Alltel Stadium

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Alltel Stadium
Image:Alltelstadiumlogo.gif
Alltel Stadium
Location 1 Alltel Stadium Place
Jacksonville, Florida 32202
Broke ground 1994
Opened August 18, 1995
Closed Open
Demolished N/A
Owner City of Jacksonville
Operator Spectacor Management Group
Surface Grass
Construction cost $121 million (1995 Renovation)
Architect HOK Sport (1995 Renovation)
Former names
Jacksonville Municipal Stadium (1995-1997)
Tenants
Jacksonville Jaguars (NFL) (1995-Present)
Gator Bowl (NCAA) (1996-Present)
ACC Championship Game (NCAA) (2005-present)
Seats
67,164 (NFL configuration)
76,000 (Normal configuration)
84,000 (college football)

Alltel Stadium is a football stadium located in downtown Jacksonville, Florida next to the St. Johns River. It is the home stadium facility of the Jacksonville Jaguars NFL franchise. The stadium sits on 10 acres (40,000 m²) of land and originally had a capacity of 73,000. Expansions over the next decade brought capacity to 76,877. However, because of sluggish sales, more than 9,000 seats were covered with tarps beginning with the 2005 season. The current capacity is 67,164. [1]

Alltel Stadium is used primarily as a football facility but does host other events including monster truck shows and concerts. It is also well-known for hosting college football, including "The World's Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party" each year between Florida and Georgia. The stadium is also the site of the annual Gator Bowl which currently pits teams from the Big East and Atlantic Coast Conference. In December 2005, Alltel Stadium hosted the first of two consecutive ACC football championship games.

The stadium, originally known as Jacksonville Municipal Stadium, was built on the foundation of the former Gator Bowl Stadium. Construction started January 3, 1994 and the new stadium opened on August 18, 1995. Total construction time was under 20 months and total cost was $134 million, $60 million of which was provided by the city of Jacksonville. The new stadium retained the west upper deck of the old Gator Bowl, which had been added in 1982.

Alltel Stadium's opening day was also the home debut of the Jaguars during the 1995-1996 NFL season. It was the first time that an expansion NFL team had played its first game in a brand new stadium. In 1997, the stadium changed its name to the current Alltel Stadium after naming rights were acquired by Alltel, a telecommunications company best known as a wireless carrier.

In 2005, the stadium hosted Super Bowl XXXIX in which the New England Patriots defeated the Philadelphia Eagles 24-21. In 2003 and 2004, $47 million in improvements to the stadium were implemented to prepare for the Super Bowl. These improvements included the addition of a unique sports bar in the south end zone called the "Bud Zone", a larger and wider scoreboard display, escalators in the north and south end zone, and a new "terrace suite" right above the "Bud Zone" in the south endzone.

Prior to the 2005 season, mainly due to low attendance figures and looming blackouts, Jacksonville Jaguars owner Wayne Weaver put in place a set of seat covers to reduce the seating capacity for Jaguars games. The covers were placed to block out 7 sections in the upper north endzone and 4 in each upper deck section, located on the corners of each. This brought the capacity down from 76,000 to 67,164 and the Jaguars haven't had a game blacked out since. For the Super Bowl, Florida-Georgia Game, and occasionally the Gator Bowl, temporary bleachers are put up in the South Endzone and the seat coverings are removed, raising capacity to over 84,000.

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Preceded by
first stadium
Home of the
Jacksonville Jaguars
1995-present
Succeeded by
current

Coordinates: 30°19′26.13″N, 81°38′14.48″W


Current Stadiums in the National Football League
American Football Conference National Football Conference
Alltel Stadium | Arrowhead Stadium | Cleveland Browns Stadium | Dolphin Stadium | Giants Stadium | Gillette Stadium | Heinz Field | INVESCO Field at Mile High | LP Field | M&T Bank Stadium | McAfee Coliseum | Paul Brown Stadium | Qualcomm Stadium | Ralph Wilson Stadium | RCA Dome | Reliant Stadium Bank of America Stadium | Edward Jones Dome | FedExField | Ford Field | Georgia Dome | Giants Stadium | Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome | Lambeau Field | Lincoln Financial Field | Louisiana Superdome | Monster Park | Qwest Field | Raymond James Stadium | Soldier Field | Texas Stadium | University of Phoenix Stadium
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