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http://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/coventry-news/sky-blues-leave-alan-higgs-4870037
Charity told football club they would have to leave the facility unless they paid more than £12,000 for the maintenance of equipment
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The Alan Higgs Centre
Coventry City appear to have pulled their Academy out of the Alan Higgs Centre for good.
Office equipment has been removed and club signage taken down at the purpose-built Allard Way training facility after a row over unpaid maintenance bills came to a head.
The Centre, which is owned and run by the Alan Higgs Trust, told the football club that they would have to leave the facility unless they paid more than £12,000 for the maintenance of equipment that had been damaged and fallen into disrepair over the last two years.
The Trust say that efforts to recoup those costs have been ignored and that they are now looking at opening up the leisure facility to the community, while the club seek a new base.
The club’s Under-18s are currently training at Ryton but all other age groups, who were due to start training on Monday, are yet to return from their summer break.
City were using the University of Warwick at the tail end of last season when they first moved out of the Higgs Centre and that would appear the most likely alternative although, in the long term, there are concerns that could affect the Academy’s category two status which is subject to various facilities being provided.
“We’ve done ten years as an Academy and now it’s going to be a different life for the building,” conceded Peter Knatchbull-Hugessen, chairman of the Alan Higgs Centre Trust and the man behind building the £11million facility back in 2002 in order for it to house the club’s Academy.
“My sadness is the same as every fan has. The pain that is caused by all of this really can’t be measured. It’s individual people hurting because the club that they love is in such a state.
“Ten years ago the club had no money and was about to lose it’s Academy status so we had to get it up quickly.
Charity told football club they would have to leave the facility unless they paid more than £12,000 for the maintenance of equipment
Share on printShare on email
The Alan Higgs Centre
Coventry City appear to have pulled their Academy out of the Alan Higgs Centre for good.
Office equipment has been removed and club signage taken down at the purpose-built Allard Way training facility after a row over unpaid maintenance bills came to a head.
The Centre, which is owned and run by the Alan Higgs Trust, told the football club that they would have to leave the facility unless they paid more than £12,000 for the maintenance of equipment that had been damaged and fallen into disrepair over the last two years.
The Trust say that efforts to recoup those costs have been ignored and that they are now looking at opening up the leisure facility to the community, while the club seek a new base.
The club’s Under-18s are currently training at Ryton but all other age groups, who were due to start training on Monday, are yet to return from their summer break.
City were using the University of Warwick at the tail end of last season when they first moved out of the Higgs Centre and that would appear the most likely alternative although, in the long term, there are concerns that could affect the Academy’s category two status which is subject to various facilities being provided.
“We’ve done ten years as an Academy and now it’s going to be a different life for the building,” conceded Peter Knatchbull-Hugessen, chairman of the Alan Higgs Centre Trust and the man behind building the £11million facility back in 2002 in order for it to house the club’s Academy.
“My sadness is the same as every fan has. The pain that is caused by all of this really can’t be measured. It’s individual people hurting because the club that they love is in such a state.
“Ten years ago the club had no money and was about to lose it’s Academy status so we had to get it up quickly.