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A soccer team’s fan base could play an integral role in its new stadium’s design and operations

Sports and Recreational Facilities

A soccer team’s fan base could play an integral role in its new stadium’s design and operations

Sacramento Republic FC and HNTB are conducting a contest where the public can submit concept ideas.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | September 27, 2017

A 20,000-seat soccer stadium in downtown Sacramento is being designed with significant input by the local community through an outreach initiative launched by the city's pro soccer club and the project's architect. Image: HNTB

AEC firms and their clients constantly talk about the importance of  “community engagement” to the success of their projects.

In Sacramento, Calif., a new soccer stadium is walking the talk. On September 19, Sacramento Republic FC, a local professional soccer team, and HNTB, the architectural firm Sac Republic hired to design its new $245 million, 20,000-seat stadium, launched a “Citizen Architect” competition that invites the public to submit design concepts for sections of the 409,000-sf stadium and its surrounding plaza.

Ben Gumpert, COO of Sac Soccer & Entertainment, the team’s holding company, tells BD+C that the contest designates three areas for which contestants can submit ideas: the stadium’s “front door” on its west side, which includes a huge promenade and access to light rail service (the stadium would be built on 14.9 downtown acres that include the former Sacramento Railyards); the North Plaza, which Gumpert says would be a large “gathering place” for fans; and the Main Concourse, which wraps around three sides of the building.  

 

 

Sac Republic FC's Citizen Architect contest gives the public a chance to influence the design and operation of three areas of the new stadium (colored red in the above rendering). Image: Sacramento Republic FC

 

Submissions and collateral materials can be entered through a new website (https://mls.sacrepublicfc.com) until October 27, and must meet specific criteria for feasibility, creativity, and community. Gumpert notes, however, that the criteria do not include budgetary limitations. “We want to leave all possibilities open,” he explains. A panel of judges that includes HNTB will announce the winning entry on November 7.

Sacramento is one of a dozen cities vying for two expansion slots in Major League Soccer, the highest professional-level league in the U.S. Since 2014 Sacramento Republic FC has played in the western conference of the United Soccer League. MLS is expected to choose its two expansion cities in December, with those teams scheduled to start playing in that league in 2020. Gumpert says that Sacramento is the only city under consideration that is far enough along on its new stadium plans meet MSL’s proposed timetable.

The Building Team on the new stadium includes general contractor Turner Construction, which has already started preconstruction on this project; and ICON Venue Group, which is the project manager.

 

 

A rendering of the stadium's North Plaza, along 8th Street in Sacramento, which is expected to be a major fan gathering spot. Image: HNTB

 

HNTB’s initial design concept for the stadium was informed by fan input from a web survey. And the Citizen Architect contest is one of five pillars of the #BringItHome initiative that Sac Republic FC launched in May to catalyze the community’s support for this project. (Last December, the Sacramento City Council voted 8-0 to approve the construction of this privately financed stadium.)

The initiative's goals include connecting directly with 20,000 fams and local residents through town halls, surveys, forums, focus groups, and one-on-one conversations to ensure the community guides the future of the club. The initiative also calls for “strong participation” by local workers and businesses in the construction and operation of the stadium; concession partnerships with local farms, restaurants, and breweries; and ensuring that there is fan representation with the operation's Board of Directors.

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