University of Phoenix
Stadium is a multipurpose football stadium
located in Glendale,
Arizona
. It is the home of the
Arizona Cardinals of the
National Football League (NFL) and
the annual
Fiesta Bowl.
The new stadium is
located next door to the Jobing.com Arena
, where the NHL's Phoenix Coyotes play, and it has the first
fully retractable natural grass playing surface built in the United
States. An opening on one side of the stadium allows the
playing field to move to the exterior of the building, allowing the
entire natural turf playing surface to be exposed to daylight when
it is not in use and also allowing the floor to be used for other
purposes without damaging the playing surface. University of
Phoenix Stadium hosted
Super Bowl
XLII and the
2007 BCS National
Championship Game, a game that it hosts quadrennially. The
stadium will also play host to
Wrestlemania XXVI in March 2010.
The
University of Phoenix, a
for-profit university specializing
in
adult education, acquired the
naming rights in September 2006,
shortly after the stadium had opened under the name
Cardinals Stadium. The "University of Phoenix"
name is applied as a corporate sponsor, and not as the home stadium
of the University (which has no intercollegiate athletics
program).
Facility information
The 63,500-seat stadium (expandable to 72,800) opened on August 1,
2006 after three years of construction. It is considered an
architectural icon for the region and was named by
Business Week as one of the 10 “most
impressive” sports facilities on the globe due to the combination
of its retractable roof (engineering design by
Walter P Moore to a scheme design by
Buro Happold) and roll-in natural grass field.
It is the only American facility on the list. The ceremonial
groundbreaking for the new stadium was held on April 12,
2003.
The cost of the project was
$455 million. That total included
$395.4 million for the stadium, $41.7 million for site
improvements, and $17.8 million for the land.
Contributors to the
stadium included the Arizona Sports and Tourism
Authority ($302.3 million), the Arizona Cardinals ($143.2 million), and
the City of
Glendale
($9.5
million).

The playing field outside and lined
for the Arizona Cardinals.

The roof of University of Phoenix
Stadium.
The first preseason football game was played August 12, 2006 when
the Cardinals defeated the
Pittsburgh Steelers, 21-13. The first
regular season game was played
September
10 against the
San Francisco
49ers (the Cardinals won 34–27).
The stadium's
air-conditioning system made it possible for the Cardinals to play
at home on the opening weekend of the NFL season for the first time
since moving to Arizona
in
1988.
The stadium hosted the highest attended soccer match in the state
of Arizona on February 7, 2007 when 62,462 fans watched the
United States
men's national soccer team defeat
Mexico, 2–0.
University of Phoenix Stadium from a bird's eye view
The multipurpose nature of the facility has allowed it to host 91
events representing 110 event days between the dates of August 4,
2006 through the
BCS
National Championship January 8, 2007.
These events included
Arizona Cardinals games; public
grand opening tours held August 19 & 20, 2006 (attended by
120,000 people); various shows, expositions, tradeshows and motor
sport events; the Rolling Stones
concert November 8 2006; the AIA 4A and 5A state championship games
for football (the first high school to win a football championship
at the stadium was Cactus Shadows High School of Cave Creek, AZ on
December 2, 2006); an international soccer exhibition match; the
Fiesta Bowl National Band Championship High School Marching Band
competition (the first marching band to ever play on the field was
Foothill High School, from
Pleasanton,
California
on December 29, 2006); the Fiesta Bowl January 1, 2007 featuring the
Boise
State
Broncos vs. the University of Oklahoma
Sooners (Boise State won 43-42 in overtime); and
the BCS National Championship January 8, 2007 between the
No. 1 Ohio State
Buckeyes and the No. 2 University of
Florida
Gators, which the gators won 41-14. It also
held the
2008 Fiesta Bowl between
the
Oklahoma Sooners and the
West Virginia
University Mountaineers, as well as the
2009 Fiesta Bowl between the
Texas Longhorns and the
Ohio State Buckeyes. It has also held
many high school graduations.
The Cardinals' first home playoff game since the 1940s took place
at the stadium on Jan. 3, 2009, with Arizona beating the
Atlanta Falcons, 30-24. The stadium also
hosted the
2008-09 NFC Championship Game between the Cardinals and
Philadelphia Eagles on Jan. 18,
2009, which the Cardinals won 32-25 in front of 70,650 fans in
attendance.
University of Phoenix Stadium with field removed.
The stadium has 88
luxury suites —
called luxury lofts — with space for 16 future suites as the
stadium matures.
The surrounding the stadium is called Sportsman's Park. Included
within the Park is an landscaped tailgating area called the Great
Lawn.
There are no obstructed view seats in the stadium. There are
visible areas in the upper deck of the end zone where seats could
have been put in but were not due to the giant super columns
supporting the roof structure.

Cardinals win NFC Championship, 18
Jan., 2009.
The stadium
seating capacity can be
expanded by 9,600 for "mega-events" such as college bowls, NFL
Super Bowls, and the
2008-09 NFC Championship
Game by adding risers and ganged, portable "X-frame" folding
seats. The endzone area on the side of the facility where the
mobile turf moves in and out of the facility can be expanded to
accommodate the additional ticketholders.
The roof is made out of
translucent
"Bird-Air" fabric and opens in twelve minutes. It is the first
retractable roof ever built on an incline.
The shape of the stadium is loosely modeled after a
barrel cactus, a widespread plant in the
Arizona desert.
University of Phoenix Stadium hosted
Super Bowl XLII on February 3, 2008 in which
the
New York Giants defeated the
previously undefeated
New England
Patriots 17-14 with a paid attendance crowd of 71,101. This
game was mentioned as one of the biggest upsets of all time.
This was
the second time the Phoenix
area hosted a Super Bowl, the other
being Super Bowl XXX held in nearby
Tempe
at Sun Devil
Stadium
in 1996 when the Dallas
Cowboys defeated the Pittsburgh
Steelers.
On February 23, 2009 it was reported that the stadium will host
WrestleMania XXVI, the
twenty-sixth edition of the annual
supercard produced by
World Wrestling Entertainment
(WWE), scheduled to take place on March 28, 2010. Global Spectrum,
the stadium's operator, had worked in previous years with WWE to
recruit the event to their venue. On January 18, 2008, Global
Spectrum publicly announced its intentions to host
WrestleMania in 2010. The event gained media
attention weeks prior when a photo of
Wayne Gretzky wearing a shirt promoting the
event surfaced in the Swedish newspaper
Expressen.
A press conference was held on February
24, 2009 at the University of Phoenix Stadium to formally announce
the event for Glendale,
Arizona
at the University of Phoenix Stadium; this will be
the first WrestleMania event to be held in the state of Arizona
.
Naming rights
On September 26, 2006 the
University of Phoenix acquired the
naming rights to the stadium totalling $154.5 million over 20
years. The University does not field any intercollegiate sports
teams because it is a
for-profit
university, specializing in providing access to higher
education for adults already in the workforce.
External links
Notes and references
- World-Class Sports Stadiums | BusinessWeek
-
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/cardinals/articles/2009/01/11/20090111cardsellout-CR.html