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Tottenham High Road

London road stubsStreets in the London Borough of HaringeyTottenhamUse British English from September 2017
Tottenham High Road, Seven Sisters, London N15 geograph.org.uk 1766620
Tottenham High Road, Seven Sisters, London N15 geograph.org.uk 1766620

Tottenham High Road is the main thoroughfare through the district of Tottenham, in the London Borough of Haringey. It runs from Edmonton in the north (where it becomes Fore Street) to Stamford Hill in the south (where the road becomes Stamford Hill). It follows, for the whole of its length, the course of the erstwhile Roman road, Ermine Street. South of Bruce Grove the road is part of the A10; to the north it is part of the A1010. High Road N 15 falls within the South Tottenham postal district. High Road N 17 falls within the Tottenham postal district.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Tottenham High Road (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Tottenham High Road
High Road, London Tottenham (London Borough of Haringey)

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Wikipedia: Tottenham High RoadContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.60068 ° E -0.06783 °
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Address

High Road

High Road
N17 0AE London, Tottenham (London Borough of Haringey)
England, United Kingdom
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Tottenham High Road, Seven Sisters, London N15 geograph.org.uk 1766620
Tottenham High Road, Seven Sisters, London N15 geograph.org.uk 1766620
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Northumberland Development Project

The Northumberland Development Project is a mixed-use development project that centres around the new Tottenham Hotspur Stadium which replaced White Hart Lane as the home ground of Tottenham Hotspur. On opening in April 2019, the stadium had a capacity for 62,062 spectators, later increased to 62,303, and was designed to host football as well as NFL games. The development plans also include 585 new homes, a 180-room hotel, a local community health centre, the Tottenham Experience, a Spurs museum and club shop, an extreme sports facility, as well as the Lilywhite House, which contains a Sainsbury's supermarket, a sixth form college and the club's headquarters.Plans for the project were first announced in 2008 and a planning application submitted in 2009. The project however was revised several times and delayed due to objections by conservation groups and a protracted dispute over a compulsory purchase order (CPO) on existing businesses at the proposed development site. A revised plan was first approved in 2010 by the Haringey Council, and following further revisions, building started in September 2012. Only part of this initial plan was executed, and the construction of the stadium did not commence until 2016 after the CPO dispute has been resolved and a new design approved by Haringey Council. The stadium opening date was revised several times but eventually opened during the 2018–19 season on 3 April 2019. The new stadium also serves as a venue for at least two of the National Football League (NFL)'s London Games each season. The NFL invested £10 million ($12.8m) in Tottenham's new stadium, just over 1% of the budget. The stadium features the world's first dividing retractable pitch, and it is the first stadium in the UK to have two pitches inside: a retractable grass pitch for football, and a synthetic surface underneath for NFL games and other events. The project is estimated to cost around £1 billion and is intended to be a catalyst for a wider regeneration scheme in Tottenham.