Alexandra Stadium: Crewe Alexandra
Crewe Alexandra Football Club have a long and illustrious history. For most people the team will always be associated with Gresty Road, their home since 1906. They are still at Gresty Road but the ground is officially known as The Alexandra Stadium. A pernickety difference, perhaps, but there was actually a ground on Gresty Road that was called Alexandra Recreation Ground, with Crewe playing there on and off from their formation in 1887 until the current ground opened in 1906.
In the end they were forced to leave Alexandra Recreation Ground when the club received a compulsory purchase order. They had to abandon the stadium because a new railway line was being built there. This is part of the reason the club’s nickname is The Railwaymen. Instead a new ground was built a short distance to the West of the Rec ground.
The stadium has been sponsored by Mornflake since 2021.
Stats
Alexandra Stadium Stats | |
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Year Opened | 1906 |
Capacity | 10153 |
Average Attendance | 5090 |
Record Attendance | 20000 (Crewe v Tottenham (1960)) |
Pitch Size | 102 x 67 (6834) |
Nickname | Gresty Road |
Former Name | Gresty Road |
Owner | Crewe Alexandra FC |
Sponsor | Mornflake |
Clubs Hosted | Crewe Alexandra |
Crewe Alexandra Stats | |
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Year Founded | 1877 |
Nickname | The Railwaymen, The Alex |
Club Mascot | Gresty the Lion |
Rivals | Port Vale, Wrexham, Shrewsbury Town, Stoke City, Chester City, Stockport County |
Previous Stadiums | Alexandra Recreation Ground, Sandbach |
Kit | Red (Home) / Green & Black (Away) / Black (Third) |
Training Ground | Crewe Alex Academy Training Ground |
Shirt Sponsor | Mornflake |
Team Owner | Charles Grant |
Record Goalscorer | Herbert Swindells (137) |
Record Appearances | Tommy Lowry (482) |
Alexandra Stadium Photos
By Rept0n1x (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0]
Alexandra Stadium Seating Plan and Where to Sit
Alexandra Stadium is built very much in the ‘English Style’, with a stand on each side of the pitch. These stands often change their names due to sponsorship. Here is a little bit of information about each of the stands:
- The Main Stand – Opened in time for the 1999-2000 season, this stand cost just over £5 million to build and houses things like the dugouts and the club’s offices.
- Gresty Road End – Regardless of who sponsors it, this stand will only ever be known as The Gresty Road End to supporters. It is a small, single-tier structure that often houses the most vocal Crewe fans.
- Whitby Morrison Ice Cream Van Stand – This single-tier stand is where the away supporters are housed and used to be called The Popular Side.
- The Family Stand – Standing behind the goal at the opposite side of The Gresty Road End, this single-tier stand houses the club’s family section.
Crewe Alexandra Ticket Prices
Crewe Alexandra’s ticketing structure is a little tricky to understand. The club doesn’t categorise their matches but the price for tickets is different depending on which stand you are in. Other things that affect the cost of tickets: your age and disability status and whether or not you are a member.
Memberships cost different amounts for different age bands, but they offer a significant saving on ticket prices if you attend the match on a regular basis. Here are the cheapest and most expensive tickets for adults and concessions, with prices for Members being a few pounds cheaper:
- Adults: £25.00 – £27
- Concessions: £19.50 – £21
How To Get Crewe Alexandra Tickets
You can buy tickets easily via the website, or call the club over the phone or else pop into the ticket office in person.
Where to Buy
Getting To Alexandra Stadium
Crewe has long been considered to be something of a gateway to the North, so it’s reasonably easy to access from most places in the country. Here are some of the more common transport methods you’ll want to consider:
Train – Crewe Alexandra Railway Station is just five minutes away from the ground for even a slow walker. A direct train from London will take between an hour and a half to just under three hours, depending on the carrier.
Bus – As it’s so close to the centre of Crewe there aren’t really any specific bus’s that you’re recommended to get. Pretty much any bus that goes through the centre will do the job for you, to be honest.
Car – Alexandra Stadium is just off the M6, with Junction 16 offering the easiest access. Follow the A500 to the A5020 then follow the signs from Crewe Town Centre. You’ll soon see signs for the ground as well as the ground itself.
By Air – Both Liverpool John Lennon Airport and Manchester Airport are close to Crewe, with Manchester probably offering the better public transport options as there is a direct train from the airport to Crewe.
Taxi – Given the ground’s proximity to the railway station it’s almost entirely pointless to get a taxi. If you really want to, however, then expect to pay about £4 or so for a journey that shouldn’t take much more than a minute.
Parking Near Alexandra Stadium
There is a pay and display car park at the stadium that has 564 spaces and a cost of £4 per stay. There is also some on-street parking in the vicinity, though make sure you keep an eye out for parking restrictions.
Useful Resources
- Parking - Just Park
Alexandra Stadium Hotels
Both Manchester and Liverpool are reasonably close, as is Chester. All three of them offer bright lights and better choices, but Crewe isn’t exactly a wasteland. Here are some of our favourite hotels that are reasonably close to the ground:
ibis Styles Crewe - £40+
Holiday Inn Express Crewe - £60+
Crewe Arms Hotel - £44+
Pubs and Bars Near Alexandra Stadium
As an old-style railway town it’s fair to say that there are a number of good drinking establishments in Crewe. Here are some of our favourites:
The British Lion
The Imperial Hotel
Retro Bar
Facilities
Gresty Road was virtually entirely rebuilt in the 1990s and up to the turn of the Millennium, so it’s sort of new but also sort of showing its age. There are places on the concourses to buy food and drink and so on, as well as a number of toilets, but it’s not the sort of place you would want to spend a long time at. It’s pleasant and friendly enough though for the short amount of time you’ll be there before or after the game.
Prices
- Programme: £3
- Pie: £3
- Cup of tea: £1.8
- Beer: £3.5
Hospitality
There are a number of interesting hospitality options available at Alexandra Stadium, with the club proud of the fact that they are affordable for plenty of different budgets. Here’s a look at some of them:
- Club 1877 – Hosted in the Wrights Lounge you will get a luxury 3 course meal, welcome drink, half time refreshments and as much tea and coffee as you like. On top of a seat in the director’s box, you can get access to pre-match manager talk and post match presentations.
- Club Alexandra – This is essentially like a lighter version of the package above, with a smaller meal, slightly less prestigious seats. It’s still great though.
Private Hire
There are a number of suites and lounges available for private hire at Alexandra Stadium. The Executive Suite, for example, overlooks the pitch and can house up to the 50 people. The refurbished Alexandra Suite, meanwhile, can welcome up to 100 people and is wheelchair accessible. The Carlsberg Lounge is the largest suite in the stadium. It can host a party of up to 300 people. Other options include the Board Room (16 people) and The Directors Lounge (10-12 people) for more intimate or private meetings
Stadium Tours & Museum
At the time of writing there are no tours of Alexandra Stadium on offer. That’s a shame because the ground is steeped in history and it would be fascinating to see things like the dressing rooms, players’ tunnel and dugouts. If anything changes then we’ll obviously update this section, but until then you’ll just have to stare at photos of the ground online and imagine what it would be like to wander around it on your own.
About Crewe Alexandra
Formed in 1877 and named after Princess Alexandra, Crewe were one of the founding members of the Second Division of the Football League when it formed in 1892. Ironically the club only lasted four years in the newly formed league before being relegated. The only major trophy that the club can boast about is the Football League Trophy that they won in 2013. They did reach the semi-finals of the FA Cup in 1888 but were eventually beaten by Preston North End. More recently they won the Second Division play-offs in 1997 and the League Two play-offs in 2012.
Crewe are perhaps best known in football as the club that had the longest-serving manager in the game: Dario Gradi. The Italian-English manager spent a 24-year spell at the club from 1983 until 2007 before co-managing the team alongside Steve Holland until December 2008. He then took charge of the club again from October 2009 until November 2011. Gradi had a focus on youth development and some notable players passed through the club during his time, such as Rob Jones, Neil Lennon, Danny Murphy and Robbie Savage.
Alexandra Stadium History
Gresty Road began life in a very modest fashion. When the club first moved into the stadium there weren’t any stands, with embankments surrounding the perimeter of the pitch rather than stands. A main stand was built on the Southern side of the ground but it was destroyed in a fire in 1932. Before the ground was restructured in the 1990’s it managed a record capacity of 20,000 when Tottenham Hotspur arrived for an FA Cup match in 1960.
The modern Gresty Road came together in the aftermath of the Hillsborough Disaster, when the Taylor Report into the disaster decreed that stadiums should become all-seater affairs. The club chose to renovate every stand with the most recent one being The Main Stand (Air Products Stand as it’s currently known). It was entirely rebuilt during the off-season in 1999, gaining a capacity of just under 7,000 at a cost of about £5.2 million.
Future Developments
The most likely development at Gresty Road in the foreseeable future will be the redevelopment of The Whitby Morrison Ice Cream Van Stand. The single-tier structure, formerly known as The Popular Side, has been earmarked for re-structuring as a two-tiered stand featuring executive boxes. At the moment it can house just over 1,500 supporters so that will likely double if the development goes ahead.
Other than that, they have permission to build a solar farm in the car park which they hope will help them save and maybe even generate money.