• Loading stock data...
Friday, September 19, 2025

The Battle Over Wimbledon’s Ambitious Expansion Plan

Wimbledon wants to triple its footprint. The plan has sparked a bitter standoff over the future of tennis’s oldest major.

Rendering courtesy of All England Lawn Tennis Club
Exclusive

Stan Verrett Joining FanDuel Sports Network in Multiple Roles

The former ESPN “SportsCenter” anchor has found a new home.
Read Now
September 18, 2025 |

Wimbledon follows the same schedule each year: The singles quarterfinals land on the Tuesday and Wednesday of the second week, as the mood switches from festival to hard-nosed competition. But in 2025, the action on Centre Court will clash with a meeting eight miles away at the High Court in central London. It will be crucial in determining Wimbledon’s long-term future. 

For decades, the All England Lawn Tennis Club, which hosts the tournament, has sought to expand its 157-year-old site. After buying neighboring land and paying off the tenants, it was eventually granted planning permission for a huge redevelopment in 2024. The proposed project is big: By adding another 39 courts, the total number will rise to 71—more than double the number in New York and Melbourne, and quadruple the total in Paris. The AELTC says the plan is so sweeping in part because grass courts deteriorate more quickly with use than the hard and clay courts used elsewhere. 

But more than anything, they believe this approach would enable it to host its qualifying tournament in-house. Currently, Wimbledon is the only Grand Slam that lacks the space on its existing site to host its qualifiers. Instead, it rents courts at a club in Roehampton three miles away. Players have told Wimbledon organizers that qualifying is a less satisfactory experience than at the other Grand Slams, a criticism that the club takes extremely seriously. 

The expansion also includes the creation of two new parks, a 23-acre area at the south end of the site and a 4-acre one at the north, along with a plan to clean up an existing lake and lay a boardwalk around it. Dominic Foster of the AELTC tells Front Office Sports that these commitments demonstrate that the expansion is intended to not only maintain the tournament’s position “at the pinnacle of sport but also provide substantial year-round public benefits.” (Wimbledon declined FOS’s request for comment on the project’s cost.)

Rendering courtesy of All England Lawn Tennis Club

But the plan’s implementation is proving a struggle: A group of local residents has raised a six-figure sum to challenge AELTC in court. The showdown is scheduled—remarkably—at the same time as Wimbledon itself. In some ways, it’s a classic NIMBY (not in my backyard) standoff—but one playing out on one of the most hallowed grounds in sports.

In 1993, the AELTC bought the land occupied by a neighboring golf course from a local council. In 2018, AELTC bought the golf club itself, terminating its lease, which was due to run until 2041. Three years later, it published a proposal to build a third show court—a potentially significant additional revenue driver—and the 38 extra courts on the golf course land. Foster claims the club has consulted with 10,000 people about the expansion.

Opposition has been loud. One group formed in 2021, Save Wimbledon Park, counts writers, record-label owners, and architects as core members. “The huge irony is that we are all tennis fans,” Simon Wright of SWP tells FOS. “We all go to the Championships. We all like living in an area where tennis takes place. We just like Wimbledon the way it is, rather than what the club is trying to do to it.”

Although Wimbledon is in a strong financial position—ticket sales and broadcasting revenue are both increasing—the AELTC believes the physical constraints on the site are preventing it from keeping pace with the other Grand Slams, particularly in attendance figures. 

Jul 14, 2024; London, United Kingdom; General view of Centre Court during the Carlos Alcaraz of Spain and Novak Djokovic of Serbia menÕs singles final on day 14 at All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club.
Susan Mullane-Imagn Images

In 2024, the tournament sold just more than 526,000 tickets, compared with 675,000 people at the French Open, 1 million at the US Open, and 1.1 million at the Australian Open. Crucially, the latter two tournaments bring in around 20% of those fans for their qualifying tournaments. To maintain its competitiveness, the AELTC wants to triple the size of the site by the early 2030s. Currently, Wimbledon sells 8,000 tickets for the qualifying event, but it is projecting it will be able to sell five times as many if it brings the tournament onto its own site.

SWP is not generally opposed to Wimbledon expanding. Wright explains that the group dislikes the size of the redevelopment (which it describes as an “industrial scale tennis complex”), believes there has been a lack of good faith engagement between AELTC with the local community, and disagrees with the club’s interpretation of agreements made when it bought the golf course land. 

After a tug-of-war between the two London councils that have jurisdiction over the land, the Greater London Authority was called in to review the planning application. The plan was rubber-stamped by the deputy mayor of London in September 2024.

Since then, SWP claims to have raised £200,000 to cover its costs from 1,000 different donors and has the support of Wimbledon’s member of parliament, Paul Kohler. Another high-profile opponent is Richard Rees, an architect who designed elements of the current Wimbledon site. He argues that “size is not everything” and believes the expansion represents “a maximum scenario for development in a perfect tennis environment without any significant constraints being accepted.”

The hearing at the High Court is not a discussion of whether the expansion should be permitted, but a judicial review at SWP’s request, looking into whether the GLA’s decision to grant planning permission was lawful. 

There is a lot at stake for both sides: If the judicial review finds in favor of any of SWP’s legal disputes, then London can withdraw the planning permission; if the SWP’s case is dismissed, the group would have the option of appealing to the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom, the country’s preeminent legal authority. Like a close match on Centre Court, this battle could still go to a deciding set.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Sep 13, 2025; San Francisco, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw (22) delivers a pitch against the San Francisco Giants in the first inning at Oracle Park.

Dodgers Pitcher Clayton Kershaw Retiring After 18 Seasons

Kershaw is fourth all-time in career earnings for a pitcher.
Adriunna Brown

Business Is Booming for WNBA’s Top Beauty Pros

A network of stylists is shaping how players look, feel, and perform.
Sep 13, 2025; Miami Gardens, Florida, USA; Miami Hurricanes running back Mark Fletcher Jr. (4) carries the football against South Florida Bulls cornerback Ben Knox (1) during the third quarter at Hard Rock Stadium.

NCAA Eliminates Spring Transfer Portal Window

The change is aimed at curbing the system of “unrestricted free agency.”
The South Milwaukee Planet Fitness at 2901 S. Chicago Ave. will relocate to Oak Creek in summer.

‘People Want to Go to the Gym’: Why Fitness M&A Is Surging..

The fitness and gym industry has had strong deal activity in the first half of the year.

Featured Today

Premier Lacrosse League

‘The Circus Is Coming to Town’: Why Upstart Leagues Start on Tour

In their ambitious plans, a traveling schedule is only temporary.
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 19: A detailed view of the MLB Debut patch on the jersey of Patrick Monteverde #44 of the Miami Marlins prior to game against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on April 19, 2025 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
September 13, 2025

The Tiny Jersey Patch at the Center of the MLB Rookie Card..

Autographed cards containing a piece of baseball history have upended the market.
September 11, 2025

Eagles-Chiefs Super Bowl Rematch Could Set More NFL Ratings Records

Fox will nationally televise Sunday afternoon’s matchup.
September 10, 2025

ESPN’s ‘MNF’ Ratings Up 8% As NFL Surges to Strong Start

ESPN posts its second-best Week 1 “Monday Night Football” audience.

$3.8 Billion Commanders Stadium Deal Approved Despite Late Drama

A decisive final vote on the stadium followed some last-minute snags.
January 5, 2025; Maui, Hawaii, USA; Hideki Matsuyama hits his fairway shot on the 13th hole during the final round of The Sentry golf tournament at Plantation Course at Kapalua.
September 15, 2025

PGA Tour’s January Season Opener Won’t Be Played At Kapalua

The Sentry’s longtime home is no longer able to host the tournament.
September 16, 2025

Commanders’ $3.8B D.C. Stadium Nears Key Council Vote

The Commanders’ proposed $3.8 billion stadium deal is poised for final approval.
Sponsored

How World Series Champ Dexter Fowler Became a Premier League Team Owner

Dexter Fowler discusses navigating retirement and embracing new roles as an owner & investor.
Aug 23, 2025; New Orleans, Louisiana, USA; Detailed view of the Denver Broncos helmet against the New Orleans Saints during warmups at Caesars Superdome.
September 9, 2025

Broncos Eye 2031 Opening for New Multibillion-Dollar Stadium

The NFL team plans a new venue and mixed-use development.
Aug 22, 2025; Bridgeview, Illinois, USA; Chicago Stars FC forward Jameese Joseph (8) passes the ball during the first half of a match against the North Carolina Courage at SeatGeek Stadium.
September 4, 2025

Chicago Stars FC Move to Evanston After 12 Years in Bridgeview

Stadium plans beyond the 2026 season aren’t solidified. 
August 28, 2025

As CFB Programs Add Corporate Field Logos, Are Jersey Patches Next?

Texas is adding a sponsor’s logo to its football field this season.
Dec 10, 2024; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; A general view of the Delta Center before the game between the Utah Hockey Club and the Minnesota Wild.
August 19, 2025

Utah’s Sports Boom Expands Into Music, Emulating Atlanta

The Jazz and Mammoth owner strikes a major deal with Live Nation.