Bodymoor Heath Training Ground is Aston Villa Football Club's training ground, located at Bodymoor Heath in the North Warwickshire district of Warwickshire, England. The site was purchased from a farmer by then Aston Villa Chairman Doug Ellis in the early 1970s. The ground is situated near Fazeley, in the Tame Valley, by the side of the Birmingham and Fazeley Canal, a short distance from Drayton Manor Theme Park and Middleton Hall. It lies close to The Belfry Golf Club, Middleton Lakes RSPB reserve and Kingsbury Water Park, just a few hundred metres from the M42 link to Tamworth and Birmingham.
Bodymoor Heath | |
Former names | Recon Training Complex |
---|---|
Location | Bodymoor Heath Warwickshire |
Coordinates | 52°34′7″N 01°43′14″W / 52.56861°N 1.72056°W |
Owner | Aston Villa F.C. |
Type | Sports training facility |
Surface | Grass pitches (9) Synthetic turf (2) |
Construction | |
Built | 1970s |
Expanded | 2007 |
Construction cost | Total: £13+ million |
Tenants | |
Aston Villa F.C. |
Many of the past and present Aston Villa players have taken up residence in the area, one of the more rural parts of the Midlands, enabling them speedy travel to training sessions. The training ground houses both the first-team and the youth academy.
The facilities at Bodymoor Heath are also used as the home ground for the majority of the academy teams, with the Under 18s and younger using provided pitches and changing rooms. The Under 23s play at Villa Park.
History
The land used for Bodymoor Heath was purchased sometime during the 1970s from a local farmer by then-Chairman Doug Ellis, to replace the previous training facility in Trinity Road, Aston. However, by the late 1990s the facilities had started to look dated, prompting then-Villa manager John Gregory to criticise Ellis, stating that he believed he was "stuck in a time warp",[1] citing the Chairman's reluctance to invest further in the training ground as something of considerable concern.
Planning permission had been a significant problem for the club's intention to modernise the training facilities, and it wasn't until November 2005 that Aston Villa announced an £8 million redevelopment of Bodymoor Heath. Before the team's 2005-06 Premier League performance, Ellis had revealed that the club had budgeted the plans for achieving 10th-12th place.[2] However, they finished 16th, and as a result the development came to halt, having already been scaled down from its original plans. Once Randy Lerner purchased the club in September 2006, the club announced that work on the redevelopment of Bodymoor Heath would continue but with revisions and upgrades of the original plans resulting in a total cost of redevelopment of £13 million.[3] The new training ground, designed by HB Architects, was officially unveiled on 6 May 2007.
In March 2019, Aston Villa submitted plans to the local council to expand the gymnastics and sport science areas of the main Bodymoor Heath building[4], as well as adding a larger match analysis room and increasing the footprint of the facility by approximately 17% [5].
HS2 Impact
The construction of High Speed 2 has caused significant issues for Aston Villa, as the line will pass directly through the south-east corner of Bodymoor Heath and is expected to cause disruption for the first team and academy. The club are expected to be compensated for several million pounds by the Government for the land that will be lost[6].
In 2018, contractors O'Brien were appointed to oversee the relocation of parts of Bodymoor Heath in order to compensate for the land used for the line. All the academy pitches and two first team pitches were moved.[7].
Sponsorship
In April 2018, Aston Villa announced that Bodymoor Heath was to be renamed the "Recon Training Complex"[8], after a group owned by the club's sole owner at the time, Tony Xia. Although the sponsorship was initially stated to last for 5 years, the majority purchase of Aston Villa by a partnership consisting of Nassef Sawiris and Wes Edens eventually saw the sponsorship deal scrapped after just 7 months, and the old Bodymoor Heath name restored[9].
References
- ^ Gregory plays down chairman row
- ^ Villa chief gives O'Leary backing
- ^ https://astonvilla.vitalfootball.co.uk/bodymoor-heath-opening/
- ^ Birmingham Mail Bodymoor Heath
- ^ Planning Application Record
- ^ https://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/football/news/aston-villa-line-hs2-compensation-9250409
- ^ https://www.birminghampost.co.uk/business/commercial-property/obrien-start-aston-villa-training-14779442
- ^ https://www.avfc.co.uk/News/2018/04/11/new-training-ground-naming-rights-partner-announced
- ^ https://www.hitc.com/en-gb/2018/11/15/photo-aston-villas-new-owners-take-down-recon-signs-at-bodymoor/