The Trust applies to list Valley Parade as an Asset of Community Value
Bantams Supporters Trust are pleased to inform our members and the wider City supporter base that we applied to the Local Authority on 21st March 2024 to list the stadium at Valley Parade as an Asset of Community Value (ACV).
We are taking this step because we feel that Valley Parade deserves to be recognised publicly for the role it plays in the lives of City supporters and the wider community of Bradford. For 120 years, the stadium has brought the community together with a shared focus of activity that reaches into many corners of the Bradford District's collective life.
Assets of Community Value are designated under the 2011 Localism Act in recognition of provisions, services or buildings that occupy a key place in the hearts and minds of local communities. The Act was designed to provide an element of devolution of power to communities and community organisations.
As far as the Trust is concerned, the main advantage of listing Valley Parade as an ACV is that it would:
- Grant Valley Parade the public recognition it deserves
- Give City fans an undeniable voice in the future of the stadium
- Prevent the owner from selling the asset from under our noses, without the knowledge of the fan base.
The procedure for listing Valley Parade as an ACV is now under way at City Hall. Council Officers must first satisfy themselves that the application conforms with the requirements of the Localism Act - it must be put forward by a recognised community organisation, such as BST, for example. Once the Council Officers approve the application, it goes to a meeting of Full Council for decision.
We hope that the application process goes through smoothly, and that Councillors from all political parties will feel able to support the initiative. The Club has indicated to the Trust that it will not stand in the way of an ACV listing for Valley Parade.
The Council will inform the owner of the asset - the Gordon Gibb Family Pension Fund - as part of the procedure. Once a decision has been taken by the Council to list the asset as an ACV, there are certain limited rights of appeal, but these are designed to be time-limited, so that the listing cannot be held up indefinitely by legal process.
The main powers assigned by the Localism Act come into play at the moment that the owner of the asset declares an intention to sell. If that were to happen with Valley Parade, the Trust would have six weeks to decide if it wished to make a bid to buy the ground. If it was decided within that period that a bid was on the cards, BST would have a further six months to raise the cash in order to put in the bid. The owner is not however obliged to accept the bid from the community organisation in those circumstances - market principles apply, and the owner might still sell elsewhere.
Listing as an ACV does not give us a right to buy the asset, but it does give us the right to know about a potential sale, and the right to bid. These rights provide important safeguards on the future of the stadium.
There are many other clubs, who’s grounds are listed as an ACV. Elland Road, The Madjeski Stadium, and the Hawthorns are 3 of them.
The Trust's plan to apply for the listing of Valley Parade has been in the pipeline for some time, but it comes now at a moment when there is widespread concern about the future direction of the Club.
We hope that City fans can unify around this initiative as a testament to the deep attachment we feel for Bradford City, with our home at Valley Parade, and as a positive statement for future developments at the Club.
We will keep members and the wider City fanbase posted in due course about the progress of the application.









