The Stadium address is:
Swansway Chester Stadium
Bumpers Lane
Chester
CH1 4LT
GROUND DIRECTIONS
Stay on the M56 motorway and follow the signs for North Wales and Queensferry A494, stay on this road until you see the exit sign for Flint/Chester A548, exit here, and then follow the sign for Chester A548. Stay on this road heading towards Chester, after passing the Lookers Vauxhall Dealership on the left hand side, turn right at the next set of traffic lights, into Sovereign Way. Continue until you see the Stadium on the right hand side.
RAIL TRAVEL
Nearest station: Chester Railway Station
History of the stadium
The Swansway Chester Stadium, is a stadium spanning the Wales-England border in the United Kingdom, which is the home of Chester FC,
When Chester City FC were taken over by new owners in March 1990, plans were announced to sell their Sealand Road stadium for redevelopment as a supermarket and build a new stadium at Bumpers Lane, and while the new stadium was being built they played at the far side of Cheshire at Macclesfield Town’s Moss Rose stadium. Sealand Road closed at the end of the 1989-90 season, and Chester would play at Macclesfield for the next two seasons.
Construction of the new Deva Stadium began in January 1992 and it opened seven months later in time for the new 1992-93 season.
It was the first English football stadium to fulfil the safety recommendations from the Taylor Report, which was commissioned after the Bradford Fire of 1985 and after the Hillsborough disaster of 1989.
The stadium was officially opened on 24 August 1992 by Morys Bruce, 4th Baron Aberdare.
The Deva Stadium hosted its first game on 25 August 1992, when Chester lost 2-1 in the League Cup to Stockport County. 11 days later, Chester beat Burnley 3-0 in the first Football League match on the ground. The stadium was officially opened on 13 October 1992, as Chester beat a Manchester United XI 2-0. Its tenth birthday in August 2002 was celebrated with a special friendly against a Liverpool XI, with Chester winning 1-0.
Between 2004 and 2007 it was officially known as the Saunders Honda Stadium for sponsorship purposes but then was known as the Cestrian Trading Stadium on the 2nd of May 2008
On 2 May 2008 it was announced that as of the 2008-09 season, the Deva would be known as The Cestrian Trading stadium
Chester City were dissolved with huge debts on 10 March 2010, two days after being expelled from the Blue Square Premier League (to which they had been relegated from the Football League the previous season), and as a result the stadium was left without a tenant. In May 2010 the owners of the ground, Chester and Cheshire West council awarded the lease to the newly formed phoenix club Chester FC.
The first Chester FC match at the stadium was a 3-0 victory over Aberystwyth Town F.C. on Saturday 24th July 2010, this was the first game played at the ground since February 2010, when Chester City played Ebbsfleet United, before the club folded.
Located outside the city centre in the Sealand Road Industrial Estate, the stadium is notable for straddling the England-Wales border. The pitch itself is in Wales (Flintshire), with the front gates and main office in England.
The stadium initially had a capacity of 6,012, before the away end was converted to seating, but now holds only around 5,400.
Local firm Exacta became sponsors of the Stadium in September 2010, and the ground has three sides of seating and one terraced end, known as the East Stand and The Harry McNally Terrace (both home), the Centurion Community Stand (half for home fans and half away fans) and the Swansway Chester Stand (away fans). In the summer of 2007, Chester City FC converted the South Stand from terracing to seating (as mentioned above). There have been few other changes of significance in the 15-year history of the Stadium, although the North Terrace was renamed the Harry McNally Terrace in December 2006 in honour of one of its most popular managers (who died two years earlier).
In 2013, the naming of the Stadium changed to the Swansway Chester Stadium following the expiration of Exacta’s sponsorship.
In 2015 the stadium was renamed to the Lookers Vauxhall Stadium.
In 2017, the naming of the stadium returned to Swansway Chester Stadium.