Liverpool to the entire long-awaited move of 50 million pounds of foreign rupture

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Liverpool has booked the international break in November as a time to move to its new centre in Kirkby.

The Reds were scheduled to move out of the iconic Melwood base in July, and last season was destined to be the last crusade at the site that has hosted them since the 1950s.

However, the structure of the new 50 million pound box was stopped due to the coronavirus pandemic shortly after football’s suspension earlier this year.

Contractors McLaughlin and Harvey ceased operating in late March as a result of COVID-19, but sent smaller personnel to the base in May when government rules indicated it should.

McLaughlin and Harvey consulted with the Construction Board and described an execution approach that was then communicated to their subcontractors at sites across the country.

Liverpool was in no hurry to leave their existing base after the agreement with Torus Housing Trust, which bought Melwood for 10 million pounds last year, gave them a 12-month era at their existing site.

As a result, the move at Klopp’s discretion after the paintings are finished and it is understood that next month marks the change.

Liverpool have not yet shown the date, but ECHO understands that the club is preparing to move when players are on a foreign project from mid-November.

Klopp has been willing to reunite the first team with the club’s old teams and Liverpool owners Fenway Sports Group have subsidized their coach by starting running alongside the Academy camps in 2017.

Liverpool know that the “world class” facility will rival all the other comforts of European football and that the long-awaited move is only a few weeks away.

“They have invested their capital in things like the new mega store, the new main stand, the Kirkby Training Center, which is global elegance and the team will move soon,” former CEO Peter Moore told ECHO this month.

“As much as we love Melwood, it’s probably not what you need. Especially when you need to integrate Academy players into the first team.

“And the good luck we have with the Academy and the players coming in makes it even more critical. The fact that they were 20 minutes away is not ideal.

“Most of the clubs we competed with at the highest level, that’s not the case, so that’s what we had to do. “

The new base is a central facility of 9200 square meters that will space both the stars of the first team and those of the club academy.

Amenities will come with two fitness centers, a full-size fitness center, a swimming pool, a hydrotherapy complex and specialized sports rehabilitation rooms for injured players to use to regain their fitness.

Open rooms have been designed for gyms that allow recovering players to see the fields in front of them as a source of motivation in their recovery process.

In 2018, Billy Hogan, who now has the name Liverpool CEO, admitted that the club would appoint the rights once the installation was completed.

He said: “For the right partner, if it makes sense, then that’s something we’re definitely going to see.

“There are broader opportunities around the new educational floor we’ll be in.

“If it’s not a call to claim rights, more sophisticated relationships could make more sense in an educational environment. “

Klopp and the first team players have been consulted on key decisions as the club approaches the final touch of what they say will be one of the continent’s educational complexes.

“This will look exactly like what you would expect from an elite status quo for Liverpool Football Club,” lead operations officer Andy Hughes said in 2018.

“It’s an essential component of a successful football club. Liverpool Football Club will have to do this development. “

Liverpool purchased 14 acres of Simonswood Playing Fields land at the back of the Academy to extend the length of the existing to approximately 60 acres.

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The plans were drawn up by London architects KSS, who designed the new anfield booth, with the company’s president, David Keirle, overseeing much of the work.

Mr Kierle said last year: “Our designs for this centre reflect the identity and ambition of Liverpool FC.

“They provide a transparent and ambitious path for the first team, while maintaining the requirement that the player earn the right to progress at all levels.

“The extensive use of herbal light, combined with a diversity of sober and sober materials, will offer a comfortable but motivating interior, which will be Liverpool. “

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