What would the stadium look like with the south endzone enclosed?

Submitted by UAUM on

With DB stating that he wants to enclose the southern part of Michigan Stadium with bleachers to expand capacity close to 120,000, I can't stop thinking about what that would look like. 

I am perplexed at what it might look like though because the new scoreboards will block seating in the middle of the new proposed section.  Since nobody will want an obstructed view, it seems like the bowl would be broken.

Are there any other stadiums that have this sort of seating arrangement that we can look to?  Are there any MGoArchitechtes out there who could do at least an ariel diagram of how the seating would look?

m1jjb00

June 14th, 2011 at 10:39 AM ^

I think Brandon described at the DC Alumni event as each side would go up to the edges of the scoreboard.  On the other hand, he also stresses a walkway connecting the two, so I guess I'm confused too.  Your welcome for the non help.

UAUM

June 14th, 2011 at 11:02 AM ^

there is not enough demand yet for closing both endzones at once.  DB said that he hopes that his successor can enclose the north endzone, which would bring the capacity to around 125,000!!

In DC, DB said that once the waiting list gets big enough and the continued widening of the current seats allows the south enzone expansion, he'd do it, and give the crappy seats to the visiting team.

Purkinje

June 14th, 2011 at 11:33 AM ^

The University has several good sized parking lots right outside of the Stadium. I don't understand why they don't take one of the offseasons to dig a huge hole in the ground and build a big parking structure... Not only would that  make it easier for people to park near the Stadium, but the University could rake in tons of cash by charging $20 a car, which is less than other parking further away. The only downside would be waiting in line to get out with thousands of other cars. There would have to be many exits and a lot more planning than I'm putting into this.

fat_wilhelm

June 14th, 2011 at 12:08 PM ^

For one thing, it takes a hell of a lot longer than an off-season to build an underground parking structure. If you're in Ann Arbor, go check out the structure going in at South 5th and Liberty right next to the downtown library. My firm did / is doing part of the design and we have a 2008 project number. Groundbreaking was in October of 2009 and today, it still looks like a gigantic hole in the ground. Also, that one, in particular, costs upwards of 42 million dollars to build, so there's that.

You can check out the "progress webcam" here if you're interested: http://webcams.christmanco.com/underground-deck/

moredamnsound

June 14th, 2011 at 11:39 AM ^

Some good solutions they may come up with (sarcasm):
<br>1. Email everyone and tell them to find a carpool
<br>2. Change the renovations in Crisler to make it into a parking garage. The basketball teams will play at the IM building or CCRB.
<br>3. Send Dave Brandon to 5 cities in 6 days to see how those cities handle parking.
<br>4. Invent teleporter.
<br>

MrVociferous

June 14th, 2011 at 11:27 AM ^

If we're going to do it, I'd like to see us add an upper deck at one end to create a megaphone effect with the stadium noise.  The endzone with the upper deck would be crazy loud and would create another big homefield advantage.

JeepinBen

June 14th, 2011 at 11:49 AM ^

The bowl is amazing in and of itself. An upper deck would look just like PSU's, and the Big House Bowl is one of the most intimidating views in sports anyway. 

When Yost designed it it was important that when you went through the gate to your seat you could instantly see the entire stadium and have a "take-your-breath-away" moment at the sheer size of the stadium. I wouldn't want to lose that with an upper deck

/read Soderstrom's book on Yost everyone, it was great

Edited:

PSU's Stadium:

Link to Soderstrom's Book: http://www.amazon.com/Big-House-Fielding-Building-Michigan/dp/1932399119/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1308066577&sr=1-1

andrewG

June 14th, 2011 at 11:59 AM ^

while a second deck would probably be the most practical solution for the endzones and allow the fans to be closer to the field (or as close to the field as you can be from 120 rows up), i can't imagine getting rid of the iconic bowl design of michigan stadium.

Space Coyote

June 14th, 2011 at 12:25 PM ^

Or an upper deck on Michigan Stadium.  I don't think it's a relevant point though.  I've heard before that the original intention was to eventually build an upper deck and seat around 140,000 - 150,000.  However, after one of the more recent expansions an upper deck became unfeasible anyway, as there isn't the proper structural support (or something around those lines) to implement such a massive undertaking. 

TheTruth41

June 14th, 2011 at 2:05 PM ^

and they didnt have a structural footing beforehand. thats why they put it in with the project the same way they would when adding an upper deck. I think you would overlap the upper deck several rows over the lower bowl to decrease the ocerall footprint of the big house and allow for even more sound catching opportunities to be thrown back onto the field.

Raoul

June 14th, 2011 at 7:47 PM ^

Have you seen the columns that have been put up to support the new scoreboards? I just drove past the stadium today. The columns are massive, and there are six on each side. It would not be a trivial undertaking to move the scoreboards.

The way they've been spending money on renovations and upgrades to the facilities, I suppose it's possible they might move them. But my guess is any expansion of the stadium--at least in the next decade or so--will be worked around the scoreboards.

jmblue

June 14th, 2011 at 12:11 PM ^

I don't understand the confusion.  The endzones are already enclosed.  We'd just be adding rows (and presumably, moving the scoreboards back).  It wouldn't be much different than it is now.  Even if only one side has rows added, it's likely that fans would hardly even notice.  For a full decade (1998-2008), the east sideline's rows did not go up as high as the adjacent endzones, and few ever noticed.