Friday, September 20, 2024

The Nissan Stadium

1.     Adelphia Coliseum – 1999 – 2002
2.     The Coliseum – 2002 – 2006
3.     LP Field – 2006 – 2015
Address: 1 Titans Way
Location: Nashville, Tennessee
Owner: Metropolitan Government of Nashville
             and Davidson County.
Executive Suites: 177
Capacity: 69,143 2006 – Present(1)
Former Capacity:
1.     67,700 1999(2)
2.     68,498 2000(3)
3.     68,798 2001(4)
4.     68,804 2002(5)
5.     68,809 2003(6)
6.     68,932 2004(7)
7.     69,149 2005(8)
Record Attendance:
Overall à 73,874 Ed Sheeran, the Mathematics Tour,
            July 22nd, 2023)(9)
Surface:
1.     Matrix Helix Turf(10) 2023 – Present
2.     Natural Grass 1999 – 2022
Broke Ground: May 3, 1997(11)
Opened: August 27th, 1999
Construction Cost: $290 million ($530 in 2023
                              dollars(12))
Architect:
1.     HOK Sport(13)
2.     McKissack & McKissack(13)
3.     Moody Nolan(13)
Structural Engineer: Thronton Tmasetti(14)
Services Engineer: M-E Engineers, Inc.(13)
General Contractor: The Stadium Group, comprising
                                Bovis, Jones & Jones Construction
                                (15)
Tenants:
1.     Tennessee Titans (NFL) 1999 – Present
2.     Tennessee State Tigers (NCAA) 1999 – Present
3.     Nashville SC (MLS) 2020 – 2021
4.     Music City Bowl (NCAA) 1999 – Present

Nissan Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium in Nashville, Tennessee. Owned by the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, it is primarily used for football and is the home of the Tennessee Titans of the National Football League (NFL) and the Tigers of Tennessee State University(16). The stadium is the site of the TransPerfect Music City Bowl, a postseason college football game played each December, from 2020 until 2021 the home field Nashville SC of Major League Soccer (MLS). It is used for concerts such as those affiliated with the CMA Music Festival each June. The stadium also has facilities to host public events, meetings, and parties.(17)

Nissan Stadium is located on the east bank of the Cumberland River, across the river from downtown Nashville and has a seating capacity of 69,143(18). Its first regular-season game was a 36 – 35 win over the Cincinnati Bengals on September 12th, 1999(19). Nissan Stadium has been known by Adelphia Coliseum (1999 – 2002), the Coliseum (2002 – 2006), and LP Field (2006 – 2015).(20)

The stadium features three levels of seating. The lower bowl encompasses the field and the club and upper levels form the stadium's dual towers, rising above the lower bowl along each sideline. The stadium’s luxury suites are located within the towers. Three levels of suites are located in the stadium’s eastern tower, one between the lower and club levels, and two between the club and upper levels. The western tower has two levels of suites between the club and upper levels. The press box is located between the lower and club levels in the western tower. Nissan Stadium’s dual video boards are behind the lower bowl in each end zone.

As of the 2023 season, the playing surface is Matrix Helix Turf with an organic infill. Before 2023, the playing surface was Tifsport Bermuda Sod, a natural grass. The climate of Nashville and the wear of hosting a game nearly every weekend often required the field to be resodded in the area between the hashes in November, and the stadium had amongst the highest lower body injuries of any in the NFL during the 2018 – 2021 seasons. (21)

On the stadium’s eastern side is the Titans Pro Shop, a retail store that sells team merchandise. (22)

With Tennessee State being the tenant, Nissan Stadium is the largest stadium in the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS formerly known as I-AA).

History

During the 1995 NFL preseason, the Houston Oilers faced the Washington Redskins in an exhibition game at Neyland Stadium in Knoxville, Tennessee. At the game, Oilers owner Bud Adams met Nashville Mayor Phis Bredesen and began discussing the possibility of moving the team to Middle Tennessee due to Adam’s discontent with the team’s lease at the Astrodome and the unwillingness of the City of Houston to build a new football-only stadium. Later that year, Adams and Bredesen announced the team’s intent to move to Nashville. The city and team decided to locate a stadium on the eastern bank of the Cumberland River across from downtown Nashville, in what had been a declining industrial/warehousing area.

In a special referendum on May 7, 1996, voters in Metropolitan Nashville/Davidson County voted to approve partial funding of the proposed stadium. The vote, which allocated $144 million of public money to the project, passed with a 59 percent majority(23). The pro-stadium organization, known as “NFL Yes!”, outspent the anti-stadium group by a ratio of 16:1 during the campaign.

The funds would initially be raised through an increase in the Metro water tax. Much of the remaining construction costs were funded through the sale of personal seat licenses. Some money from the State of Tennessee was allocated to the project, on the condition that the Tennessee State University football team move its home games there, and that the incoming NFL team be named Tennessee instead of Nashville.

The stadium’s construction was delayed when the construction site was hit by a tornado that struck downtown Nashville on April 16th, 1998, and destroyed several cranes, but the stadium opened in time for the first scheduled event.

On May 3rd, 2010, the stadium’s playing surface was filled with 6 feet of water due to the heavy rains and flooding from the Cumberland River. The flood also reached down to the locker rooms of the stadium.

The stadium received upgrades in mid-2012. Among the improvements are a new sound system, high-speed elevators to the upper levels, and LED ribbon boards mounted on the faces of the upper mezzanines. Two new HD Lighthouse brand LED video displays measuring 157 feet by 54 feet were installed, replacing the entire end zone scoreboard apparatuses. At the time of installation, the two boards became the second-largest displays in the National Football League (trailing only AT&T Stadium).(26)

In 2014 and 2015, the stadium hosted the Nashville Kickoff Game, a college football game featuring major NCAA teams for Tennessee.

During the 2018 season, two 20th-anniversary logos were put in each of the end zones to help celebrate the Titans’ 20th year in Nashville. The yard line numbers were also changed to match the number style on the new uniforms.

From 2021 to 2023, Indy Car ran the Music City Grand Prix which used a street track that used streets in Downtown Nashville and around the stadium. The stadium facilities were used for Club seats for the races.(27)

In February 2022, the Titans paused ongoing renovations to the stadium, citing the rising costs and the structure,(28) to explore the possibility of replacing the facility shortly (29). They would later commit to a full replacement in late 2022, releasing renderings for their new stadium, which will possibly open in 2027.

On July 1st, 2023 the stadium hosted the Monster Jam World Finals 22.(30)

On July 3rd, 2024, the human remains of an unhoused man who disappeared a couple days prior were located inside a tent were found in a section of the stadium parking lot that is located near the Cumberland River, foul play has not suspected in the incident and the official cause of death has not been determined yet.(31)

Naming Rights

During its construction, the stadium had no official name, though it was generally referred to as “The East Bank Stadium”, a reference to the stadium’s location on the eastern bank of the Cumberland River. Upon its completion, it was given the name “Adelphia Coliseum” in a 15-year, 30 million dollar naming rights arrangement with Adelphia telecommunications company. However, after Adelphia missed a required payment and subsequently filed for bankruptcy in 2002, the agreement was abandoned and the stadium became known simply as “The Coliseum” for four years. (Adelphia itself was dissolved in 2006.)

A naming rights deal with Nashville-based Louisiana-Pacific was inked on June 6th, 2006. Louisiana-Pacific, which markets itself as “LP Building Products”, paid $30 million over 10 years for naming rights(32). LP’s influence inside the stadium led to the creation of the LP Building Zones in 2007, located beneath the giant scoreboards from Daktronics at the north and south ends of the stadium. The concession stands and restrooms in those two areas were decorated to look like suburban homes using LP products.

On June 24th, 2015, car manufacturer Nissan, which has its North American headquarters just south of Nashville in Franklin operates a large manufacturing plant in nearby Smyrna, and is headquartered in Nishi-ku, Yokohama, Japan, bought the naming rights for the stadium in a 20-year contract, rebranding the stadium as Nissan Stadium(33)(34). As part of the sponsor agreement, a 2016 Nissan Titan pickup truck was placed next to the stadium scoreboard.(35)

Tennessee Titans

The Tennessee Titans have posted an impressive record at Nissan Stadium since moving there in 1999, including winning their first 13 games before losing to the Baltimore Ravens on November 12th, 2000(36). Overall, in a total of 181 games, the Titans are 100 – 76 in the regular season and 2 – 3 in playoffs at Nissan Stadium(37). Since moving to Nissan Stadium, the Titans have made the playoffs nine times, played in three AFC Championship Games, and appeared in one Super Bowl (XXXXIV).

Music City Miracle

On January 8th, 2000, one of the most memorable and debated plays in NFL history took place at then-Adelphia Coliseum. The “Music City Miracle” (as it has come to be known) was a last-minute trick play on a kickoff return that resulted in a touchdown and catapulted the Titans past the Buffalo Bills to the Divisional Playoffs. It also ensured that the Titans would go undefeated in the first season in the team’s new home. The victory was seen in front of a franchise-record crowd. (38)

Soccer

Nissan Stadium regularly hosts soccer matches featuring the United States men’s national team as well as the women’s national team and visiting professional clubs. The venue was first used for soccer on April 20th, 2004, in an exhibition game between the Los Angeles Galaxy of Major League Soccer and Tecos UAG of the Mexican Primera Division(39). Since then, Nissan Stadium has been used for friendly matches by the U.S. women versus Canada in 2004, a return of Tecos against rival F.C. Atlas in 2005, and the U.S. men versus Morocco in 2006(40). The stadium helped host the CONCACAF men’s 2008 and 2012 qualifying tournaments for the 2008 and 2012 Summer Olympics.(41)(42)

On April 1st, 2009, the U.S. men’s national team played a World Cup qualifier beating Trinidad and Tobago, 3 – 0. The match says Jozy Altidore became the youngest American to score a hat trick for the national team(43)(44). The U.S. men returned on March 29th, 2011 falling to Paraguay in a friendly before a record crowd of 29,059 – the largest to attend a soccer game in the state of Tennessee. (45)

Nissan Stadium was chosen for two games of the Group Stage for the 2017 CONCACAF Gold Cup.

The record crowd for a soccer game played in Tennessee is 56,232 and was set on July 29th, 2017, when English Premier League clubs Manchester City and Tottenham played an exhibition match at Nissan Stadium.(46)

Major League Soccer club Nashville SC began playing at the stadium in February 2020 and played their final game there in 2021.(47)

Concerts and Events

Nissan Stadium can also serve as a large concert venue. The main stage for the annual CMA Music Festival, held every June, is located in the stadium.(48)

Copyrights and references 

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