Jump to content

Alright, who wants a dome?


Roundybout

Dome??  

270 members have voted

  1. 1. Should Pegs build a dome?



Recommended Posts

37 minutes ago, Luka said:

If the money is ever put forth to build a new stadium, it will be a dome. No way that kind of investment is made in this region just to have it be used 8 times a year. A dome can host many different events and that's what will get a new stadium built.

 

Look around the league and see how many non-football events are hosted in NFL stadiums. 

 

Ford Field (covered, similar market) has a bowl game in Dec. and a Taylor Swift concert in August.

 

MetLife (open, largest market) has “Jets Cooking School” in Feb, a two night Taylot Swift stay, and Kenny Chesney and Ed Sheeran concerts in the summer. Oh, and a monster truck rally. A grand total of 6 non-NFL events. 

 

The “could host so many other events!” take is the weakest one out there. We barely get a handful of 18k capacity events at the arena as it is.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Limeaid said:

 

The only way it works if it is like a dome in Atlanta which is kept open when it snows.

 

A friend of mine who is a retired architect showed drawings of a design he made for a stadium.  He has been paid as consultant on several stadiums but more a QA then as a designer.  It basically is a dome not entirely enclosed and the sides of stadium are slanted so snow piles up along side of stadium rather than layering on dome.  The curve helps protect the stands and less snow will fall on seats.  I think it looks like an orange being opened up.  

This is what I am talking about.  Best of both worlds... But your average idiot would go berserk.  "I want it closed when it snows!"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, 4_kidd_4 said:

 

Look around the league and see how many non-football events are hosted in NFL stadiums. 

 

Ford Field (covered, similar market) has a bowl game in Dec. and a Taylor Swift concert in August.

 

MetLife (open, largest market) has “Jets Cooking School” in Feb, a two night Taylot Swift stay, and Kenny Chesney and Ed Sheeran concerts in the summer. Oh, and a monster truck rally. A grand total of 6 non-NFL events. 

 

The “could host so many other events!” take is the weakest one out there. We barely get a handful of 18k capacity events at the arena as it is.

 

 

It's not a "weak take," it's reality. Hence the reason we still don't have a new stadium. 6 non-NFL events that I'm positive made money. Money they wouldn't have otherwise had.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, ExiledInIllinois said:

This is what I am talking about.  Best of both worlds... But your average idiot would go berserk.  "I want it closed when it snows!"

 

No surprise this coming from him since he went to Rockpile games.

 

I asked him if it could be made into a dome and he said yes but design would need to be open in winter for it could not hold the snow weight.  Basically the dome with be a roof like a curtain which would slide across on pulleys which would protect against rain, reasonable speed wind, reasonable size hail and other conditions.  Not as fast as Atlanta and certainly not as pretty.  Roof would be slanted to help direct rain to sides and holes to allow water to flow out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

22 hours ago, Georgia Bill said:

I think there might be some practical concerns with a domed stadium in Buffalo.  Nov 2014, seven foot of snow fell in Orchard Park.  Can domes safely handle that weight?  And if they can, can they be built to also be retractable?  I doubt it.  Maybe some mechanical engineers can weigh in but I suspect the choice is a super heavy duty, non-retractable dome, or open air.  I hate the idea of losing the outdoors feel at games, and say no to a dome.

Mechanical engineer says Yes, we can build anything. Especially to handle a little ol snow. 

 

Fan says heck no! LET snow let it snow let it snow!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Luka said:

 

It's not a "weak take," it's reality. Hence the reason we still don't have a new stadium. 6 non-NFL events that I'm positive made money. Money they wouldn't have otherwise had.

 

Got any math on what kinda dent a handful of events every year puts in a billion dollar price tag?

 

I’m no economist, but the professional ones all agree, it’s not much and almost all cities will never see a ROI on any pro stadium, no matter what.

 

https://news.stanford.edu/2015/07/30/stadium-economics-noll-073015/

 

“NFL stadiums do not generate significant local economic growth, and the incremental tax revenue is not sufficient to cover any significant financial contribution by the city,” said Noll, a senior fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. He has written articles and books and given talks on the public financing of sports stadiums.

 

Go ahead and Google for yourself. There’s plenty more stark evidence out there.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

15 minutes ago, 4_kidd_4 said:

 

Look around the league and see how many non-football events are hosted in NFL stadiums. 

 

Ford Field (covered, similar market) has a bowl game in Dec. and a Taylor Swift concert in August.

 

MetLife (open, largest market) has “Jets Cooking School” in Feb, a two night Taylot Swift stay, and Kenny Chesney and Ed Sheeran concerts in the summer. Oh, and a monster truck rally. A grand total of 6 non-NFL events. 

 

The “could host so many other events!” take is the weakest one out there. We barely get a handful of 18k capacity events at the arena as it is.

 

This^ Many of the biggest concert tours don’t stop in Buffalo either. New Era has hosted some huge ones over the past few years, but Buffalo isn’t an automatic tour stop such as NYC. Plus, there is no reason New Era or any open air stadium can’t host concerts. As mentioned, New Era has hosted several big ones. Most big concert tours take place  during the summer, thus negating the need for a dome. The only thing that a dome would bring is the NCAA tourney every few years. The Key Bank Center already does so. Also, the future of stadium acts in music doesn’t look so bright imo. 

Edited by DriveFor1Outta5
  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

29 minutes ago, Georgia Bill said:

I agree, I don't think they engineer any domes for 7 ft of snow, which happened in Orchard Park just a few years ago.  

They didn't, but they should have. Designing is not the hard part. Making it affordable is.

Edited by BUFFALOKIE
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, DriveFor1Outta5 said:

This^ Many of the biggest concert tours don’t stop in Buffalo either. New Era has hosted some huge ones over the past few years, but Buffalo isn’t an automatic tour stop such as NYC. Plus, there is no reason New Era or any open air stadium can’t host concerts. As mentioned, New Era has hosted several big ones. Most big concert tours take place  during the summer, thus negating the need for a dome. The only thing that a dome would bring is the NCAA tourney every few years. The Key Bank Center already does so. 

 

This is solid as well. Excellent point on summer tours, and how desirable the Buffalo market isn’t for 60k+ people events.

 

Its just a fact, NFL stadiums will never pay for themselves and will more likely end up costing the community more money than it takes in.

 

I think TP knows this market, and knows the real math involved. I could definitely foresee us being in OP for a long time, like it or not.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Carrier Done in Cuse... They average what BFLo area averages, if not more snow.  But BFLo does hold the record between the two @ 199"

 

Yet, OP is in Southtowns, they  gotta average way more than BFLo proper's 95"/year.  Probably, 150" which is more than Syracuse.

 

No other NFL location is sniffing at those micro-climate #s!  NOT EVEN CLOSE!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, 4_kidd_4 said:

 

Got any math on what kinda dent a handful of events every year puts in a billion dollar price tag?

 

I’m no economist, but the professional ones all agree, it’s not much and almost all cities will never see a ROI on any pro stadium, no matter what.

 

https://news.stanford.edu/2015/07/30/stadium-economics-noll-073015/

 

“NFL stadiums do not generate significant local economic growth, and the incremental tax revenue is not sufficient to cover any significant financial contribution by the city,” said Noll, a senior fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. He has written articles and books and given talks on the public financing of sports stadiums.

 

Go ahead and Google for yourself. There’s plenty more stark evidence out there.

 

I dont believe anyone is debating the economical impact a NFL stadium has.  Its a fact that Buffalo would have the ability to host events with a Domed stadium that currently is not available with an open stadium, and probably more importantly a stadium that is a few decades behind in areas.  For the Buffalo Bills to stay in the area a new Stadium is needed to be built or the process approved with in 5 years.  With the game yesterday it would make the most sense as a business to make the last quarter of their homes games more enjoyable so they will have higher attendance totals.  Improving the product on the field sure helps yes, but even if Buffalo was undefeated that game would be hard to sell out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Mat68 said:

I dont believe anyone is debating the economical impact a NFL stadium has.  Its a fact that Buffalo would have the ability to host events with a Domed stadium that currently is not available with an open stadium, and probably more importantly a stadium that is a few decades behind in areas.  For the Buffalo Bills to stay in the area a new Stadium is needed to be built or the process approved with in 5 years.  With the game yesterday it would make the most sense as a business to make the last quarter of their homes games more enjoyable so they will have higher attendance totals.  Improving the product on the field sure helps yes, but even if Buffalo was undefeated that game would be hard to sell out.

 

Fair enough, but the argument was presented that other events will help bring in revenue. True, but I was simply pointing out that it won’t make a dent in the cost to the community.

 

If anything, they would need to add on a “convention center”(which downtown Buffalo needs more than a stadium) to a new stadium in order

to realistically get multi-use out of it, not necessarily for the revenue but for the appearance of usage.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

15 hours ago, 4_kidd_4 said:

 

Fair enough, but the argument was presented that other events will help bring in revenue. True, but I was simply pointing out that it won’t make a dent in the cost to the community.

 

If anything, they would need to add on a “convention center”(which downtown Buffalo needs more than a stadium) to a new stadium in order

to realistically get multi-use out of it, not necessarily for the revenue but for the appearance of usage.

More events will bring in more revenue and help justify the annual losses that civic center public event centers lose every year every place they are built except a couple rare instances like the Allstate Center in Chicago that is the busiest arena in the world and yet still barley breaks even or loses some every year.

 

Public event centres never make money directly. The ancillary financial area economic benefits are very hard to extrapolate and estimate. Many studies based on fuzzy math as local money spent on these events displaces local money that would have been spent other places locally. If it is an event that hordes of out of towners come in to spend mega money than that is different. Like a Star Trek convention or Super Bowl or Political convention or other things that bring in a lot of outsiders would be preferred. Concerts and truck shows RV shows etc etc are more for locals so do not generate new income.

 

Do you think the Sabres arena should be torn down because it loses money every year??

Edited by cba fan
add
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I prefer outside.  I like attending games outside... and also the aesthetics on TV.  The variability, etc.  I also understand the points that pro-dome people have.  That is a valid opinion as well.  There is no right/wrong or absolutes.  It is based primarily on personal opinion.    What matters is what Pegula and the financials determine is the best course.  

 

 

I think the cheapest/easiest course of action is in place.  Parking, routes out of the stadium/area really arent that bad, doesnt take up potentially valuable downtown space, etc.  However, I think Pegula is likely looking at any way feasible for downtown to link his sports and entertainment empire.  If I had to bet, I would say most likely some sort of Ford Field style dome to the South-East area of the arena/cobblestone/downtown.

 

Style of the stadium, my preference, maybe a happy medium.  Out of the snow belt would help... also, some sort of roof structure would be nice.  Whether its dome or outdoor, I really hope they concentrate on the fan experience.  Amplify sound.  Great sight lines, etc.  I think the thing should be geared 95% toward football watching (as that is what we do here).  An outdoor stadium, enclosed like 50% by roof, maybe something similar in ways to Centurylink Field in Seattle would be wonderful.  Maybe it would be possible to make an outdoor stadium convert to an amphitheater for the offseason that would be able to host many concerts over the summer.  Run Darien lake out of business and get bodies downtown.

Edited by May Day 10
Link to comment
Share on other sites

43 minutes ago, cba fan said:

Do you think the Sabres arena should be torn down because it loses money every year??

 

Oh totally, that’s clearly my entire argument. 

 

In fact let me grab my sledgehammer, I’ll meet you down there.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 minutes ago, ProcessTheTrust said:

Retractable dome that you can crack open a little to let some snow in but shut when you can't even see the field. Compromise?

I wonder if there is a rule about that.  Could the Bills for example open the roof in a December snowstorm against the fish or another warm weather or indoor team, but close it for a team that plays well in it?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, CodeMonkey said:

I wonder if there is a rule about that.  Could the Bills for example open the roof in a December snowstorm against the fish or another warm weather or indoor team, but close it for a team that plays well in it?

 

I'm pretty sure the NFL collectively has a rule that says all domes must be closed if the temperature is below a certain mark. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...