Bloomberg
Arsenal’s Property Business Becomes Debt-Free on Highbury Sales
September 24, 2010, 6:04 AM EDT
By Tim Barwell
Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Arsenal Football Club’s property business generated 156.9 million pounds ($246 million) of revenue in the year through June, allowing the top-flight English soccer team to repay all of its real-estate debt.
Built into the former stands of its Highbury Stadium in north London and bracketing a garden converted from the old field, the 724-unit Highbury Square development includes apartments and penthouses. The company sold 362 private homes in the year through May, up from 208 a year earlier, Arsenal Holdings Plc said today in a statement.
“The most pleasing aspect of these results is that the returns generated in the property business during the year, particularly at Highbury Square,” Chairman Peter Hill-Wood said in the statement. “We now have a debt-free property business which is accumulating surplus cash as further unit sales are made at Highbury Square.”
Arsenal, which has won England’s top league championship 13 times, played at Highbury from 1913 to 2006 before moving to its new 60,000-capacity Emirates Stadium nearby. League rules set for the 1993 season forced teams to convert to all-seated stadiums, cutting capacity at Highbury to 38,000 from 57,000 and driving the search for grounds that could generate greater revenue.
Instead of selling the Highbury site, the team decided to redevelop the stadium itself and sell apartments. The ground was first opened as a residential development in September 2009.
Arsenal holds the record for the longest uninterrupted period in England’s top league, having been there since 1919. In the final match at Highbury, Arsenal beat Wigan Athletic 4-2, with club-record goal scorer Thierry Henry getting three. Before moving to Highbury in 1913, Arsenal played in Woolwich, south London.
--Editors: Ross Larsen.
Arsenal’s Property Business Becomes Debt-Free on Highbury Sales
September 24, 2010, 6:04 AM EDT
By Tim Barwell
Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Arsenal Football Club’s property business generated 156.9 million pounds ($246 million) of revenue in the year through June, allowing the top-flight English soccer team to repay all of its real-estate debt.
Built into the former stands of its Highbury Stadium in north London and bracketing a garden converted from the old field, the 724-unit Highbury Square development includes apartments and penthouses. The company sold 362 private homes in the year through May, up from 208 a year earlier, Arsenal Holdings Plc said today in a statement.
“The most pleasing aspect of these results is that the returns generated in the property business during the year, particularly at Highbury Square,” Chairman Peter Hill-Wood said in the statement. “We now have a debt-free property business which is accumulating surplus cash as further unit sales are made at Highbury Square.”
Arsenal, which has won England’s top league championship 13 times, played at Highbury from 1913 to 2006 before moving to its new 60,000-capacity Emirates Stadium nearby. League rules set for the 1993 season forced teams to convert to all-seated stadiums, cutting capacity at Highbury to 38,000 from 57,000 and driving the search for grounds that could generate greater revenue.
Instead of selling the Highbury site, the team decided to redevelop the stadium itself and sell apartments. The ground was first opened as a residential development in September 2009.
Arsenal holds the record for the longest uninterrupted period in England’s top league, having been there since 1919. In the final match at Highbury, Arsenal beat Wigan Athletic 4-2, with club-record goal scorer Thierry Henry getting three. Before moving to Highbury in 1913, Arsenal played in Woolwich, south London.
--Editors: Ross Larsen.

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