New Nissan Stadium is a domed American football stadium under construction in Nashville, Tennessee for use by the Tennessee Titans, succeeding the current Nissan Stadium beginning in 2027.[2][3]

Quick Facts Former names, Location ...
New Nissan Stadium
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Former namesNew Tennessee Titans Stadium (planning/construction)
LocationNashville, Tennessee
Coordinates36°10′03.8″N 86°46′05″W
OwnerMetropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County
OperatorMetropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County
Capacity55,000-60,000
SurfaceTurf
Construction
Broke groundFebruary 29, 2024
Opened2027 (planned)
Construction cost$2.1 billion
ArchitectManica Architecture
General contractorTennessee Builders Alliance (AECOM Hunt/Turner Construction/I.C.F. Builders/Polk & Associates) [1]
Tenants
Tennessee Titans (NFL) (TBD)
Tennessee State Tigers (NCAA) (TBD)
Music City Bowl (NCAA) (TBD)
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The 60,000-seat stadium is projected to cost $2.1 billion, $1.26 billion of which is subsidized by the public. It is by far the largest stadium subsidy in U.S. history.[4]

It is to be built adjacent to Nissan Stadium, which will be demolished following the completion of the new stadium. The stadium will be designed by Manica Architecture who previously designed Allegiant Stadium, NRG Stadium and Wembley Stadium.[5]

History

Background

Nissan Stadium, an open-air concrete-and-steel stadium which seats 69,000, has served as the home venue for the Tennessee Titans since its opening in 1999. The city hired an independent group, Venue Solutions Group (VSG), to conduct a thorough assessment of the current stadium’s condition and the cost of maintaining it for the remainder of the lease, which ends in 2039. VSG outlined a preliminary report showing it would cost the city between $1.75 and 1.95 billion to renovate Nissan Stadium as a "first class condition" facility.[6]

Planning and construction

The $2.1 billion needed to fund the new stadium will come from a variety of sources:

  • $840 million from the team
  • $500 million from the state of Tennessee
  • $760 million from revenue bonds issued by the Metro Sports Authority to be repaid via personal-seat license sales and taxes collected at the stadium and additional money from a new 1% hotel/motel tax.

The 1.7-million-square-foot proposed stadium would be a dome, have a seating capacity of 55,000-60,000, have approximately 170 luxury suites and an artificial turf field.[7] The Titans would sign a 30-year lease to play in the stadium.

The financing program was confirmed by a 26-11 vote on April 25, 2023. Construction began in 2024 and opening day set for 2027.[8]

The route of the IndyCar Series Music City Grand Prix was originally planned to be changed during the new stadium's construction period. However, on February 14, 2024, it was announced that the race would be moved to nearby Nashville Superspeedway.[9][10]

References

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