Has anyone thought about Pitt strong arming the Rooneys...
Hahahahahahahahaha.
Ahhhhhh... Hahahahahahahahahahaha.
You should have an HBO special
Hilarious.
Has anyone thought about Pitt strong arming the Rooneys...
Has anyone thought about Pitt strong arming the Rooneys into redoing the seat colors and making seats sectioned to be removed and sort of have the stadium re molded into a 55,000 capacity stadium which we need (not 80,000). Pitt needs to muscle the Steelers here and perhaps threaten litigation or the building of another stadium to perhaps get more cooperation from them. We can likely work the stadium out with Heniz to meet the Pitt community needs but not if we don't start demanding changes from the Steelers and NFL. This is our best option.
Multi-purpose stadium typically aren't great for anything. Three Rivers was a poor venue to watch baseball, and a mediocre one for football. And when you try football/basketball, it will typically be too cavernous for basketball, and too small for football, and of course, be indoors, which sucks.If they are bent on having football played in Oakland, then a multipurpose facility is the way to go.
Multi-purpose stadium typically aren't great for anything. Three Rivers was a poor venue to watch baseball, and a mediocre one for football. And when you try football/basketball, it will typically be too cavernous for basketball, and too small for football, and of course, be indoors, which sucks.
They dont want to own a football stadium which would lock PITT in to running a football program.If Pitt was miraculously given 100 acres of flat buildable land.....
The administration would build everything BUT a football stadium.
we'd sell it to Marriott and build some more hotels in Oakland..If Pitt was miraculously given 100 acres of flat buildable land.....
The administration would build everything BUT a football stadium.
Heinz seats are coming due to be replaced. CIncy has started theirs.
Yep. They will need to replace the sun faded bleacher seats with new bright yellow benches.
Oh wait... do some of you think that new seats will be anything other than Steelers colors?
we'd sell it to Marriott and build some more hotels in Oakland..
Since you bring it up, I have a question regarding the new Marriott in Oakland. Is that going to be located on the old Mosque site or the parking lot behind the PAA? I could've swore we owned that site and if it's the latter, that seems like it'd be a tight fit. Thanks, it's hard for an out-of-towner to keep up with that kind of stuff.we'd sell it to Marriott and build some more hotels in Oakland..
They'll probably make them Red seats since yellow was so unpopular. That will fix the problem?Heinz seats are coming due to be replaced. CIncy has started theirs.
Since you bring it up, I have a question regarding the new Marriott in Oakland. Is that going to be located on the old Mosque site or the parking lot behind the PAA? I could've swore we owned that site and if it's the latter, that seems like it'd be a tight fit. Thanks, it's hard for an out-of-towner to keep up with that kind of stuff.
Interesting. It looks like it'll be very nice, but tight as well.I believe it will go on the PAA's personal parking lot, which is different then the land Pitt owns.
With the on-campus stadium talk once again making the rounds, I figured I would put my idea out there. I really do think the only way to bring football back on campus is to get rid of the Pete and build a new facility on that land. This is the best idea for three reasons:
The remaining challenges would be parking/congestion in Oakland and cost-effectiveness. The first part is simple: Build a parking garage on the OC Lot front of Cost (see #3 here), work with Carlow to build a garage on the current Carlow Lot C, and expand the OC Garage (see #2 here). To reduce congestion, Pitt could run a shuttle service into Oakland. The proposed Oakland Transit Connector and potential “Spine Line” would help as well. The rest of the solution can be found here. Credit goes to James Santelli. It clearly shows that the necessary parking is already there.
- You are not changing the campus footprint at all
- Pitt already owns the land
- You would not need to tear down any existing infrastructure, with the exception of Panther Hall. A solution to adding it back can be found here (see #7)
The only challenge left is if it’s worth the money. My idea is this: Construct a multi-purpose indoor stadium that would be home to Pitt football and basketball. The facility would include a student fitness area and student-athlete service center, practice and storage rooms for the Band, offices space, and classrooms for a potential new major at Pitt such as Sports Management. This means that the facility could host a wide range of events, such as ACC/NCAA tournament games, concerts, graduations, and more.
At this point, you’re probably imagining something similar to Syracuse: a stadium that is “converted” into a basketball arena by placing the court in an endzone and closing off the rest, which creates little atmosphere. This is completely different. It would be only the second stadium in the world to truly transform itself into an arena by having a moving seating section that can shrink it from 47,500 to around 20,000. The technology is already there. Built for $195m in 2000, the Saitama Super Arena in Japan has the ability to shrink its playing surface of 36,500 into a 19-22,000 seat arena. For comparison, the Pete was built for $119m. Here’s how it works:
For more details, click here. When it's in arena mode, there is enough room for the other side to be used as a practice field. What’s also cool is that the arena seating would be flexible. It could expand or shrink based on the type of event. And to replace the lost practice courts, you can convert the Cost into a basketball practice facility. Additionally, a center-hung jumbotron would be on a track that would allow it to glide and rotate to the end of the stadium that’s in arena mode.
If we are going to spend hundreds of millions on an on-campus stadium, it must be something that will benefit all students and be used every day of the year. Something that would serve athletics, arts, and education equally. It would benefit the entire University that the project would cost less than if you were to to buy property, tear down and replace buildings, build a stadium, etc. Pitt would have another landmark that’s marveled by the entire world. I’d love to hear everyone’s thoughts on this. Hail to Pitt!
No, I did not waste any of my time. This will definitely never happen, but I enjoy thinking up all these concepts and scenarios. It does have flaws, like all of them, but I thought it was something different (unique?) and would benefit our University.Cliffs please! Did you just waste 15-20 min of your life or did I miss something about on campus stadium momentum?
I have an idea! Why can't Pitt build an on campus stadium that hovers over Oakland like a space ship? It literally could 100 feet above the Pete. There could be an escalator going down to the Pete!!! Thoughts?
City of Pittsburgh has marked all air in Oakland as a national registered landmark. cant build anything on it..I have an idea! Why can't Pitt build an on campus stadium that hovers over Oakland like a space ship? It literally could 100 feet above the Pete. There could be an escalator going down to the Pete!!! Thoughts?
Does that include the air they put in a special box at the last game held at Pitt Stadium?City of Pittsburgh has marked all air in Oakland as a national registered landmark. cant build anything on it..
City of Pittsburgh has marked all air in Oakland as a national registered landmark. cant build anything on it..
Sorry. Not enough sky real estate available in Oakland. And if there were, Pitt has other priorities, like the sky track.
With the on-campus stadium talk once again making the rounds, I figured I would put my idea out there. I really do think the only way to bring football back on campus is to get rid of the Pete and build a new facility on that land. This is the best idea for three reasons:
The remaining challenges would be parking/congestion in Oakland and cost-effectiveness. The first part is simple: Build a parking garage on the OC Lot front of Cost (see #3 here), work with Carlow to build a garage on the current Carlow Lot C, and expand the OC Garage (see #2 here). To reduce congestion, Pitt could run a shuttle service into Oakland. The proposed Oakland Transit Connector and potential “Spine Line” would help as well. The rest of the solution can be found here. Credit goes to James Santelli. It clearly shows that the necessary parking is already there.
- You are not changing the campus footprint at all
- Pitt already owns the land
- You would not need to tear down any existing infrastructure, with the exception of Panther Hall. A solution to adding it back can be found here (see #7)
The only challenge left is if it’s worth the money. My idea is this: Construct a multi-purpose indoor stadium that would be home to Pitt football and basketball. The facility would include a student fitness area and student-athlete service center, practice and storage rooms for the Band, offices space, and classrooms for a potential new major at Pitt such as Sports Management. This means that the facility could host a wide range of events, such as ACC/NCAA tournament games, concerts, graduations, and more.
At this point, you’re probably imagining something similar to Syracuse: a stadium that is “converted” into a basketball arena by placing the court in an endzone and closing off the rest, which creates little atmosphere. This is completely different. It would be only the second stadium in the world to truly transform itself into an arena by having a moving seating section that can shrink it from 47,500 to around 20,000. The technology is already there. Built for $195m in 2000, the Saitama Super Arena in Japan has the ability to shrink its playing surface of 36,500 into a 19-22,000 seat arena. For comparison, the Pete was built for $119m. Here’s how it works:
For more details, click here. When it's in arena mode, there is enough room for the other side to be used as a practice field. What’s also cool is that the arena seating would be flexible. It could expand or shrink based on the type of event. And to replace the lost practice courts, you can convert the Cost into a basketball practice facility. Additionally, a center-hung jumbotron would be on a track that would allow it to glide and rotate to the end of the stadium that’s in arena mode.
If we are going to spend hundreds of millions on an on-campus stadium, it must be something that will benefit all students and be used every day of the year. Something that would serve athletics, arts, and education equally. It would benefit the entire University that the project would cost less than if you were to to buy property, tear down and replace buildings, build a stadium, etc. Pitt would have another landmark that’s marveled by the entire world. I’d love to hear everyone’s thoughts on this. Hail to Pitt!
No problem. I love coming up with stuff like this and hopefully one day we can bring football back to Oakland in a way that benefits our entire University.I love the idea in theory. Just not sure how realistic it would be for Pitt to actually move forward with a project like this. I've often thought this might be the only way to get an on campus stadium but I've never done the research to see how plausible it might be. Thanks for all the info.
Too many hospital helicop
copyrighted by the Bluth CompanyI have an idea! Why can't Pitt build an on campus stadium that hovers over Oakland like a space ship? It literally could 100 feet above the Pete. There could be an escalator going down to the Pete!!! Thoughts?
Problem is, most of us on here want the on campus stadium so that we can watch the game in person. However, everyone else goes for the experience which includes tail-gating. No on campus stadium in Oakland is going to allow for a full game day experience. Not enough space no matter how you shake it. Just my opinion.