Due to the transport infrastructure, ANFIELD CAN NOT BE DEVELOPED BEYOND 60,000, or just for the point neither can Goodison.
The area can not accommodate any more until there are better roads, a new railway station, a tram, or even a monorail, or airport.
Sorry RedPuppy, anwser is a bit late... Then why do Liverpool FC and owners not invest in a new Stadium elsewhere??... Stanley Park??... Arsenal moved a couple miles up the road....
Just spotted this today...
Liverpool chief says further Anfield expansion 'not a smart investment'
The cost of redeveloping the Anfield Road end of Liverpool's stadium "is not a smart investment", says chief executive Ian Ayre.
Liverpool opened the redeveloped Main Stand last month, raising capacity to 54,074, and have planning permission to extend Anfield Road by a further 4,800.
But Ayre said: "A stand behind a goal doesn't have the benefit of hospitality that would go a long way to meet the redevelopment costs."
The upgrade would cost about £60-70m.
Club owner John Henry has previously played down the prospect of the work going ahead on the basis ticket prices would have to rise to cover the cost.
Ayre told a meeting of the Liverpool Supporters' Committee (LSC) that the club needed to find "the right economic model" and a "rounded solution" before moving forward with any Anfield Road plans.
Liverpool are worried how fans would react after thousands of protested against plans to charge £77 for some tickets in the club's new Main Stand back in February.
The £100m expansion of the Main Stand is expected to be paid off in six years because of the lucrative income generated by hospitality seating - but that is not the case with the Anfield Road end.
"From a purely general admission perspective, building, say, 6,000 extra seats to take the capacity up to 60,000 would cost somewhere between £60m and £70m," said Ayre.
"At £12,000 to £13,000 per seat, it would take approximately 15 years to pay back, which is not a smart investment for the business."
Ayre told the meeting the club was open to fan investment to help fund further redevelopment of the ground and said conversations should take place.
Without a new stadium LFC will find it hard to compete unless we find new owners with bottomless pockets and the will to spend that money. If not maybe some way down the line LFC will died the death of a thousand cuts and end up playing our football in League one