The Irish Football Association is to back plans for the redevelopment of its international venue at Windsor Park, scuppering the proposals of other sports bidding to use the stadium.
The move will be seen as a setback to those hoping to see a new multi-sport national stadium being built.
There had been plans for a new venue to host major fixtures in football, rugby union and gaelic games.
The IFA said it would now be looking at how big the revamped stadium would be as well as the current contract it had with the ground owners Linfield FC.
In a statement, the IFA said: ‘The Irish FA’s Executive Board has agreed in principle to support the redevelopment of Windsor Park as the National Stadium for Northern Ireland.
‘The size of the stadium, together with the ownership structure of the stadium and negotiations around the existing contract with Linfield FC were not discussed but the Association will now begin work on these areas and other key elements of the redevelopment project. At this stage no further comment will be made.’
Proposals for the upgrade of Windsor Park football stadium were revealed in June. Linfield Football Club said a £20m boost from the public purse would lift capacity and address safety issues.
The Stormont government abandoned the former Maze prison site as a shared venue for soccer, rugby and GAA, earlier this year.
Since the Maze plan was shelved, government had asked the three sports for proposals on how facilities might be upgraded.
The Linfield document advanced two proposals. Option one was termed ‘an interim fix’ at a cost of £3m. The club believe this would refurbish the north and south stands – the stadium’s two major spectator areas – and construct some form of new east stand at the railway end of Windsor. Capacity would remain unchanged at 13,500.
Option two, described as the ‘long-term fix’ would require funding of £20m and see capacity rise to 20,000 to include new south and east stands.
Linfield had indicated they would be prepared to renegotiate its current contract with the IFA for ground use, which has 80 years to run.