London Stadium (formerly and also known as the Olympic Stadium and the Stadium at Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park) is a multi-purpose outdoor stadium at Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in the Stratford district of London. It is located in the Lower Lea Valley, east of central London. The stadium was constructed specifically for the 2012 Summer Olympics and 2012 Summer Paralympics, serving as the athletics venue and as the site of their opening and closing ceremonies. Following the Games, it was rebuilt for multi-purpose use and now serves primarily as the home of Premier League club West Ham United, who became anchor tenants from the 2016 season. UK athletics are the other tenants in the stadium and host a round of the IAAF Diamond League each year, known as the London Grand Prix, sometimes called the London Anniversary Games.
Land preparation for the stadium began in mid-2007, with the construction officially starting on 22 May 2008. The stadium held 80,000 people for the Olympics and the Paralympic games, before it was remodelled between 2013 and 2015 with 66,000 seats, but with capacity for football limited to 60,000 under the terms of the lease. The decision of what happened to the stadium post Olympics had to be run twice after the first process was delayed by legal cases and a complaint to the European Commission in regards to state aid. It was decided to run a second round of bidding for the stadium, this time keeping it in public ownership and seeking an anchor tenant instead of an owner.
The stadium has been owned and operated by different companies starting with the London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (LOCOG). In October 2012 the whole park including the stadium was handed over to the London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC) who set up a subsidiary company with Newham Council known as E20 Stadium LLP in July 2012 to oversee the stadium. In 2015, Vinci SA were appointed to manage the Stadium for a 25-year period through London Stadium 185. Newham Council left the E20 Stadium partnership in 2017 and their stake was taken by the LLDC. The LLDC bought LS185 from Vinci in 2019. In January 2025 the LLDC relinquished their interest in E20 Stadium LLP and LS185 to GLA Holdings Ltd and when the change of ownership happened E20 Stadium LLP was renamed London Stadium LLP.
Following the collapse of the first deal for the stadium over state aid and the wish to keep the stadium in State ownership; the London Borough of Newham withdrew from the West Ham bid and intended to contribute to the funding of the Stadium with the OPLC. It was decided that a Special-purpose vehicle (SPV) would be created which the £40m, from the first tender process would be invested through a subsidiary company called Newham Legacy Investments (NLI). Accounting firms concluded that a limited liability partnership (LLP) was the most appropriate structure for the SPV. In October 2012 the whole park including the stadium was handed over to the London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC); which had replaced the public sector, not-for-profit company limited Olympic Park Legacy Company in April 2012 under the Localism Act 2011 as the responsible body to redevelop the Olympic Park after the Games. The LLDC and Newham Council, set up another subsidiary company known as E20 Stadium LLP in July 2012 to take long term responsibility for managing the Stadium.
In October 2014, The Evening Standard reported that French company Vinci SA were favourites to be given a contract to run the stadium for ten years. The company had reportedly beaten off competition from other companies including Anschutz Entertainment Group. In February 2015, Vinci Stadium, a subsidiary of Vinci Concessions, were appointed to manage it starting in April 2015 for a 25-year period becoming the first stadium outside France to be managed by Vinci. The company is also responsible for the London Marathon Charitable Trust Community Track and events on the south park lawn. Vinci set up a subsidiary company called London Stadium 185 (LS185), with the 185 signifying how many medals were won by British athletes at the London Olympic and Paralympic Games. In January 2019, the LLDC bought LS185 from Vinci and kept all the existing staff in place after concerns were raised in regards to costs at the venue, as it turned in a £3.5million loss the previous year.
NIL retired from the E20 Stadium in November 2017 and Stratford East London Holdings LTD (SELH), another subsidiary company of the LLDC was formed and took its place. In November 2024 the LLDC voted relinquished their interest in E20 Stadium LLP, SELH and LS185 to GLA Holdings Ltd, a subsidiary company of Greater London Authority (GLA). The GLA ratified the ownership change in January 2025. The E20 Stadium company was renamed to London Stadium LLP from April 2025 when ownership in the company formally changed. The reason behind this was that the GLA funds the stadium, which loses around £17 million each year and will allow the LLDC to focus on other projects in the park.
Culture Secretary Chris Smith removed athletics from a Wembley stadium rebuild in December 1999 stating that UK Athletics would have to find a different venue. A House of Commons Select committee for Culture, Media and Sport disagreed with the decision noting that it was beyond the proper responsibilities of the minister. A new stadium was announced for Picketts Lock in the Lower Lea Valley to host the 2005 World Championships in Athletics in March 2000. It was noted that the Picketts Lock Stadium could have been expanded to host 80,000 people for any future summer Olympic Games bid. In October 2001 Great Britain withdrew from hosting the World Athletics Championships at Picketts Lock and the proposed stadium was cancelled on cost grounds with David Bond noting that the decision was likely to end any hopes of bringing the Olympics to London. The Picketts lock area was considered for an Olympic park, however was not favoured due to its distance to existing venues and the city. It was noted by the bid team that had a more strategic view had been taken to bid for an Olympic Games when proposing the stadium, then Stratford (which was dismissed at the time) would have been more a suitable site.
When Beijing won the 2008 Olympic Games in 2001, this left the way open, under the IOC's policies on awarding Olympic Games, for London to bid for the 2012 Games using the land earmarked in east London.
It was found in 2005 that the site of the stadium was host to Queen Mary College's department of nuclear engineering, which had a small nuclear reactor.
The stadium is situated in the southern part of the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in the Stratford district of London. It is located in the Lower Lea Valley, 6 miles (10 km) east of central London.
On 13 October 2006, the London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (LOCOG) selected Sir Robert McAlpine and Populous to start exclusive negotiations to fulfil the design-and-build contract of the Stadium, after no other organisations met the bidding criteria. The stadium design was launched on 7 November 2007.
The stadium's track-and-field arena is excavated out of the soft clay found on the site, around which is permanent seating for 25,000, built using concrete "rakers". The natural slope of the land is incorporated into the design, with warm-up and changing areas dug into a semi-basement position at the lower end. Spectators enter the stadium via a podium level, which is aligned with the top of the permanent seating bowl. A lightweight demountable steel and pre-cast concrete upper tier was built up from this "bowl" to accommodate a further 55,000 spectators.
The stadium has two tiers:* The base tier, which allows for 25,000 seats, is a sunken elliptical bowl made up of low-carbon-dioxide concrete; this contains 40 per cent less embodied carbon than conventional concrete. The foundation of the base level is 5,000 piles reaching up to deep. There are a mixture of driven cast in situ piles, continuous flight auger piles, and vibro concrete columns.
The stadium contains just under a quarter of the amount of steel used in the Olympic Stadium in Beijing for the 2008 Summer Olympics: about 10,700 tons. In addition to the minimal use of steel, which makes it 75 per cent lighter, the stadium also uses high-yield large diameter pipes that were surplus on completion of North Sea gas pipeline projects in its compression truss, and recycled granite. Many of the building materials were transported on trains and barges rather than by lorry.
A wrap, which was announced in the initial designs was scrapped in 2010 during cost saving measures; but was reinstated months later in early 2011 to minimise cross winds. The wrap funded by Dow Chemical Company who were allowed to advertise on it until 26 June 2012, covered the exterior of the stadium. The wrap was made from polyester and polyethene and printed using UV curable inks. The wrap was made of pieces of material covering high and in length. The final design for the wrap consisted of fabric panels, twisted at 90-degree angles to allow entry to the stadium at the bottom of the structure, and held in place with tensioned cables.
To allow for fast on-site assembly, compression truss and roof column connections were bolted; this also enabled easy disassembling of the roof structure after the closing ceremonies. The cable-supported roof structure covered approximately two-thirds of the stadium's seating. Reaching above the field of play, its roof held 14 lighting towers that collectively contained a total of 532 individual 2 kW floodlight lamps. The lights were first officially switched on in December 2010 by Prime Minister David Cameron and London Mayor Boris Johnson. During the Games, the towers were fitted with additional ceremony lighting, and four of the towers held large temporary video screens.
A temporary athletics warmup track was constructed for the 2012 games to the South of the Greenway.
During the Games, the Stadium's grandstands contained a lighting system developed by Tait Technologies that allowed them to function as a giant video screen, later called Landscape video. 70,500 individual "paddles"
/ref> This technology was also adopted for the Pyeongchang Olympic Stadium, which hosted the 2018 Winter Olympics.
Rowan Moore noted that the stadium was the perfect model of an austere structure for austere times, if it had not had cost £486m. The Olympic Stadium was nominated for the 2012 Stirling Prize in architecture losing out to the Sainsbury Laboratory at the University of Cambridge.
Before London's bid for the Olympic Games was successful it was thought that football clubs West Ham United or Tottenham Hotspur could move into the stadium after the games. However Mayor Livingstone ruled this out stating that it would be scaled down to around 25,000 seats for an athletics facility and would not be turned into a football ground. By 2006 Olympic organisers stated that West Ham could takeover the stadium with the athletics track in situ. The keeping of the athletics track put Tottenham off the stadium. In 2007 Leyton Orient were in discussions to move into the stadium as the plan was still to scale the stadium down and the club were a suitable size to move into it. West Ham's request for the stadium was turned down, despite the club reportedly offering the authorities £100m to reduce the 80,000 seat stadium to 60,000 after the 2012 Games; as it would not be possible deliver the stadium on time and budget for the games due to the number of design changes required by the club. Alternative sites for a new stadium included Thames Ironworks and land next to West Ham station were considered by the club and the London Development Agency (LDA). The Olympic board was made up by the government, the mayor of London and the Olympic Delivery Authority and focused on legacy planning for the stadium. In February 2012 former Sports Minister Richard Caborn, who was a member of the board at the time, noted that other board members were keen to begin construction work on the original design and avoid another Wembley-style embarrassment. Caborn further noted that not planning for a genuine dual use stadium such like the Stade de France was a missed opportunity. Talks with football clubs were abandoned in 2007 and not picked up again until 2010.
In 2008 Boris Johnson became Mayor of London, and stated that the stadium could be used for football and wanted to revisit the post games plans to downsize. The London Assembly's economic development, culture, sport and tourism committee warned that the stadium would struggle to be financially viable in July 2009 . The committee later stated that the decision to downsize the stadium to 25,000 seats instead of 60,000 as flawed and not in the long-term interests of taxpayer. The Olympic Park Legacy Company (OPLC) was established as a public sector, not-for-profit Company limited set up by the Mayor of London, Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, and the Minister for the Olympics in 2009. The aim of the company was to carry on the work started by the LDA, which had acquired the land, and worked on post 2012 legacy. The company chaired by Baroness Ford wanted to review the size of the stadium post 2012.
Media speculation and expressions of interest included: the England and Wales Cricket Board and Kent County Cricket Club; Middlesex County Cricket Club, Essex County Cricket Club: Wasps RFC; Saracens R.F.C.; London Skolars; Major League Baseball; and the National Football League. After receiving and pre-screening over 100 expressions of interest, the formal bidding process of selecting the post-Olympics user of the stadium opened on 18 August 2010. It ran until midday on 30 September and the OPLC hoped to select a tenant by March 2011.
On 12 November 2010, it was announced that two bids had been shortlisted for the future use of the stadium, with whom final negotiations would take place. A joint bid from Tottenham Hotspur and Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG), and a second bid from West Ham United and Newham Council was selected. The only other bid received by the OPLC came from a consortium formed by International Stadia Group, HKS and CB Richard Ellis and was not shortlisted.
At the opening of the formal bid process, West Ham United were considered favourites once they withdrew their initial opposition to keeping the running track in place. The club planned a £100 million conversion to create a 66,000 capacity venue, which would also host international football, international athletics, as well as Essex County Cricket Club, international Twenty20 cricket matches, NFL games, and Live Nation events. Whereas Tottenham proposed knocking the stadium down and rebuilding it as a football only venue. The scheme also would refurbish Crystal Palace for athletics. In 2017 Moore Global conducted an Olympic Stadium Review and noted that West Ham's bid ticked all five of the requirements set out by the OPLC whereas Tottenham's only met three of them.
The OPLC announced on 5 July 2011 that an independent review into the awarding of the Olympic Stadium to West Ham United was to be conducted. The Times had found that the Director of Services, Dionne Knight, had been engaged by West Ham United to carry out consultancy work without the permission of the OPLC. West Ham responded with legal action against Tottenham Hotspur and The Sunday Times due to how the information was obtained. The club and the OPLC stated that Knight had no involvement in the vote to award the stadium. In August 2011, Moore Global investigation and a separate West Ham investigation led by a Blackstone Chambers barrister ruled that the process was not compromised and the bid process would not be reopened. West Ham and the OPLC made complaints to the police and Operation Polworth was conducted in August 2011 following allegations relating to the unlawful obtaining of information. It was revealed that the information was received by people working on behalf PKF, who were employed by Tottenham to assist with their bid for the stadium. Both PKF and Tottenham stated they did not know about the activity. The three men were fined a total of £123,250 between them after pleading guilty to obtaining personal data contrary to the Data Protection Act 1998 in 2013.
Leyton Orient, who are geographically the nearest professional football club to London Stadium, complained that as it was so close to their own ground, West Ham's occupancy of it would breach F.A. rules and could even force them into bankruptcy. Tottenham Hotspur F.C. and Leyton Orient applied for a judicial review to overturn the OPLC's decision; however, this appeal was rejected in June 2011. Tottenham Hotspur appealed the decision not to have a review on 29 June 2011. On 23 August, the day before Tottenham Hotspur were due in court, they staged "intense negotiations" with the office of the Mayor of London, and looked set to drop all claims for a review and be offered funding for their own stadium. However, the next day Tottenham did attend court with Leyton Orient and won a review of the decision, being told that they had an arguable case specifically in regards to the £40m loan by Newham Council giving an unfair advantage through state aid or through state resources". On 17 October 2011, a day before they were due in court for the judicial review into the bidding process of the stadium, Tottenham Hotspur and Leyton Orient ended their legal challenge.
The award of the stadium to West Ham was cancelled on 11 October 2011, as the OPLC the concluded that the Olympic Stadium would remain in State ownership and that it would be leased out to an anchor tenant. This came after concerns around Legal challenges and a complaint to the European Commission over state aid, would have led to the stadium sitting empty for years. The London Borough of Newham withdrew from the West Ham bid and intended to contribute to the funding of the Stadium with the OPLC.
In February 2012, 16 parties were interested in the stadium. Essex County Cricket Club along with the University of East London decided to make a bid for the stadium, but the university pulled out of the process. Four bidders for the stadium were announced in July 2012:
In 2017 Moore Stephens conducted an Olympic Stadium Review and noted that Leyton Orient's was the same as West Ham's but offered weaker financial outcomes. The bid from Intelligent Transport Services, was rejected for having too much speculation and uncertainty in their business plan and in Moore Stephens view limited legacy. Additionally they noted that the bid from the university of Football would not be an appropriate use to guarantee regular use of the Stadium and it offered a limited legacy.
In April 2012, the Olympic Park Legacy Company was dismantled, and responsibilities transferred to the newly constituted London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC). In December 2012, West Ham were named as the preferred bidder by the LLDC to be anchor tenants for the stadium with a separate operator co-ordinating community and sporting use, as well as concerts and events. West Ham, reportedly, agreed to pay £2.5 million in rent per year to the LLDC and promised to pay back any extra cost for the roof and seats within ten years.
On 22 March 2013, West Ham United secured a 99-year lease deal, with the stadium planned to be used as their home ground from the 2016–17 season. In July 2013, UK Athletics received a 50-year deal for the use of the stadium. UK Athletics will have access every year from the last Friday in June until the end of July.
With so much public money going into the stadium and its redevelopment, the BBC learned that David Gold and David Sullivan must share any profits they make if they sell the club. Daniel Kretinsky took a 27 per cent stake of West Ham in 2021, and the club had to pay £6.5 million to E20 Stadium as part of the agreement for use of the stadium in 2023. However £3.6m was returned to West Ham in January 2025 after a judge ruled that "manifest errors" in an "expert determination" relating to the increase in the club's valuation after Krestinsky had purchased. West Ham had originally paid £2.6m before the LLDC demanded more.
Following the appointment of West Ham as tenants Barry Hearn stated that he would mount another legal challenge as he believed the rules set out by the LLDC had not been followed and felt that Leyton Orient's proposed groundshare had been ignored. On 19 September 2013, Leyton Orient lost their bid to win a judicial review with Mr Justice Lewis stating that the LLDC was entitled to make the decision which was not "irrational". In November 2013, it was the House of Lords' opinion that Leyton Orient should be allowed occasional use of the stadium. In early December, the LLDC said that there was nothing to stop Orient from negotiating a rental agreement with whichever firm ends up running the stadium. Orient, however, would not be able to negotiate a 99-year deal like West Ham and would only have usage of the stadium when they were not playing. On 1 July 2014, Leyton Orient brought an end to their dispute with the Premier League. They had disputed the validity of the Premier League's decision to allow West Ham to move to the stadium; but as Orient would be able to consult with the stadium operators over using the venue for matches of their own they dropped the claims.
In May 2014 it was announced that Essex Cricket Club had agreed to a deal "in principle" for a two-week festival of Twenty20 cricket matches at the stadium from 2016. In 2016 it was stated that it was more likely to be held from 2018 using a drop in pitch. The venue was also touted as a possible venue for the 2019 Cricket World Cup. However, the venue was not included in the final fixtures list. It was not chosen due to the existing facilities running east to west which would have made the game difficult to watch, due to the setting sun, as at most cricket venues the pitch runs from north to south. Additionally, it was discovered that the capacity of the stadium would decrease by 30,000 if the facilities were reconfigured to a north–south alignment. The International Cricket Council also had concerns over potential injuries to players caused by the raised sand-based outfield.
In September 2018, Lyn Garner, chief executive of the LLDC, revealed that the £2.5m paid per year by West Ham did not even cover the cost of staging matches leading to increased debts in running the stadium for the 97-year remainder of their tenancy agreement. E20 and West Ham became embroiled in a protracted legal dispute in the High Court as to which elements of service were included in the annual payments under the 99-year lease, and which elements might be expected to involve an additional regular facility fee. Both parties, in November 2018, agreed to an out-of-court settlement. E20 Stadium and LLDC sued Allen & Overy law firm for professional negligence in its role drafting the London Stadium concession agreement with West Ham which was settled in August 2022. The LLDC stated that being unable to charge West Ham during their Europa Conference League campaign was further proof of how poor the original deal was.
Balfour Beatty were initially contracted to construct the new roof for £41 million; in January 2014 they were awarded a £154 million tender, which includes the earlier contract for the roof, to complete the stadium's transformation works. Imtech G&H were awarded a £25 million contract to carry out electrical and plumbing work. Paul Kelso, working for Sky News, discovered in September 2014 that the cost of the conversion of the stadium may rise by £15 million, due to additional work to strengthen the structure, to allow it to support the new roof. It was revealed neither West Ham United nor the taxpayer would have to meet the additional cost as Balfour Beatty would contribute with the remainder funded from the existing LLDC transformation budget of the Olympic Park. In October 2014, the LLDC contributed a further £35.9 million towards the project with the funding coming from reserves and income generated by other means.
Work commenced on 13 August 2013 with the removal of 25,000 seats and the grass from the field of play. The athletics track was covered with a layer of recycled concrete to protect it during the heavy lifting. In November 2013 work commenced to remove the fourteen floodlight panels as part of the £200 million conversion of the stadium. Work began on installing the 14 new floodlights in March 2015. Each floodlight panel is tall and weighs , and sits above the stadium's floor, suspended from the roof rather than sitting on top. As the floodlight work began, work on a steel halo structure that encircles the stadium, containing 96 turnstiles, catering and toilet facilities, concluded.
In 2024 planning permission was given for 6,500 square metres of solar membrane panels to be installed by Ameresco on the roof of the stadium. The LLDC Solar Membrane Project was the first to receive funding from the Mayor of London's Green Finance Fund in a form of a loan. London city had already contributed £45,000 towards a feasibility study and business case for the project. At a cost of £4.35 million this will allow the venue to generate enough energy to power all of the stadium's major events.
The original athletics Mondotrack FTX track surface was removed in May 2016 and a new surface, using of Mondotrack/WS track, was installed. The grass playing field was lengthened by several metres at either end for the 2015 rugby matches to fit a suitably-sized rugby/football pitch. The pitch at the stadium was replaced after the Olympic Games with a Desso GrassMaster artificial-natural hybrid pitch approved for Premier league matches of , along with under-soil heating.
The black-and-white seating design from the Olympics was replaced with a white, blue and claret design. The new design includes West Ham's name on the East Kop Stand and symbolic crossed hammers on all lower-tier stands, and the retention of the 2012 shard design on the upper tier, albeit in new colouring to match the stadium's anchor tenant. Work continued through 2016 to transform the stadium into a home for West Ham, with the club's colours and giant model West Ham shirts added to the stadium concourse. A West Ham store and coffee shop was opened on 23 June.
In an attempt to make London Stadium more like their home ground, in April 2019 a £250,000 claret-coloured pitch surround was announced and installed. The colour of the carpet, over the athletics track surrounding the pitch, was at the centre of a long running dispute between the club and LLDC. An agreement on the carpet was met as one of the conditions to avoid a court case, with West Ham paying an increased rent and also being allowed to place a statue outside the stadium and to name a stand. The East Stand was chosen to be renamed in honour of Billy Bonds. A statue of Bobby Moore, Geoff Hurst and Martin Peters known as "West Ham United's European Champions" picturing the 1965 European Cup Winners' Cup was installed outside the Stadium in 2021 in an area known as Champions Place. Peters' ashes were placed in the foundation of the statue.
In February 2020, West Ham announced planned alterations to the stadium introducing two new lower-tier stands moving supporters closer to the pitch, many by more than . In March 2020, West Ham opened a sensory room in the stadium for fans. On 6 April 2022, West Ham announced that the capacity for football matches would be increased to 62,500 and the lower tier of the west stand is to be reconfigured to make the stadium more football-oriented. The redevelopment meant an increase of the overall capacity to 68,013.
The track allows the London Stadium to comply with IAAF rules at Category 1 facilities and is home to Newham and Essex Beagles Athletic Club. Altis FC have also made the stadium their home along with use by the Bobby Moore Academy.
At the beginning of the 2016–17 season, West Ham's games were marred by instances of crowd trouble. Disturbances occurred in matches against AFC Bournemouth, Watford and Middlesbrough's at the stadium, leading to the club to ask E20 to ensure that there was a police presence at the venue. The police turned down the request stating that there was not a satisfactory radio system at the stadium. Further issues occurred in matches against Sunderland and Chelsea. This was despite enhanced security measures being deployed for the Chelsea match.
Measures were permanently put in place inside and outside of the stadium including creating more distance between opposing fans and strengthening barriers and ensuring segregation outside the stadium on the Island and having stewards with cameras.
In March 2018, there were protests against West Ham United owner, David Sullivan at the stadium during a 3–0 home defeat to Burnley. There were four pitch invasions and Sullivan was escorted from his seat before the end of the match. Sullivan was also hit on the head by a coin. Measures including increased security presence and preventing fans from approaching the area holding members of the West Ham board were announced in late March. The measures funded by the taxpayer cost £60,000 to implement.
In June 2018, West Ham were charged by the FA with offences relating to crowd disturbances at the game against Burnley in March. In January 2019, West Ham were fined £100,000 for the disturbances. The Football Association investigation of the incidents was heavily critical of the stadium operators, London Stadium 185 (LS185), and found that they had left sections which were damaging to the company out of their report. As LS185 were in control of the stadium's operations and were blamed for their actions in the disturbances (including cutting the number of stewards, poor training and unsatisfactory response to pitch invasions), West Ham sought to split the fine with the company.
During the London Disability Grand Prix, Paul Blake (T36, 1500 metres), Hannah Cockroft (T34, 100 metres), Michael McKillop (T37, 1500 metres), and Richard Whitehead (T42, 200 metres) all set new . The stadium also hosted the athletics events of the UK School Games.
The stadium hosted both the opening and closing ceremonies at the 2012 Olympic Games. During the four London 2012 ceremonies, the track was protected via synthetic covering. During the Athletics events of the Olympic Games, world records were set by David Rudisha for the 800 metres to become the first man to run the distance in under 1 minute 41 seconds. Jamaica men surpassed the 4 × 100 metres relay record from the 2011 World Championships by two-tenths of a second. The United States women's 4×100 metres team beat the previous best set by East Germany in 1985, recording a time of 40.82 seconds. were set by Usain Bolt, who ran the second-fastest 100 metres, Renaud Lavillenie in the Pole vault by , Sally Pearson recorded a record time in the 100 metres hurdles and Tatyana Lysenko set a new mark in the Hammer throw.
The stadium also hosted both the opening and closing ceremonies of the 2012 Paralympic Games. Over the course of the Paralympic Games athletics events, world records were set on the track by; Oxana Boturchuk Martina Caironi, Chen Junfei, El Amin Chentouf, China, Libby Clegg, Arnu Fourie, Marie-Amelie le Fur, Terezinha Guilhermina, Mahmoud Khaldi, Samwel Mushai Kimani, Walid Ktila. Liang Yongbin, Rosemary Little, Liu Ping, Liu Wenjun, Gunther Matzinger, Michael McKillop, Mateusz Michalski, Yohansson Nascimento, Oscar Pistorius, David Prince, Evgenii Shvetcov, South Africa, Leo Pekka Tahti, Abraham Tarbei, Iurii Tsaruk, Richard Whitehead, Abderrahim Zhiou, Zhu Daqing, and Zhou Guohua. Multiple World Records on the track were set by Yunidis Castillo, Assia El Hannouni, Evan O'Hanlon, Jason Smyth, Fanie van der Merwe, and Marlou van Rhijn.
In the field events, world records were set by Hani Alnakhli, Alexey Ashapatov, Aigars Apinis Lahouari Bahlaz, Mohamed Berrahal, Kelly Cartwright, Yanlong Fu, Leonardo Diaz, Zeljko Dimitrijevic, Tanja Dragic, Najat El Garraa, Javad Hardani, Todd Hodgetts, Jun Wang, Maroua Ibrahmi, Juan Yao, Mohsen Kaedi, Mohammad Khalvandi, Gocha Khugaev, Karolina Kucharczyk, Assunta Legnante, Maciej Lepiato, Liu Fuliang, Drazenko Mitrovic, Azeddine Nouiri, Katarzyna Piekart, Mariia Pomazan, Nikita Prokhorov, Qing Wu, Markus Rehm, Raoua Tlili, Wang Yanzhang, Zhu Pengkai, and Oksana Zubkovska. Multiple records were set in the field by Dong Xia, Birgit Kober, Na Mi, Yang Liwan, and Wang Zhiming.
At the championships Great Britain set a European record whilst winning the men's 4x100m, while Emma Coburn set a championship record in the 3000m steeplechase. Rosângela Santos set a South American record in the 100m. An Asian record was set by Lyu Huihui in the javelin.
On 24 January 2013, it was confirmed that the London Athletics Grand Prix, a Diamond League event, would be switched to the stadium from Crystal Palace due to construction work on the stadium not commencing until 2014. In February 2013, it was announced that it would also hold a Paralympic athletics event on 28 July. Sainsbury's were announced as sponsors and the event was renamed the "Anniversary Games". The London Grand Prix was scheduled to move permanently to the stadium in 2016. However, due to the 2015 Rugby World Cup taking place in the stadium, using the original seating configuration. The meeting moved to the stadium a year early again under the name of the Anniversary Games.
In 2016 the IPC Grand Prix events were incorporated alongside Diamond League events on the second day of the meet. The 2017 Muller Anniversary Games was shortened to a one-day event on Sunday 9 July 2017. Before it returned to a two-day event in 2018. The 2020 event was scheduled to take place on the 4–5 July. However, the event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The 2021 event, scheduled to be reduced to a single day and take place on 13 July. As the meeting was the only event taking place that summer in the stadium, the LLDC paid UK Athletics to stage it elsewhere. After a three-year hiatus, the event returned to London Stadium as a single day event on 23 July 2023.
World records have been set at the meeting in the stadium by Tom Bosworth in the 3000 metres walk. Kendra Harrison broke the women's 100m hurdles world record, a time which has existed for 28 years in 2016. Diamond League records have been set in the stadium by Nickisha Pryce in the 400 metres, Femke Bol in the 400 metres hurdles twice, and Sifan Hassan in mile. European records have been set in the stadium during the meetings by Matthew Hudson-Smith in the 400 metres, and Karsten Warholm in the 400 metres hurdles. Hassan has twice set the European record for the 5000 metres.The women's 100m African record was twice set by Blessing Okagbare. Asian records have been set by Zhenye Xie in the 200 meteres,
At the event, David Weir set a world record for the T54 mile. Georgina Hermitage (400 m T37) and Sophie Hahn (100 m T38) set world records. Kare Adenegan and Sophie Hahn set world record times in the T34 100m and T38 200m events.
The stadium had hosted the Great Newham London Run in 2015 and 2016 In February 2018, London Stadium was announced as the venue for the inaugural Athletics World Cup. The event was held on 14 and 15 July, and was won by the United States of America.
The 2021–22 National League play-off final to decide who wins promotion to the English Football League was held at the stadium as Wembley Stadium was unavailable. Grimsby Town F.C. defeated Solihull Moors F.C. 2–1 after extra time.
The stadium has hosted many charity football matches. It hosted the 2022 edition of Soccer Aid where a World XI defeated an England XI in a penalty shootout. It also hosted the 2023 Sidemen Charity Match on 9 September 2023. Sidemen defeated the YouTube all stars 8–5 with £2,425,855 being raised for charity. Sellebrity Soccer held an event in 2024 and 2025.
The stadium hosted its first ever international football match on 22 March 2024 between Spain and Colombia, drawing a crowd of 44,000.
The Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees played a two-game series at the stadium from 29 to 30 June 2019, the first MLB regular season games ever played in Europe. Branded as the 2019 MLB London Series, the Yankees won both games. Prior to the 2019 games, it was announced that the Chicago Cubs and St. Louis Cardinals would play games at the stadium in 2020; however, this series was cancelled as the result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The two teams did appear in 2023 when the London Series resumed, sharing the games. The deal was extended to have games in 2024 and 2026.
In 2022, 2023 and 2024 the stadium hosted Monster Jam. FIM World Supercross Championship will be hosted for the first time in London at the stadium in 2025.
2015 Baskerville Shield |
2016 Four Nations |
41,039 |
50,626 |
51,820 |
53,187 |
54,658 |
55,925 |
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Stations nearby:
North London Line | ||
Lewisham/Canary Wharf-Stratford Stratford International–Beckton/Woolwich Arsenal | ||
Great Eastern Main Line West Anglia Main Line Lea Valley Lines | ||
High Speed 1 | ||
Elizabeth line | Stratford | Elizabeth line |
108 | Lewisham bus station | Stratford International station | East London, South-East London, South London |
308 | Wanstead | Upper Clapton | East London |
339 | Shadwell station | Leytonstone station | East London, North-East London |
388 | Elephant & Castle | Stratford City bus station | Central London, East London, South London |
A further 17 services use Stratford bus station and Stratford City bus station, which offer a network of services across East London. In addition, route 25 from City Thameslink serves Central London.
National Express coach services to Stratford bus station provide a direct connection to Stansted Airport and several other routes to Essex and East Anglia.
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