Stadium Expansion

Submitted by WhoopinStick on

I've heard about the possibility of "bricking" the the north and south ends of the stadium to cover up the steel erector set look and so that the ends of the stadium match the rest of the brick work.  I've even seen a rendering of what it would look like. 

And of course I've also heard of new scoreboards and the possible addition of roughly 5,000 seats.  I can visualize new scoreboards but what are your thoughts on where they would construct the additional seats?

Looking at the aerial photo of the stadium, there appears to be only one access point for each end zone section.  What is the possibility of adding an additional concourse along the very top of the ends of the stadium to improve ingress/egress and incorporating the new seats and scoreboards with the concourse? 

Bryan

July 29th, 2010 at 4:09 PM ^

When it happens, the only logical place to add the seats would be to the endzones. I doubt there would be any need for additional concourses as this would only increase the cost of the project without a real benefit. Somewhere between 10-15 additional rows would add an extra 5k in seats.

jcgary

July 29th, 2010 at 4:13 PM ^

When they designed the new structures they designed it with the idea that they would add an upper deck or just go further back in the current bowl in the endzones.  Most likely they would add an upper deck in the endzones and when they do this I am sure they would cover the beams of that exterior with brick. 

Edit:  One other thing I forgot to mention that the design of the new structure also allows them to extend the upper public concourse (that will open this season) around both endzones of the the bowl.

BlockM

July 29th, 2010 at 4:12 PM ^

The University of Michigan will embark on a stadium expansion project SO LARGE that it requires them to go to... AN UPPER DECK.

Bryan

July 29th, 2010 at 4:36 PM ^

The four towers (where the stairs and elevators are located) are the only places you can see the field from. The area between the towers has a wall of which prevents a person from seeing the field. The structures were not designed to hold rows of people on the roof.

DeathStar

July 29th, 2010 at 4:49 PM ^

I'm adding a new couch, which should seat three more people in my living room (can't have the guys over and have them watching football and rubbing legs with each other or touching each other "accidentally").

TrppWlbrnID

July 30th, 2010 at 11:26 AM ^

a google image search for Cask of Aman... revealed this beauty.

"bricked in" sounds like the farthest thing from adding a state of the art, high visibility, high occupancy, durably finished, quality constructed building to a widely revered 100 year old building that seats over 107,000 people at once.