Fresh drone footage has provided Wrexham supporters with another close look at the rapid transformation of the Racecourse Ground.
The new Kop Stand is now beginning to take clear shape, with the project moving beyond the early groundwork and into a far more visible stage of construction.
Watch as Kop Stand project advances past initial groundwork
The latest aerial footage, captured on July 8th, shows how quickly work is progressing on the new Kop Stand at the Racecourse Ground.
After months of foundation and piling work, the main steel framework is now largely in place, giving supporters a much clearer impression of the eventual footprint and scale of the new stand.
The footage also shows that the structural towers have now been topped out, while steelwork across the site continues to transform the appearance of the previously vacant end of the stadium.
The wider project is expected to cost around £70 million and initially add approximately 5,500 seats to the Racecourse Ground.
The design also provides scope for the stand to be expanded to around 7,500 seats in the future, with the initial development taking the stadium's overall capacity towards 18,000.
The scale of the progress is particularly clear when compared with earlier footage of the site.
The project has moved from a largely empty construction zone dominated by groundwork and machinery to a recognisable stadium structure, with the steel skeleton now rising prominently behind the goal.
FGG says: Wrexham fans can finally see their new Kop Stand taking shape
For Wrexham supporters who have followed the project through years of planning and the less visually exciting groundwork phase, the latest footage offers another clear indication of what the finished Kop Stand will bring to the Racecourse Ground.
There is still plenty of work ahead, but the emergence of the main structure represents an exciting stage of the build.
With the towers topped out and steelwork advancing rapidly, each new update is now likely to bring a noticeable change to the famous old ground.