I designed Everton’s new stadium – now I have an 1878 tattooImage source, AFP via Getty ImagesImage caption, Dan Meis says he has never experienced anything like working with EvertonByCiaran VarleyBBC Sport journalistPublished1 hour agoTwo relegation battles, a change of club ownership, a global pandemic and even discovering unexploded World War Two ordnance on site – just a few things designers and engineers had to contend with before they could deliver the Hill Dickinson Stadium for its opening last August. “Just about everything that could happen did,” mentioned Dan Meis – the Los Angeles-based architect who designed Everton’s new ground.Aside from some of the issues already mentioned, the American had to deal with transposing the Premier League club’s fans into a new site – away from Goodison Park, which they had called home for 133 years.Meis was used to pressure, but nothing prepared him for Everton.”I live in LA, I did the Staples Center – home of the Lakers,” he mentioned.”That was an important building to people, but it was nothing like Everton.”I don’t think I will ever have another experience quite like that because of who the club are, what the city of Liverpool is and the site where we built.”‘The stadium should feel like it grew out of the dock’Image gallerySkip image gallery
-

Image source, MEIS Studio
1 of 4
Slide 1 of 4, Early sketch of the Hill Dickinson Stadium.,





