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It is a lovely neat stadium but lacks some home atmosphere. The away end holds 2000 fans and is quite a steep stand, all seated and with all round good views. With the walk and two tubes, the normal travelling time is around 30 minutes from Kenton'.If travelling from Central London on the Jubilee Line then after leaving Queensbury Station, you can enjoy a very good view of the Hive Stadium which you will pass on your right.Extremely easy, a short walk through the park back to Canons Park tube station and plenty of trains going to Central London.Although we had arrived early it was pleasing to see that from 12.30pm we were allowed to enter the ground and use the catering facilities. It will be lovely when it's finished.
On leaving the station car park, walk back to the main road and cross over and turn left. There then followed my customary routine of inspecting the facilities and buying a programme. Food was decent but pricey.Very simple. We got back to Exeter at around 9.30pmWe were seated in the Main Stand towards the one end, where we enjoyed good views. Not that I am complaining, I am in fact a big fan of the former Guns and Roses lead guitarist Slash!Although the upset never happened, this was a terrific game of full of incident played at a fast tempo. Pleasingly it is of the same height as the Main Stand and has a very similar design. There was a mix of home and away fans in this busy pub but all very cordial. I got the train from Letchworth up to King's Cross before heading to Wembley Park via the Metropolitan line and then on to Canons Park via the Jubilee Line. Women of the FA WSL.
I was back at Kings Cross by 6pm, in plenty of time for my 6.30pm train home, arriving back in Leeds at 9pm.The game was a not a great match but both teams had their chances, Barnet taking theirs and going onto win 2-0. Select an option below to see step-by-step directions and to compare ticket … The Hive is shared between Barnet FC, the women’s clubs London Bees and Tottenham Hotspur ladies and finally the rugby league club London Broncos. Plus it was a reasonably short trip and at this time of year, the match was a good excuse not to go Christmas shopping!Having followed the directions on this site finding the Hive was easy.We found plenty of street parking options close to the stadium having arrived early.Typical modern new build.
Food and drink were not overly extortionate, £4 pint of Heineken, cheeseburger (of good quality for football grub) and chips £7.Dead easy, quick walk back to tube station, back to London and the South Coast.Getting away from the ground was rather simple. Domestic travel within United Kingdom may be affected.The British Museum, located in the Bloomsbury area of London, United Kingdom, is a public institution dedicated to human history, art and culture. Upset on or not? The last 20 minutes were a little laboured as a spectacle; Barnet were happy now to sit deep and defend, which they did with relative ease, whilst taking a speculative punt with the odd counter-attack. The away end was comfortable, and the bar underneath was very pleasant, with Sky Sports, shelter and warmth. There seemed to be plenty of fast food options and shops such as Tesco around for anyone who wanted some food before the game. We really shouldn't have to pay more than £20 to watch League Two football.Me and my mate drove from Norfolk, down the A11 and A14 until we reached the A505, then down into Edgware. The whole site was very clean and spacious. Heady days indeed!Inside, the West stand dominates. There were plenty of stewards present, although from what I saw, they very much kept to themselves.Very easy.
and despite them now being a league club in a new ground, the general atmosphere reminded me of a non league set up, which is something I really like (I've currently visited 125 non league grounds).Having enjoyed the old-school character of Underhill, I was intrigued to see the difference a modern stadium would make to the club and the atmosphere. Home atmosphere was non-existent, all the noise was coming from the away end, seems like most of the people around me were West Ham fans who couldn't get tickets to their game at Chelsea.
Services depart hourly, and operate every day. The ticket office is in a portakabin behind the South Terrace. The queue for this stretched around to the other side of the stand, and once inside it was fairly cramped.The Hive is a modern stadium, very clean, and with good facilities, just very much on the small side, with a Non-League feel.
It does though have a larger all seated capacity of 2,684 fans. Exeter weren't much better but equalised before half time then had a purple patch for 10 minutes after half time , like 1970 Brazil and scored 2 goals.
I opted to try JJ Moons (a Wetherspoons pub) one tube stop earlier than the ground. ( the onions came free as an optional extra though, says he with a touch of irony ). A professional performance against a very poor Barnet side.
A few friends of mine drove to the game and had to pay £5 to park at the stadium, although there was plenty of parking available at the Tube station.I was very impressed with the West Stand although I was situated on the North Terrace.
It is a lovely neat stadium but lacks some home atmosphere. The away end holds 2000 fans and is quite a steep stand, all seated and with all round good views. With the walk and two tubes, the normal travelling time is around 30 minutes from Kenton'.If travelling from Central London on the Jubilee Line then after leaving Queensbury Station, you can enjoy a very good view of the Hive Stadium which you will pass on your right.Extremely easy, a short walk through the park back to Canons Park tube station and plenty of trains going to Central London.Although we had arrived early it was pleasing to see that from 12.30pm we were allowed to enter the ground and use the catering facilities. It will be lovely when it's finished.
On leaving the station car park, walk back to the main road and cross over and turn left. There then followed my customary routine of inspecting the facilities and buying a programme. Food was decent but pricey.Very simple. We got back to Exeter at around 9.30pmWe were seated in the Main Stand towards the one end, where we enjoyed good views. Not that I am complaining, I am in fact a big fan of the former Guns and Roses lead guitarist Slash!Although the upset never happened, this was a terrific game of full of incident played at a fast tempo. Pleasingly it is of the same height as the Main Stand and has a very similar design. There was a mix of home and away fans in this busy pub but all very cordial. I got the train from Letchworth up to King's Cross before heading to Wembley Park via the Metropolitan line and then on to Canons Park via the Jubilee Line. Women of the FA WSL.
I was back at Kings Cross by 6pm, in plenty of time for my 6.30pm train home, arriving back in Leeds at 9pm.The game was a not a great match but both teams had their chances, Barnet taking theirs and going onto win 2-0. Select an option below to see step-by-step directions and to compare ticket … The Hive is shared between Barnet FC, the women’s clubs London Bees and Tottenham Hotspur ladies and finally the rugby league club London Broncos. Plus it was a reasonably short trip and at this time of year, the match was a good excuse not to go Christmas shopping!Having followed the directions on this site finding the Hive was easy.We found plenty of street parking options close to the stadium having arrived early.Typical modern new build.
Food and drink were not overly extortionate, £4 pint of Heineken, cheeseburger (of good quality for football grub) and chips £7.Dead easy, quick walk back to tube station, back to London and the South Coast.Getting away from the ground was rather simple. Domestic travel within United Kingdom may be affected.The British Museum, located in the Bloomsbury area of London, United Kingdom, is a public institution dedicated to human history, art and culture. Upset on or not? The last 20 minutes were a little laboured as a spectacle; Barnet were happy now to sit deep and defend, which they did with relative ease, whilst taking a speculative punt with the odd counter-attack. The away end was comfortable, and the bar underneath was very pleasant, with Sky Sports, shelter and warmth. There seemed to be plenty of fast food options and shops such as Tesco around for anyone who wanted some food before the game. We really shouldn't have to pay more than £20 to watch League Two football.Me and my mate drove from Norfolk, down the A11 and A14 until we reached the A505, then down into Edgware. The whole site was very clean and spacious. Heady days indeed!Inside, the West stand dominates. There were plenty of stewards present, although from what I saw, they very much kept to themselves.Very easy.
and despite them now being a league club in a new ground, the general atmosphere reminded me of a non league set up, which is something I really like (I've currently visited 125 non league grounds).Having enjoyed the old-school character of Underhill, I was intrigued to see the difference a modern stadium would make to the club and the atmosphere. Home atmosphere was non-existent, all the noise was coming from the away end, seems like most of the people around me were West Ham fans who couldn't get tickets to their game at Chelsea.
Services depart hourly, and operate every day. The ticket office is in a portakabin behind the South Terrace. The queue for this stretched around to the other side of the stand, and once inside it was fairly cramped.The Hive is a modern stadium, very clean, and with good facilities, just very much on the small side, with a Non-League feel.
It does though have a larger all seated capacity of 2,684 fans. Exeter weren't much better but equalised before half time then had a purple patch for 10 minutes after half time , like 1970 Brazil and scored 2 goals.
I opted to try JJ Moons (a Wetherspoons pub) one tube stop earlier than the ground. ( the onions came free as an optional extra though, says he with a touch of irony ). A professional performance against a very poor Barnet side.
A few friends of mine drove to the game and had to pay £5 to park at the stadium, although there was plenty of parking available at the Tube station.I was very impressed with the West Stand although I was situated on the North Terrace.