All-England Club plans makeover for No 2 and No 3 courts as it prepares for Olympics

Courts No 2 and No 3 at the All-England Club, home of the Wimbledon championships, are to be demolished and rebuilt in time for the 2012 London Olympics.

This is part of a wider redevelopment of the southern part of the site, which will include the provision of new restaurants.

The aim is to get Wimbledon, in south-west London, ready for the Olympic tennis tournament.

At present the two courts are considered to be too close together, cramping pedestrian movement. A source said: “The latest thinking is to do this build in two or three phases and aim for the Olympics. It would provide more space and better circulation.”

A second insider added: “The suggestion is to bring forward plans to fit with the Olympic timetable.”

No 2 court would be demolished and moved to the south-east of the site. No 3 court would be rebuilt on its current site or moved slightly westward.

Planning permission for a 5,000-seat No 2 court in the south-east corner was obtained in 2002, before London won the Olympics, to ensure that the estate could be updated quickly.

A spokesman for Wimbledon said: “We have no news on timings; we are reviewing the options. For the past 18 months we have been looking at it.”

However, sources close to the plans insist that the All-England Club is keen to get the project under way as soon as possible to complement the installation of an HOK Sport-designed roof on centre court, due for completion by 2009. Realigning the southern courts would mirror similar changes made to those in the north, where the courts are better spaced.

΢Ȧ Design Partnership’s 1993 All-England Club masterplan stipulated that changes should be made by 2012 but those time limits have become outdated. As a result, new development has moved at a slower pace and taken a different direction to that intended.