The Boleyn Ground was reportedly blown up on Monday evening for a movie called Fatal Score, which stars Pierce Brosnan and former WWE star Dave Bautista and is said to involve armed criminals holding fans hostage inside a football stadium.
West Ham legend Billy Bonds has claimed the club's new London Stadium "isn't a football ground".
The Hammers moved into the former 2012 Olympic Stadium in Stratford ahead of the new season, but there have been a number of problems since the switch from Upton Park, which was blown up earlier this week as part of filming for an upcoming movie.
Bonds, who played for West Ham for 20 years and managed the club from 1990 to 1994, has now added to the criticism of the new stadium, although he has said that supporters should embrace it.
He told fans' website Knees Up Mother Brown: "I don't think it's a football ground. That's not to say I didn't moan about it when we were moving, but I didn't share a lot of opinions about it because we were going to move anyway, so it didn't matter.
"And it doesn't matter that it's not a football ground because we're going to be there for a long time. It's still our home.
"We don't own the place and there are a lot of problems with that going on, but it's still where our team are going to play and if you're a West Ham supporter then you're going to embrace it.
"It seems strange. The pitch is like an island out in the middle. Slaven Bilic has to walk 20-odd yards to get to the edge of pitch and when you're sitting up high you can see a big trench where they've moved the seats. Arsenal built a new stadium but they're two yards away from the playing surface.
"I went to the Bournemouth game and I was sat behind the media. It just seemed miles away from the pitch and you couldn't get the atmosphere up there.
"'I'm not saying the fans weren't making noise - there was loads of noise there. It just lacks that bit of atmosphere of a football ground."