and ground breaking was started in May 2008. After intermediate delays, work recommenced in late 2011 with foundations in place. The project was again delayed in October 2012, with "minimal work" undertaken between 2014 and 2020, pending €6.7 million in additional government funding. In April 2021, a "provisional allocation" of government funding was reportedly announced. By May 2022, the development plans were further revised and scaled-back to account for inflation and concerns rdf:langString
rdf:langString Donegal Community Stadium
rdf:langString Donegal Community Stadium
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xsd:integer 2008
rdf:langString Joseph McMenamin & Sons
rdf:langString Artist's impression
rdf:langString Railway Road, Stranorlar, Republic of Ireland
rdf:langString Donegal Community Stadium
xsd:string 54.80083333333333 -7.768611111111111
rdf:langString The Donegal Community Stadium is a stalled construction project in Stranorlar, Ireland. The stadium was initially intended to have a capacity of 6,800 spectators, and proposed as an association football venue to replace Finn Park as the home stadium of Finn Harps F.C. Planning permission was granted in June 2007, and ground breaking was started in May 2008. After intermediate delays, work recommenced in late 2011 with foundations in place. The project was again delayed in October 2012, with "minimal work" undertaken between 2014 and 2020, pending €6.7 million in additional government funding. In April 2021, a "provisional allocation" of government funding was reportedly announced. By May 2022, the development plans were further revised and scaled-back to account for inflation and concerns that "prices for building works have rapidly risen [in 2022]". This scaled-back proposal was reportedly given the "green light" in August 2022.
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