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West Ham's London Stadium cost owners £6m this summer to convert for multi-use

The London Stadium has been transformed to host Major League Baseball
Image: The London Stadium was transformed to host two Major League baseball games in June

The cost of converting the London Stadium from football ground to multi-use venue and back again has risen to £6m, the stadium's owners E20 have confirmed.

West Ham have a 99-year lease at the 60,000-seat venue, which was built for the 2012 Olympics, but pay only £2.5m a year in rent.

According to its most recent set of accounts, E20 is losing £20m a year and has spent £4m in legal fees in an unsuccessful attempt to get more money out of West Ham, who claim they are not to blame for the venue's financial woes.

West Ham to expand London Stadium
Image: West Ham want to expand London Stadium by 2,500 to 62,500 to make it biggest in the capital

One of the key issues at the stadium is the cost of moving its seats after the football season is over so it can be used for athletics, music concerts and other sporting events over the summer.

In response to a Freedom of Information request from PA, E20 confirmed it cost £11.3m to move the seats in 2017, when the stadium staged the World Athletics and World Para Athletics Championships.

That figure fell to £4.1m, though, in 2018, when the stadium was the venue for concerts, before hosting three weekends of international athletics.

But the cost of moving the seats has risen again this year after a summer that has seen the stadium stage a concert, two Major League Baseball games and athletics' Anniversary Games on July 20-21.

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Image: West Ham begin their Premier League campaign against champions Manchester City on August 10

The £6m figure in E20's FOI response is £500,000 higher than an estimate it published earlier this summer and it includes a £1.9million cost for the New York Yankees v Boston Red Sox series.

E20, however, told PA that MLB's hire fee for the stadium covered the cost of the seat moves and the league also covered the costs of the baseball pitch and "overlay", the temporary structures such as the bullpen and dugouts.

Asked if the baseball experiment, which is being repeated next June, made money, an E20 spokesperson said: "In addition to the wider economic benefit of bringing MLB to London, I can confirm a profit was generated by the baseball games."

The publicly-owned company would not reveal how much profit was made, though, citing "commercial interests".

The Hammers return to the venue on Saturday for a friendly against Athletic Bilbao, before starting their 2019/20 Premier League campaign against defending champions Manchester City on August 10.

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