
Livingston
LIV
ScotlandLivingston Stadium

Tony Macaroni Arena
Livingston FC plays at the Tony Macaroni Arena (also known as Livingston FC Stadium), located in Livingston, a new town in West Lothian, Scotland, built in the 1960s and 1970s to house overspill population from Edinburgh. The stadium has a capacity of approximately 10,016 spectators and has been developed from its origins as a modest ground into a reasonable Scottish Premiership venue. Livingston is one of Scotland's newer towns, giving the football club — founded in 1943 as Ferranti Thistle before adopting several name changes — a different urban context from clubs based in Scotland's older cities and industrial towns.
Livingston FC experienced their greatest era in the early 2000s under chairman Dominic Keane, winning the Scottish League Cup in 2004 and qualifying for the UEFA Cup, where they participated in the group stage against clubs including Villarreal, Grazer AK, and Stade Rennais. Those European nights at what was then the Almondvale Stadium were extraordinary occasions for a club from a new town with a relatively short history, and the achievement remains one of the most remarkable in recent Scottish football. The club has since experienced significant financial difficulties and several relegations before rebuilding their Premiership position.
The Tony Macaroni Arena — named after a local Italian restaurant chain following a commercial naming rights deal — provides a functional home for Livingston's Scottish Premiership campaigns. The stadium's location in Livingston's Almondvale commercial district, adjacent to a major shopping centre, reflects the new town planning ethos of commercial and amenity integration. While the ground lacks the historical character of Scotland's older football venues, it provides modern facilities and a strong home atmosphere generated by Livingston's committed supporter base. The club's consistent Premiership presence in recent seasons demonstrates that new town football can compete successfully at Scottish football's highest level.