The development has saw the demolition of the club’s former ground, as well as replacing Belle Vue Sports Centre and Consett Baths with a £3m community based sports complex. I’ve featured Consett a couple of times on the blog but haven’t gave the club the full Google caboodle, so here you are..
Consett was a basic village in 1841 with 145 residents before becoming a boom town, as it sits on top of coking coal and blackband iron ore, and along with nearby limestone, had the three essential ingredients needed for blast furnaces to produce iron and steel. The Derwent Valley was the cradle of the British steel industry helped by the easy availability of coal from Tyneside and the import of high quality iron ore from Sweden via the port of the Tyne. However, following the invention of the Bessemer process in the 19th century, steel could be made from British iron ore, so the Derwent Valley's geographical advantage was lost to South Yorkshire as Sheffield became the leading center of the British steel industry.
The closure of the steel works in 1980 marked the end of the Derwent Valley steel heritage, and along with the closure of coal mines, it was also a first step in the decline of all heavy industry in the area, reaching an unemployment peak of 36% in in 1981.The club have finished league runners-up in 1976-77 and 2007-08 and have won the Second Division on two occasions in 1988-89 and 2005-06. They’ve also lifted the Northern League Cup in 1995 as well as winning the Durham Challenge Cup six times.
There are two seated stands, one to the right hand side of the dugouts at the entrance end and the other sitting on the halfway line at the far side. Both are the regularly seen meccanno type stands, filled with red flip seats. The changing rooms/clubhouse block are to the left of the dugouts and the rest of the ground is open. The best and most important feature is the 3G pitch, as Consett is notorious for being the first place in the north-east for snowfall and freezing temperatures, so there shouldn’t be any problems getting a match on now, just as long as they’ve got some big shovels!
In true Consett fashion the shiny new pitch already had a frost coating and there was the distinct Derwent Valley chill in the air. Prior to kick off the stadium was officially opened by the Vice-Chairman of Durham County Council John Robinson and Peter Beardsley, the Toon legend put on his boots and wore the number 10 shirt as a guest player for the evening.
I would have loved to see Peter score the very first goal at the Belle Vue Stadium, however that honor went to another Geordie as Adam Campbell fired United ahead on the half hour mark.Newcastle made several substitutions at the break including two old warhorses from the Everton team of the ‘80s, now on the NUFC staff – Kevin Richardson and Dave Watson, the big center half breezed through the game and hardly broke sweat.
On 56 minutes Consett equalised when substitute Luke Sullivan knocked in a right wing cross, but United snatched it late on when County Durham-born defender Jamie Cobain header home a near post header from a corner kick.A fantastic evening and great reward for everyone connected with Consett AFC who have worked so hard in making this happen. The Belle View Stadium might not win any architectural awards but this won’t bother anyone at the club, as the whole point of the move is to benefit the community and built on a successful youth set up. The club run a large junior section covering all ages and have just announced a link with the Newcastle United Football Foundation, so things are looking bright and certainly heading in the right direction for The Steelmen.CAFC 1(Sullivan 56) NUFC(Campbell 30 Cobain 86)
Att.TBC (approx 1,500)
Admission £6
Programme £2
Previous Consett AFC posts
My first visit to Belle Vue
My last visit to Belle Vue
Consett by The Riverside
Ground no.374 Belle View Stadium - Matchday Web album(28 pictures)