Revolutionary Stadiums

By (Correspondent) on September 21, 2009

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LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - NOVEMBER 7:  In this handout illustration provided by the Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA), A CGI rendering of the GBP500m 80,000 seat Olympic stadium is unveiled, on November 7, 2007 in London, England. Work on the London 2012 sh

Every so often as fans we are treated to a new stadium that promises to changes the way we look at the sporting world.

Last night the Cowboys ushered in their state of the art, ultra flashy new digs. But will Cowboys Stadium be the stadium in which all new NFL stadiums built from here on in will be compared against? Did we usher in a new era of stadiums?

Sometimes the stadiums hit it out of the park and start a revolution. There seems to have been an equal number of times that a promising stadium ends up becoming a monument to failure.

Here is a look at a few stadiums that promised to change the game and how they fared.

Harvard Stadium

21 Nov 1998:  General view of the game between the Harvard Crimson and the Yale Bulldogs at the Harvard Stadium in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The Bulldogs defeated the Crimson 9-7. Mandatory Credit: M. David Leeds  /Allsport

The first concrete stadium in the world was constructed in 1903 for a cost of $310,000. Harvard Stadium accomplished permanence for the game of football.

Since the stadium was made of immovable concrete the field dimensions were set to their modern proportions.

Harvard Stadium may be old, but it still plays an important role every other year playing host to one of the nations longest standing rivalries (Harvard vs Yale). Harvard Stadium is also home to a professional women's soccer club.

Yale Bowl

NEW HAVEN, CT - AUGUST 24:  Flavia Pennetta of Italy and Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark play in a staged tennis exhibition on an oversized tennis court at the Yale Bowl on August 24, 2009 in New Haven, Connecticut.  (Photo by Chris Trotman/Getty Images for

The Yale bowl was built soon after Harvard stadium. While Harvard brought in the modern area of football, the opening in 1914 of the Yale Bowl became the template for the football world and can hold upwards of 64,000 people.

Like Harvard Stadium, the Yale bowl is no longer in its prime. However its design was duplicated at Michigan Stadium, Notre Dame Stadium, the Rose Bowl, and LA Coliseum among others.

All of these stadiums are still considered to be some of the best places to catch a game.

RFK Stadium

WASHINGTON, DC - FEBRUARY 1: A view of the west side of the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium is seen February 1, 2005 in Washington, DC. The stadium will be the home for the Washington Nationals. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Opened in 1961 RFK might not have been designed to have been a revolutionary stadium, but it was.

RFK brought in the cookie cutter stadium era, as stadiums that were built to handle both football and baseball, and currently holds 45,000 people.

Stadiums that followed the same model as RFK stadium include, Veterans Stadium, Shea Stadium, Three Rivers Stadium, Fulton Country Stadium and Busch Stadium.

There have been other interpretations of this model that still exist, but for the most part, the past 15 years have been about replacing these dated facilities. RFK is also currently on the chopping block because in 2012 it will lose it's only tenant.

Arrowhead Stadium

KANSAS CITY, MO - OCTOBER 1:  Arrowhead Stadium is shown during the San Francisco 49ers game against the Kansas City Chiefs at Arrowhead Stadium on October 1, 2006 in Kansas City, Missouri. The Chiefs defeated the Niners 41-0.  (Photo by Doug Pensinger/Ge

Arrowhead stadium was years ahead of it's time. When the other cities were busy duplicating the the cookie cutter style stadiums, Arrowhead was making the blue print for NFL stadiums that would be built in the late 90's into the 2000's.

Arrowhead Stadium opened in 1972 at a cost of $43 million for the 79,000 seat stadium.

Is it any wonder that most of the NFL (and MLB) teams consulted with the Kansas City based stadium design firms when they were constructing their new facilities?

Arrowhead Stadium is approaching 40 years old and is still looking fantastic.

Olympic Stadium (Montreal)

Jul 1976:  General view of the Opening Ceremony of the Olympic Games   at the Olympic Stadium in Montreal, Canada. \ Mandatory Credit: Tony Duffy /Allsport

When first conceived this was going to be one of the great wonders of the world. This huge stadium would have a retractable roof and huge slanted tower and cost $770 million in 1976.

What resulted was anything but for this 66,000 seat stadium.

The designed proved to be too complex, the roof never worked, concrete chunks fell from above and the stadium has since fallen into disrepair.

Currently there is no tenant for the Big O and no real plan for this reeling facility.

Sky Dome

TORONTO - APRIL 6:  A general view of the Opening Day game between the Toronto Blue Jays and the Detroit Tigers at the Rogers Centre April 6, 2009 in Toronto, Ontario.(Photo by: Dave Sandford/Getty Images)

Rodgers Centre formally called Skydome was one of the first stadium to offer a retractable roof, a hotel within the stadium and when built the largest video board in the world.

It was built in 1989, and the construction costs ran to almost $570 million.

It was the last stadium built that was designed for both baseball and football in North America. While many of this stadiums concepts were duplicated (retractable roof), many felt that this stadium would bring usher in a new level of stadium design.

Since then the nostalgia of the stadium wore off, things that once wowed the public now don't seem so special. The Rodgers Center is however faring better than it's other Canadian Counter part.

Oriole Park at Camden Yards

14 Jul 1996:  A general view of Oriole Park from an ajoining alley way in right field during the Orioles 4-1 loss to the New York Yankees at Camden Yards in Baltimore, Maryland.  Mandatory Credit: Doug Pensinger  /Allsport

Oriole Park at Camden Yards was built in 1992 at a cost of $110 million (a bargain). Camden Yards was the first modern ballpark to bring back the soul of a old school ballpark and mesh it with modern amenities, and seats 48,000 fans.

It was here that America's latest stadium revolution started. Countless baseball stadiums across the country modeled their ballparks after ideas and concepts that Camden Yards delivered 17 years ago.

It brought in record numbers of fans and moved baseball stadiums back into city neighborhoods. Camden Yards is still regarded as one of the best places in the country to watch a ball game.

Beijing National Stadium

BEIJING - AUGUST 08:  33,996 people take part in an attempt to break the Guinness world record for the largest number of people practising Taiji outside the National Olympic Stadium, known as the Bird's Nest on August 8, 2009 in Beijing, China. China hold

Commonly referred to as the Birds Nest, Beijing's National Stadium is the worlds largest steel structure.

This stadium combined beauty and functionality and wowed the world for 3 weeks last August. The price tag for this 80,000 seat facility was only $423 Million.

After the torch was blown out at the 2008 Olympics the Birds Nest has struggled to find a tenant and a purpose. Only a year ago this was the focus of the world, now future plans for this gem might even include converting it into a shopping mall.

Yankee Stadium

NEW YORK - APRIL 02: The bleachers in center field are almost full for a New York Yankees workout at the new Yankee Stadium on April 2, 2009 in the Bronx borough of New York City.  (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

The new version of Yankee Stadium is essentially a pimped out version of the old Yankee Stadium. This latest model has a huge HD center field video board, tons of Yankee memorabilia in the 'Great Hall' and 52,000 seats.

Beautiful Indiana Limestone graces the stadiums facade as seemingly no expense was spared here at this 1.5 Billion dollar ballpark.

Yankee Stadium has been criticized for having many unused seats in the first few rows behind home plate and being a home run haven when the winds are blowing out.

Yankee Stadium future will host Notre Dame vs Army and the possibility of being host to a college bowl game.

Cowboy's Stadium

ARLINGTON, TX - SEPTEMBER 20:  An American flag on the field before a game between the New York Giants and the Dallas Cowboys at Cowboys Stadium on September 20, 2009 in Arlington, Texas.  (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

Cowboy's Stadium seems to have it all. A retractable roof, room for over 100,000 fans and video screens that span 60 yards. Opened in 2009 at a cost of $1.3 billion.

This is the latest addition to revolutionary stadiums is not with out it's issues. The $75 game day parking and the low hanging scoreboards.

The stadium's future is very bright as it will host the Final Four, the Super Bowl and be the new home of the Cotton Bowl.

On the Horizon

LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - JULY 27: A general view of ongoing construction work at the Olympic stadium in east London on July 27, 2009 in London, England. The countdown starts today to the opening ceremony in 3 years time. (Photo by Stfean Rousseau/WPA Pool

The new Meadowlands Stadium opens next football season. It will be home to both the Giants and the Jets. Construction costs are estimated to be around $1.4 Billion. Features include a facade skin that changes color and 4 large video screens.

Target Field in Minneapolis will be the home of the Twins starting in 2010. This will be the second ballpark in the majors that will LEED certified. A concept that the Nationals ballpark revolutionized in 2008.

If you enjoyed this article please check out my website devoted to sports travel http://www.thecrosshairguide.com

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