Everton Football Club has submitted an outline planning application to Liverpool City Council for a community-led legacy development at Goodison Park. Read more
Everton Football Club has submitted an outline planning application to Liverpool City Council for a community-led legacy development at Goodison Park. Read more
Everton Football Club has revealed the final designs of its new 52,000-seater stadium at Bramley-Moore Dock on Liverpool’s waterfront, before a detailed planning application is submitted to Liverpool City Council today. Read more
Everton Football Club has revealed the results of its record-breaking public consultation into designs for a proposed 52,000 capacity stadium at Bramley-Moore Dock. Read more
Everton Football Club has revealed the proposed designs for its iconic new stadium. Read more
Everton FC’s plans for a new stadium at Bramley-Moore Dock will be shown across the Liverpool City Region as part of the club’s second wide scale consultation with the public.
Goodison Park’s hospitality lounges will undergo a major renovation project this summer that will see all of the stadium’s suites and event spaces refreshed and upgraded. Read more
Everton FC has revealed the results of the first stage of its formal public consultation into plans to develop a new stadium at Bramley-Moore Dock and a community-led legacy project at Goodison Park. Read more
Everton FC’s plans to build a new stadium in Liverpool and leave a legacy at Goodison Park will take a major step forward with the launch of a widescale public consultation into the proposals. Read more
Everton FC has appointed a stadium development director to support the club’s ambition of delivering a new ground at Bramley-Moore Dock in Liverpool. Read more
Everton FC could have a new stadium “within two years,” according to the city’s mayor, Joe Anderson. Read more
Goodison Park, home of Everton FC, was the location for a ‘world first’ on Monday, as ADI ran a live demo from its HQ in Preston during the SportsVMT Summit.
The conference audience of club media managers and sport broadcasters witnessed the first use of Adobe Anywhere. With an ADI editor at Goodison Park and an Adobe editor at the conference, both worked on assets stored on the Adobe Anywhere server at ADI, and both contributed to the clip, including a live interview from pitchside along with selected archived footage. The end result was played out to the big screen in the corner of Goodison and viewed back at the summit, receiving plaudits from all.
This revolutionary system means all the assets – from high quality video and graphics to sponsor content – are stored in one place, allowing video journalists and editors to access the files they need. Under the bonnet, there’s a lot of clever stuff to allow transmission of files to various devices, including tablets for sign-off by execs, without losing quality. Users of ADI’s LiveVenue can use Adobe Anywhere simply by buying an Adobe Creative Cloud subscription.
ADI has also developed LiveVenue with the help of technical partners like Nevion and EVS, and the VMT summit was packed with demos and best-practice information from these companies’ working around the globe. IMG Studios is a content partner which is offering clubs a secure and searchable video content archival service on ADI’s servers, both for in-house retrieval and for licensing to an international audience.
A discussion panel on commercialising content brought out the complexity of managing the marketing and monetising of video assets but also the potential for achieving fan engagement in and beyond the venue. During the panel session, Mark Ellis, COO at Middlesbrough FC, advised:
LiveVenue impacts a lot of people. Make sure roles and accountabilities are clear from the start.
Ellis also told PanStadia & Arena Management that stadiums need to carefully assess the wide ramifications of HD video production in the bowl, especially in relation to UEFA’s floodlighting requirements for the top divisions in Europe.
by Mark Webb