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  • Vikes stadium proposal

    With retractable roof:



    http://www.minnpost.com/jayweiner/20...dedly_new_turn

    It would be incorrect and hyperbolic to say the Vikings stadium debate was stood on its head this morning.

    But, surely, it was turned on a swivel, and that 90-degree repositioning might — might — create a mild jump-start in a complex process that seems inexorably and painfully headed toward the end of the 2011 football season.

    That's when the football team's lease expires at the Metrodome. And, don't look now, but the fall of 2011 is a mere four football seasons away.





    $853 million retractable-roof stadium proposed
    The Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission, which owns and operates the 27-year-old Metrodome, unveiled a new, fascinating $853 million retractable-roofed concept today. (Let's gloss over the price for now.)

    The new idea, created long ago by Minneapolis-based Ellerbe Becket but finally made public today, re-uses some of the Dome's foundation. The design would, literally and architecturally, turn the stadium's field around, reorienting the current north-south football field to an east-west configuration. With a neat view of downtown over the west goalpost, to boot.





    That would allow builders to, among other things, widen the Dome's cluttered concourses, add 8,000 club seats, increase suites from 99 to 150, improve the awful toilet situation (especially for women) and put a retractable roof on the edifice. In fact, in images displayed at the Commission meeting, when the roof is off, the reconstructed Dome's west wall would open while its roof would slide towards the east.

    According to stadium consultant CSL, the "reconstruction" would generate $32 million in new premium seating, signage, naming rights and ticket revenues over the current Metrodome revenue streams. (It would boost average ticket prices to about $72, CSL's respected Craig Skiem estimates, too.)

    Time out.

    There is a very long way to go. This proposal is just that — a proposal — but much less breathless than a more expensive one made 18 months ago by a design group called ROMA with the architectural firm HOK. That one would have built on the Dome sit, but completely demolish the current facility. It also promised massive and, perhaps, unnecessary development around the stadium.

    It had a price tag of $954 million or $100 million more than the new one.

    Fewers bells-and-whistles, more value
    Today's presentation offered fewer bells-and-whistles and more dollars-and-cents. And that's good. Because, when push comes to tackle, this Viking debate will be reduced to cost.

    Clearly, there will be talk about the value of an NFL franchise to a community and the power of the team. Another Sports Facilities Commission document released today shows that about 1 million Minnesotans every Sunday either watch on TV or listen on radio to Vikings games. That's a hefty figure if you consider this: What other statewide event brings 1 million together for three hours once a week?


    Ellerbe Becket
    This sketch shows the proposed stadium with the roof open.


    But, still, it will be about the deal, about which public entity will get involved — yes, there will be a call for public financing — and then, of course, how much owner Zygi Wilf and his partners will invest.

    The Twins' ballpark financing model of partnering with Hennepin County won't work. Another local sales tax increase would create riots along Nicollet Mall. The concept of "a local partner," as Gov. Tim Pawlenty likes to call it, is off-base. If any government account benefits from pro sports, it is the state's (via income and sales taxes) and it is the state — of any government entity — that will have to come to the table on this massive project.

    Or not.

    For their part, the Vikings representatives at the meeting today were subdued, but clearly pleased with some movement, any movement. Indeed, this Ellerbe plan was being polished and proof-read about a year ago. There was lots of excitement about it then.

    But, on August 1, the I-35 bridge collapsed nary a mile from the Dome, and talking about stadium infrastructure instead of bridges was not in the cards.

    Vikings stadium VP Lester Bagley was particularly cautious when asked about the projections by Skiem, of the Twin Cities-based CSL consultants, that an additional $32 million per year will roll into team coffers at a new stadium.

    That piece he said — sounding like a Star Tribune editorial — "requires further study." Actually, the entire pile of documents released today requires deep study by political leaders, legislative staffers and stadium boosters and critics.

    But Bagley is correct on one front: "We need to get this resolved sooner, rather than later, or this franchise is going to be in jeopardy."

    I'm not exactly sure what "jeopardy" means, and I don't see this team moving in 2012. Remember, within one minute of owning the team three years ago, Wilf said he'd never move the Vikings. Still, with the changing dynamics of NFL economics and the possibility of a labor dispute with the players, local revenues are becoming increasingly critical. (They've been important forever, but with the New York teams and the Dallas Cowboys coming on line with new facilities, the rich are gonna get richer before the Vikings do.) The Vikings trail just about every other franchise in the league when it comes to stadium-generated revenues.

    New stadium back in play as political issue
    With the economy in a tailspin, with oil prices spurting through the Dome's roof and banks failing with working people's cash, the last thing Minnesotans will want to address any time soon is an $853 million Vikings stadium or any public gift to Mr. Wilf.

    But it's out there, folks. The issue isn't going away, and it's almost a miracle that a new proposal is cheaper than an old one. Construction costs since this Vikings debate started nearly a decade ago have about doubled. This cost reduction in the new Ellerbe design was one of the goals of some commissioners, most notably its longtime finance chairman, Paul Thatcher.

    Today, Thatcher revealed a conversation he had with MSFC chairman Roy Terwilliger, the former Republican state senator from Edina.


    Ellerbe Becket
    This sketch shows the proposed stadium with roof closed.


    When the two of them first saw the Ellerbe design a year ago, Thatcher said he told Terwilliger, "Mr. Chairman, that looks pretty Republican to me," meaning the refurbishing of some of the Dome's structure and its relatively reduced cost.

    Thatcher said Terwilliger replied, "It's not only very Minnesotan, it's even Lutheran.''

    Terwilliger has even taken to calling this proposal "Hotdish" because of its reusable components.

    Ya know, re-use what ya got, Lena.

    Maybe that'll play well at the Legislature.

    Another key issue to address: under this proposal, the Vikings would have to play elsewhere, probably at the new University of Minnesota stadium, for two seasons. Capacity would be shrunk. Revenues would be reduced. What happens on that front?

    Requests for proposals to architectural and construction firms were approved today. The commission is seeking LEED certification.

    The RFP reads: "The Commission in consultation with the Minnesota Vikings ... is undertaking preliminary work in regards to this project in anticipation of providing the Minnesota Legislature at its 2009 session with detailed information and recommendations."

    The Dome's meeting room today was filled with lobbyists, consultants and architects.

    The Vikings stadium game is back on.

  • #2
    who is paying for this??

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    • #3
      thats what you get in a Blue state

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      • #4
        aaaaahhhhhhhhhhh

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by UL_LUZ98 View Post
          who is paying for this??
          Hopefully Mr. Wilf.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by UL_LUZ98 View Post
            thats what you get in a Blue state

            Comment


            • #7
              If Ziggy has enough money to buy a team then he should have enough to have his own house to play in. I will not support ANY sports team projects untill the let up have a dragstrip close to home and if WE as car people would get together and tell them that we might have a chance, Ultra slim but just maybe.
              Doesn't make a a difference if you demo or repubo to much has been spent on people who get millions and millions and we get shit in return. The Vikings have never won anything and the same will happen this year. People who play as a team win as a team.
              Remember there is no "I" in team but as my son says there is a "ME":rlol:

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