<P> At Valley Parade there are now two memorials . One, now re-situated to that end of the stand where the fire began, is a sculpture donated on the initial re-opening of Valley Parade in December 1986 by Sylvia Graucob, a then Jersey - based former West Yorkshire woman . The other, situated by the main entrance, was donated by the club after its £ 7.5 million rebuilding of the original main stand in 2002 . It has a black marble fascia on which the names and ages of those that died are inscribed in gold, and a black marble platform on which people can leave flowers and mementos . There is a twin memorial sculpture, unveiled on 11 May 1986, which has the names of the dead inscribed on it . They were donated by Bradford's twin city of Hamm, Germany, and are situated in front of Bradford City Hall in both locations . After the fire, Bradford City also announced they would thereafter play with black trim on their shirt collars and arms as a permanent memorial to those who had died . </P> <P> Four police officers, Police Constables David Britton and John Richard Ingham and Chief Inspectors Charles Frederick Mawson and Terence Michael Slocombe, and two spectators, Richard Gough and David Hustler, were awarded the Queen's Gallantry Medal for their actions . PCs Peter Donald Barrett and David Charles Midgley, along with spectators Michael William Bland and Timothy Peter Leigh received the Queen's Commendation for Brave Conduct . In total, 28 police officers and 22 supporters, who were publicly documented as having saved at least one life, later received police commendations or bravery awards . Together, flanked by undocumented supporters, they managed to clear all but one person who made it to the front of the stand . Club coach Terry Yorath incurred minor injuries while taking part in the rescue . </P> <P> While Valley Parade was re-developed, Bradford City played games at various neighbouring grounds: Elland Road, Leeds; Leeds Road, Huddersfield; and Odsal Stadium, Bradford . Valley Parade re-opened on 14 December 1986, when Bradford City beat an England XI 2--1 in a friendly . Since then, it has been further re-developed and, today, Valley Parade is a modern 25,136 all - seater stadium, which is virtually unrecognisable from how it was at the time of the disaster, save for the original clubhouse that still stands beside the main stand, and the flank support wall that runs down the Hollywell Ash Lane at the "Bradford End". </P> <P> Lincoln City suffered two successive relegations, first to the Fourth Division in 1986, and again in 1987, becoming the first team to be automatically relegated from the Football League itself . They were immediately promoted back to the Football League in 1988, and survived for 23 years before being relegated again in 2011 . Although some attributed Lincoln City's sudden demise to the psychological effects of the fire on its players (together with the resignation of successful manager Colin Murphy shortly before the fire), it symbolised the wider crisis that the introduction of new safety legislation brought to Lincoln's Sincil Bank home . The timber construction of St. Andrew's Stand, Main Stand and the roof of its popular Railway End terrace were immediately condemned as fire hazards, which saw seating capacity briefly cut to nil . Lincoln City's board responded by committing £ 1,100,000 to their ground's renovation in the year that immediately followed the fire at Valley Parade, and over the following decade made improvements that eventually totalled £ 3,000,000 . After its renovation in 1990 they named the home end of their ground the' Stacey - West Stand', in honour of Bill Stacey and Jim West, the two Lincoln City supporters who were amongst the 56 to die at Bradford . Each year Lincoln send representatives to the annual memorial service in Bradford city centre and between 2007 and 2009, were managed by Bradford's captain that day, Peter Jackson . </P>

Where did bradford city play after the fire
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