BATON ROUGE - A proposal to expand Tiger Stadium will be presented to the LSU Board of Supervisors at its next meeting on April 27, it was announced Wednesday by Joe Alleva, Vice Chancellor and Director of Athletics.
The proposal will call for the addition of approximately 60 suites and approximately 3,000 club seats above the existing south end zone seats in Tiger Stadium, as well as approximately 1,500 general public seats above the new suite and club seating. There will also be a still-to-be-determined number of standing room only tickets made available when the new structure opens.
The project will be entirely privately funded by the Tiger Athletic Foundation in a similar manner that was used to expand the east side of Tiger Stadium in 2000 and renovate the west side of the stadium in 2005. The TAF will seek a $100 million bond issue to fund the south end zone expansion and to begin to address facility needs for non-revenue sports.
"It is important to always have an eye on the future and this investment in our facilities is critical for the future of LSU Athletics," Alleva said. "When things are going well, you can move forward or you can fall behind. We are choosing to advance the athletics program so that it can remain a viable and successful part of the mission of our university."
In addition to the Tiger Stadium expansion, the proposed project will help fund a new tennis facility and a new gymnastics practice facility, which in turn will make room for locker rooms for the track and field teams in the Carl Maddox Field House.
If approved by the Board of Supervisors, construction on the stadium expansion will begin this fall with completion scheduled for the summer of 2014. The south end zone video board that currently sits atop the south bowl of the stadium will be removed prior to the 2013 season and will be replaced with two video boards in the southwest and southeast corners of the stadium when the expansion opens for the 2014 football season.
The expansion will bring the capacity of Tiger Stadium to near or above 100,000.
The LSU Athletic Department is a self-sufficient auxiliary of LSU. LSU Athletics generates all of its own revenue and uses no state tax dollars and no mandatory student fees to operate. LSU Athletics is funded through ticket sales, donations associated with tickets, concessions, merchandise sales, radio and TV revenue, corporate sponsorships, SEC revenue distribution and private funding through the TAF.
The LSU Athletic Department annually passes millions of dollars to the academic side of the university, making it one of the few athletics programs in the nation to generate a surplus each year and share funds with the academic mission of the university.
Bud Lee wrote:I'm wondering what it will do to the sound in the place. It is already loud, I wonder if it will help keep some of the noise in there.
On a side note, open invitation to my tailgate to anyone who ventures their way down south.
Even Quack.
I went to a game at the Swamp with my bro in law who's a UF alum, whole different ball game down there.... I would love to see a game at LSU, especially a big time night game. It was kinda weird wearing UF gear all day! Haha....
"How do we go from nine to one?" - Chip Kelly
“Our expectations are to win every game we play." - CK
Everyone wants to and I think we'd sell out if we expanded to 75k but logistics make it tough. We already have reduced parking around stadium quite a bit(baseball stadium and new football offices) and the costs of those as well as our new basketball arena means we've used up hundreds of millions already so not gonna be easy to get another 100 million to expand 15-20k more seats
LSU created a Tiger Athletic Foundation (TAF) Fee , to help pay for the other two expansions. People pay anywhere from $220 - $900 a ticket for the right to purchase season tickets.
Adds up quick when you are taling about 94,000 seats.
Bud Lee wrote:LSU created a Tiger Athletic Foundation (TAF) Fee , to help pay for the other two expansions. People pay anywhere from $220 - $900 a ticket for the right to purchase season tickets.
Adds up quick when you are taling about 94,000 seats.
We have the DAF... I pay $200 a seat for the right to purchace my two season tickets, the money is already allocated for student athlete support. Fans might riot if they were to substantially increase minimum donations.... again. .
"How do we go from nine to one?" - Chip Kelly
“Our expectations are to win every game we play." - CK
Bud Lee wrote:LSU created a Tiger Athletic Foundation (TAF) Fee , to help pay for the other two expansions. People pay anywhere from $220 - $900 a ticket for the right to purchase season tickets.
Adds up quick when you are taling about 94,000 seats.
We have the DAF... I pay $200 a seat for the right to purchace my two season tickets, the money is already allocated for student athlete support. Fans might riot if they were to substantially increase minimum donations.... again. .
On top of getting rid of General Admission and raising endzone seats by about 3x and doubling the cost of SRO tickets