Fratton Park

Fratton Park
The Old Girl
Fortress Fratton
PO4
Interactive map of Fratton Park
AddressFrogmore Road, Portsmouth, PO4 8RA
Coordinates50°47′47″N 1°3′50″W / 50.79639°N 1.06389°W / 50.79639; -1.06389
OwnerPortsmouth F.C.
Capacity20,867
SurfaceNatural grass with artificial fibres
ScoreboardDigital
Record attendanceAll-time: 51,385 vs. Derby County
(26 February 1949)
All-seater: 20,821 vs. Tottenham Hotspur
(17 October 2009)
Field size100 × 66 m (109 × 72 yards)
Public transit Fratton
Construction
Built1899
Opened15 August 1899 (1899-08-15)
(first match: 6 September 1899)
Renovated1900, 1905, 1915, 1925, 1928, 1935, 1949, 1956, 1962, 1974, 1985, 1988, 1996, 1997, 2007, 2015, 2020–present
ArchitectAlfred H. Bone (1898–99, 1905), Arthur Cogswell (1900), Archibald Leitch (1925, 1935), KSS Design Group (1997)
Tenants
Portsmouth (1899–present)
Website
https://www.portsmouthfc.co.uk/

Fratton Park is a football ground in Portsmouth, Hampshire, and is the home of Portsmouth Football Club. Constructed in 1899, it has been the only home ground in Portmouth' F.C.'s history. The stadium's location on Portsea Island makes it the only professional English football ground not located on the mainland of Great Britain.

The first match at Fratton Park took place in September 1899. Subsequent developments included the pavilion in 1905, capacity expansion in 1935 (later reduced after the 1946 Burnden Park disaster), and floodlights in 1956, making it the first ground in England to stage an evening Football League match under artificial light. Its maximum capacity has been reduced to 20,867 since it became an all-seater ground in 1996. Several relocations plans proposed during the 1990s and 2000s failed to materialise.

Fratton Park is affectionately nicknamed "The Old Girl", "Fortress Fratton" and "PO4" (an abbreviation of its PO4 8RA postal code) and has a reputation for high attendances and a powerful atmosphere, similar to that of larger capacity stadia.