Basketball
Add news
News

The new Atlanta stadium’s 5 wildest features

0

Here’s what to know about Mercedes-Benz Stadium during its debut season.

The new Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta opens on Aug. 26 for a preseason Atlanta Falcons game against the Arizona Cardinals. After that, the first college football game that will be played in the new stadium has been pegged as the sport’s biggest opening game ever, between top-ranked Alabama and Florida State on Saturday, Sept. 2.

Along with being the home stadium to both the Falcons and Major League Soccer’s Atlanta United, the new digs will put on the Chick-fil-A Kickoff, the SEC Championship, the HBCU national championship, and the Peach Bowl each season.

The 2017 National Championship will be here, too. This year also includes Georgia Tech vs. Tennessee on Labor Day. The Super Bowl and Final Four are headed here soon, too.

OK, so what makes this thing so unique?

Well, there’s a lot, actually!

1. The state-of-the-art roof is retractable, but not like anything that’s ever been done before.

There are eight different petals that move when the roof is opened and closed.

The roof will remain closed for the beginning of the football season, but teams will have the option to open or close it, weather permitting, about midway through the season.

Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

2. “The world’s largest video board” doesn’t begin to describe this thing.

Right below the roof is the “halo board,” which has 3,200 lineal feet of ribbon board. It towers over the field, providing 63,000-square feet of screen, and if you stretched it out, it’d be longer than the Eiffel Tower.

Here’s where it’s controlled:

SB Nation, Morgan Moriarty

There’s a “mega-column” that’s wrapped in an LED screen on three sides, too.

SB Nation, Morgan Moriarty

3. The food is actually good ... and cheap!

It’s easy to eat for under $10. For just $2 you can get a refillable cup. It’s like they’re not trying to gouge you at all!

SB Nation, Morgan Moriarty

“When you can come to an NFL stadium or a Major League Soccer stadium and be able to feed your family, a kid for $10, and get a hotdog, a refillable soda, a popcorn, and a pretzel, and right there you’ve only spent $8,” stadium general manager Scott Jenkins told SB Nation. “I don’t think there’s a sports venue in the country that can say that.”

Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

There are 15 local Atlanta food options along with 1,264 beer taps in the stadium, so don’t worry about having a lack of variety.

Yes, there’s a Chick-fil-A that’ll be closed during games on Sundays but open for college football games and other events. Besides, I sampled the chicken sandwiches at West Nine and Game Changers, and they were absolutely delicious.

SB Nation, Morgan Moriarty

There are also 12 different “neighborhood bars” in the stadium and other fan-first areas, and that’s not all.

4. Every bit of it is high-tech.

SB Nation, Morgan Moriarty

It has 4,000 miles of optic fiber, powering everything at the speed of light. In addition to free, fast WiFi throughout, the building has over 2,500 TVs, so fans won’t miss a second.

"We’ve got 1,800 wireless access points in the building," Jenkins said. "So there’s 1,000 of them in the seating bowl and another 800 in the concourses, so no matter where you are in this building, 70-some-thousand fans will have fast, wireless connectivity. And then whether you’re on WiFi or your on your cell phone with cellular service, we’ll have a distributed antenna system that’s throughout the building, that’ll give you great service through various carriers."

Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

Its 4,000 solar panels can generate enough solar energy on its campus in a year to power over nine Falcons home games or 13 United home matches. The stadium will also reuse rain water that the stadium collects.

"We’ll use about 47 percent less water, through our design of the building and our capture and re-use of rain water," Jenkins said. "So the rain water that hits the site, will be stored in a 680,000-gallon cistern, and we’ll use that water for make-up water for our cooling tank and to irrigate the landscaping."

5. The giant metal bird statue.

Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

That’s one giant metal bird statue!

This is a whole different building from the Georgia Dome.

“Every decision we’ve made has been squarely with the fans’ perspective of ‘how do we take the fan experience to the next level?’” Jenkins said. “The LED displays we have, whether it’s every seat is two inches wider than the Georgia Dome, almost all the concourses connect so you can circumnavigate the building, you don’t get cut-off. You can move vertically throughout the building, we have really wide staircases, we have twice the elevators, twice the escalators compared to the Georgia Dome.”

It also has the capacity to add an additional 2,700 seats at the top of upper bowl.

How much did this thing cost?

The final figure came down as $1.6 billion, part of which came via the city. But the good news is $850 million of that was financed from banks and investors, and Falcons owner Arthur Blank covered some of it, too.

In addition to the $850 million in loans, $200 million of the construction cost comes from bonds backed by Atlanta hotel-motel taxes, $200 million from the NFL and a yet-undetermined amount from sales of personal seat licenses. Blank is responsible for cost overruns.

Comments

Комментарии для сайта Cackle
Загрузка...

More news:

Turtle Soup Maryland Blog
Raptors Republic

Read on Sportsweek.org:

Other sports

Sponsored