News

Everton Way makes huge progress in latest Bramley-Moore Dock stadium update

Add as preferred source on Google

Everton continue to push forward in their construction of the Bramley-Moore Dock stadium, which is seemingly nearing completion with immense speed.

The rate at which the magnificent brickwork is being erected, or the roof has been put together, is alarming, and even features such as the paving outside the ground and seats inside have started to take shape too.

Despite all the misery and turmoil suffered in recent years, this ongoing build feels like the light at the end of the tunnel for Evertonians, with the brand-new arena set to provide a refreshing platform with which a profitable future can be built.

Given the renewed hope attached to the stadium, fans are unsurprisingly clamouring for its completion, ready to get inside and start making cheering on some positive changes.

And, with the latest project update, fans’ excitement will only continue to build.

Especially given how they even offer some brief screen time to some alternative projects around the ground making progress, particularly down on Everton Way.

The walkway, in which many fans have purchased a personalised stone set to be engraved and encased forever, is one such feature, which is shown to have made huge progress as the builders begin laying the foundation for a historic and ground-breaking initiative.

When will Everton move into the Bramley-Moore Dock stadium?

Whilst there was plenty of debate regarding when Everton might depart Goodison Park, an answer was finally given just last month with the completion date of the stadium also largely confirmed.

As is often the case with such monstrous constructions, it is near-impossible to offer an exact date when it might be finished.

However, the club has always attested that late 2024 would be its goal, likely in preparation for an early 2025 move-in.

West Ham United v Everton FC - Premier League
Photo by Vince Mignott/MB Media/Getty Images

That was, until they revealed that they would leave the 2024/25 campaign for their current ground to receive a final lap of honour, as one of England’s most historic footballing homes.

Goodison Park has been Everton’s ground since its construction in 1892, and marked the second of what will soon be three stadiums that the Toffees have now owned in the city (Anfield being the first).

So, at the end of next season the Old Lady will be no more, and Everton will finally trade up for hopefully greener pastures.

That makes the 2025/26 term the first in which they will call Bramley-Moore Dock stadium their home, allowing fans to explore all these tiny details teased in project updates with complete freedom.