Rangers' plans for a fan zone beside Ibrox are set to be approved by Glasgow City Council.
Gers have demolished Edmiston House with hopes of building a state-of-the-art facility.
As part of the club's 150th anniversary celebrations in 2022, the building would include a Rangers museum, cafe, and a multi purpose conference and concert venue. As well as that, the development will also be comprised of two floors' worth of retail space. Plans were officially submitted to the council back in August with demolition work taking place last month. And council planners have given the green light for work to begin.
A document read: "The proposal shall result in the former Edmiston House being replaced with a new facility associated with Rangers FC, offering a mix of uses. "The proposed uses will enhance the match day experience of supporters within a controlled environment, provide opportunities for local community benefit and offer new uses which have city wide benefits such as conference use and live entertainment."
Speaking previously, Rangers' commercial director James Bisgrove hailed the plans as "one of the most exciting projects in European football". He said: "If you take a step back from Rangers, that has to be one of the most exciting projects in European football. "Our aim there is to create a destination really for supporters seven days a week, also a destination for Glasgow in terms of what we can do around conferences and events. "That for us is an opportunity for us to turn a derelict building, lets be an honest a bit of an eyesore at the moment in and around the Ibrox footprint, into a revenue generating asset.
"Within that are a number of pillars. We presented a plan to the board that projected a seven-figure profit per year from that building. "There are a lot of plans which need to fall into place to get to that, the club museum is one of the more exciting projects for us to put in place. "We have been looking at the Hearts museum, the Hampden museum but also looking further afield, the Santiago Bernabeu and the Camp Nou, for something that can bring supporters and also tourists, something really engaging but which can also provide a revenue stream for the club.
"It will also have a multi functional, multi-faceted space on the ground floor that can serve as a fan zone on match days. "We are looking at a capacity of between 1,500-2,000 supporters that can use that indoor outdoor space to have food and beverage, watch giant screens, entertainment and increase the dwell time at Ibrox."