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Everton's new era began on Sunday with the first Premier League game at the Hill Dickinson Stadium.
David Moyes' side faced Brighton in the sunshine on Merseyside.
Everton's men's first team said goodbye to Goodison Park in an emotional manner in May, defeating Southampton 2-0 on the final day of last season.
The 52,769-seater waterfront stadium had already hosted a number of test events leading up to Sunday's game - beginning with Everton under-18s against Wigan under-18s as its first match back in February.
The men's first team played their first game in front of fans at the new ground earlier this month - against Roma in their final friendly before the Premier League season began.
But the club's new start really began on Sunday. Here's the Toffees big day in picture..
A sea of blue made its way to Bramley-Moore Dock
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Fans enjoying a beer at the Brambley Moore Pub
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Everton's Iliman Ndiaye scores their side's first goal of the game during the Premier League match…
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Fans celebrate the first goal at the Hill Dickinson Stadium
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Everton's new stadium is hoped to inspire a renaissance in Liverpool's post-industrial Northern Docks.
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Professor Michael Parkinson, from the University of Liverpool says it is vital the new ground delivers meaningful change for the north of the city.
He's been chronicling the change in the city's fortunes since the 1980s.
He told the Echo: "North Liverpool was an area we neglected for a long time. We fixed the city centre, fixed the south but didn't do the north.
"Now you have real evidence that people have realised that there's a challenge and an opportunity. The next decade will need to see the north get some of the benefits that some of the other parts of the city have got.
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