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The Game Future NRL Stadiums part II

franklin2323

Immortal
Messages
33,546
Doesn’t bother me. They can play wherever they like for all I care.

But when the buzz words are “geographical footprint” having multiple teams play out of one stadium doesn’t really make much sense.

Which is why Campbelltown makes sense to get out of the cramped city
 

magpie_man

Juniors
Messages
1,973
The Wanderers inaugural year the spill over was an extra 10million in revenue for Parra leagues.

This is what started Parra leagues transformation plans.

It's great for the Eels but doesn't quite sit right that the Tigers are lining their pockets by taking home games next door.
As someone said, maybe Wests Ashfield with their squillions can by a pub or bar nearby. Or maybe the RSL club down the road.
 

unforgiven

Bench
Messages
3,138
It's great for the Eels but doesn't quite sit right that the Tigers are lining their pockets by taking home games next door.
As someone said, maybe Wests Ashfield with their squillions can by a pub or bar nearby. Or maybe the RSL club down the road.
Doesn't really worry me, I'm a Tigers fan and currently sitting at Panthers having dinner.
 

taipan

Referee
Messages
22,500
It's great for the Eels but doesn't quite sit right that the Tigers are lining their pockets by taking home games next door.
As someone said, maybe Wests Ashfield with their squillions can by a pub or bar nearby. Or maybe the RSL club down the road.

Slothfield is non fussed.He is over the moon, a Leagues club is stationed close to any football stadium.So he can get a ham and cheese sandwich after the game.And then pronounce in his Sunday paper ,he sighted a 1970s rugby lead player,eating chicken wings with his wife, and blowing his nose with a Pierre Cardin handkerchief. And was caught holding her hand when they left.
 
Messages
21,880
Sydney FC, Roosters and Waratahs want LED ‘curtain’ at new Allianz Stadium
MARCH 28, 2019Sydney FC, the Roosters and the Waratahs are leading a push to ensure the NSW Government follows through on promises to include a multi-mode “curtain” in the new Allianz Stadium design, to avoid the sight of playing in a two-thirds empty venue every week.

With the coalition government returned to office in last weekend’s election, the nine tenants of the Moore Park precinct are lobbying for money to be found to pay for some form of curtain that can cover the top section of the stadium, after it was quietly dropped from the 45,000-seat design last year on grounds of cost.

After Infrastructure NSW confirmed to The Daily Telegraph that the curtain isn’t in the $729m design presented by the government last year, the SCG Trust is also pushing heavily to meet the promises made to the major tenants in return for them supporting a full rebuild.

When they announced their public backing for a rebuild of the stadium in November 2017, both Sydney FC and the Roosters trumpeted the inclusion of an LED curtain that would carry their livery and disguise the empty tiers of seats during regular games.

An early artist’s impression of how a LED ‘curtain’ at the new Allianz Stadium might look.
Sydney FC averaged just under 15,000 crowds at their home games last season, with the Roosters and Waratahs some 1500 less. It’s widely feared the stadium will be a white elephant if it looks mostly empty week in, week out.

After external reviewers went through the stadium plans last year, both the curtain and the so-called “media halo”, an LED display at the edge of the roof, were dropped to save $46m — though the defined tiers of seating necessary will be built, and the roof designed, to allow for a curtain to be installed retrospectively.

An artist’s impression of the new Allianz Stadium.
A spokesperson for Sports Minister Stuart Ayres would only confirm that the demolition of the stadium had begun, and construction of the new entity is due to start next year.

But Infrastructure NSW, which will manage the project, confirmed there is currently no curtain budgeted for.

“The $729 million rebuild of the Sydney Football Stadium announced by the NSW Government in March 2018 did not include a club mode curtain,” a spokesperson said.

“However, the stadium’s roof and upper tier is being designed to permit the future installation of a club mode curtain.”

But a briefing document prepared by the SCG Trust for its tenants four months before the winning design was announced said it would “boast a world-first dual operating modes … Club mode will have 30,000 seats available with a revolutionary LED mesh curtain covering the top deck, keeping the sound in the stadium and providing the ability to display images and branding to generate atmosphere.

“In championship mode the curtain lifts to make the full 45,000-seat capacity available for major events.”

It’s understood the curtain remains a major priority for the Trust, after the Alliance of Moore Park Sports — its tenants — met this week and agreed to step up lobbying of government now the election is over.

The final design for the interior of the stadium will be drawn up in coming months.

" dir="ltr" style="color: rgb(68, 68, 67); font-family: "Adobe Garamond Pro", Georgia, "Times New Roman", Times, serif, -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, "Segoe UI", "Droid Sans", "Helvetica Neue", "PingFang SC", "Hiragino Sans GB", "Droid Sans Fallback", "Microsoft YaHei", sans-serif, sans-serif; font-size: 22px; font-variant-ligatures: common-ligatures;">
Sydney FC, the Roosters and the Waratahs are leading a push to ensure the NSW Government follows through on promises to include a multi-mode “curtain” in the new Allianz Stadium design, to avoid the sight of playing in a two-thirds empty venue every week.

With the coalition government returned to office in last weekend’s election, the nine tenants of the Moore Park precinct are lobbying for money to be found to pay for some form of curtain that can cover the top section of the stadium, after it was quietly dropped from the 45,000-seat design last year on grounds of cost.

After Infrastructure NSW confirmed to The Daily Telegraph that the curtain isn’t in the $729m design presented by the government last year, the SCG Trust is also pushing heavily to meet the promises made to the major tenants in return for them supporting a full rebuild.

When they announced their public backing for a rebuild of the stadium in November 2017, both Sydney FC and the Roosters trumpeted the inclusion of an LED curtain that would carry their livery and disguise the empty tiers of seats during regular games.

3894c64149e2d6afec413b77b544e3ab

An early artist’s impression of how a LED ‘curtain’ at the new Allianz Stadium might look.
Sydney FC averaged just under 15,000 crowds at their home games last season, with the Roosters and Waratahs some 1500 less. It’s widely feared the stadium will be a white elephant if it looks mostly empty week in, week out.

After external reviewers went through the stadium plans last year, both the curtain and the so-called “media halo”, an LED display at the edge of the roof, were dropped to save $46m — though the defined tiers of seating necessary will be built, and the roof designed, to allow for a curtain to be installed retrospectively.

5838d271aa19fd50b1e36664f9da9be7

An artist’s impression of the new Allianz Stadium.
A spokesperson for Sports Minister Stuart Ayres would only confirm that the demolition of the stadium had begun, and construction of the new entity is due to start next year.

But Infrastructure NSW, which will manage the project, confirmed there is currently no curtain budgeted for.

“The $729 million rebuild of the Sydney Football Stadium announced by the NSW Government in March 2018 did not include a club mode curtain,” a spokesperson said.

“However, the stadium’s roof and upper tier is being designed to permit the future installation of a club mode curtain.”

But a briefing document prepared by the SCG Trust for its tenants four months before the winning design was announced said it would “boast a world-first dual operating modes … Club mode will have 30,000 seats available with a revolutionary LED mesh curtain covering the top deck, keeping the sound in the stadium and providing the ability to display images and branding to generate atmosphere.

“In championship mode the curtain lifts to make the full 45,000-seat capacity available for major events.”

It’s understood the curtain remains a major priority for the Trust, after the Alliance of Moore Park Sports — its tenants — met this week and agreed to step up lobbying of government now the election is over.

The final design for the interior of the stadium will be drawn up in coming months.

https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/s...m/news-story/cbdb43bbb794cad3033c2b001b3a854a
 
Messages
21,880
Sydney FC, Roosters and Waratahs want LED ‘curtain’ at new Allianz Stadium
MARCH 28, 2019Sydney FC, the Roosters and the Waratahs are leading a push to ensure the NSW Government follows through on promises to include a multi-mode “curtain” in the new Allianz Stadium design, to avoid the sight of playing in a two-thirds empty venue every week.

With the coalition government returned to office in last weekend’s election, the nine tenants of the Moore Park precinct are lobbying for money to be found to pay for some form of curtain that can cover the top section of the stadium, after it was quietly dropped from the 45,000-seat design last year on grounds of cost.

After Infrastructure NSW confirmed to The Daily Telegraph that the curtain isn’t in the $729m design presented by the government last year, the SCG Trust is also pushing heavily to meet the promises made to the major tenants in return for them supporting a full rebuild.

When they announced their public backing for a rebuild of the stadium in November 2017, both Sydney FC and the Roosters trumpeted the inclusion of an LED curtain that would carry their livery and disguise the empty tiers of seats during regular games.

An early artist’s impression of how a LED ‘curtain’ at the new Allianz Stadium might look.
Sydney FC averaged just under 15,000 crowds at their home games last season, with the Roosters and Waratahs some 1500 less. It’s widely feared the stadium will be a white elephant if it looks mostly empty week in, week out.

After external reviewers went through the stadium plans last year, both the curtain and the so-called “media halo”, an LED display at the edge of the roof, were dropped to save $46m — though the defined tiers of seating necessary will be built, and the roof designed, to allow for a curtain to be installed retrospectively.

An artist’s impression of the new Allianz Stadium.
A spokesperson for Sports Minister Stuart Ayres would only confirm that the demolition of the stadium had begun, and construction of the new entity is due to start next year.

But Infrastructure NSW, which will manage the project, confirmed there is currently no curtain budgeted for.

“The $729 million rebuild of the Sydney Football Stadium announced by the NSW Government in March 2018 did not include a club mode curtain,” a spokesperson said.

“However, the stadium’s roof and upper tier is being designed to permit the future installation of a club mode curtain.”

But a briefing document prepared by the SCG Trust for its tenants four months before the winning design was announced said it would “boast a world-first dual operating modes … Club mode will have 30,000 seats available with a revolutionary LED mesh curtain covering the top deck, keeping the sound in the stadium and providing the ability to display images and branding to generate atmosphere.

“In championship mode the curtain lifts to make the full 45,000-seat capacity available for major events.”

It’s understood the curtain remains a major priority for the Trust, after the Alliance of Moore Park Sports — its tenants — met this week and agreed to step up lobbying of government now the election is over.

The final design for the interior of the stadium will be drawn up in coming months.

" dir="ltr" style="color: rgb(68, 68, 67); font-family: "Adobe Garamond Pro", Georgia, "Times New Roman", Times, serif, -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, "Segoe UI", "Droid Sans", "Helvetica Neue", "PingFang SC", "Hiragino Sans GB", "Droid Sans Fallback", "Microsoft YaHei", sans-serif, sans-serif; font-size: 22px; font-variant-ligatures: common-ligatures;">
Sydney FC, the Roosters and the Waratahs are leading a push to ensure the NSW Government follows through on promises to include a multi-mode “curtain” in the new Allianz Stadium design, to avoid the sight of playing in a two-thirds empty venue every week.

With the coalition government returned to office in last weekend’s election, the nine tenants of the Moore Park precinct are lobbying for money to be found to pay for some form of curtain that can cover the top section of the stadium, after it was quietly dropped from the 45,000-seat design last year on grounds of cost.

After Infrastructure NSW confirmed to The Daily Telegraph that the curtain isn’t in the $729m design presented by the government last year, the SCG Trust is also pushing heavily to meet the promises made to the major tenants in return for them supporting a full rebuild.

When they announced their public backing for a rebuild of the stadium in November 2017, both Sydney FC and the Roosters trumpeted the inclusion of an LED curtain that would carry their livery and disguise the empty tiers of seats during regular games.

3894c64149e2d6afec413b77b544e3ab

An early artist’s impression of how a LED ‘curtain’ at the new Allianz Stadium might look.
Sydney FC averaged just under 15,000 crowds at their home games last season, with the Roosters and Waratahs some 1500 less. It’s widely feared the stadium will be a white elephant if it looks mostly empty week in, week out.

After external reviewers went through the stadium plans last year, both the curtain and the so-called “media halo”, an LED display at the edge of the roof, were dropped to save $46m — though the defined tiers of seating necessary will be built, and the roof designed, to allow for a curtain to be installed retrospectively.

5838d271aa19fd50b1e36664f9da9be7

An artist’s impression of the new Allianz Stadium.
A spokesperson for Sports Minister Stuart Ayres would only confirm that the demolition of the stadium had begun, and construction of the new entity is due to start next year.

But Infrastructure NSW, which will manage the project, confirmed there is currently no curtain budgeted for.

“The $729 million rebuild of the Sydney Football Stadium announced by the NSW Government in March 2018 did not include a club mode curtain,” a spokesperson said.

“However, the stadium’s roof and upper tier is being designed to permit the future installation of a club mode curtain.”

But a briefing document prepared by the SCG Trust for its tenants four months before the winning design was announced said it would “boast a world-first dual operating modes … Club mode will have 30,000 seats available with a revolutionary LED mesh curtain covering the top deck, keeping the sound in the stadium and providing the ability to display images and branding to generate atmosphere.

“In championship mode the curtain lifts to make the full 45,000-seat capacity available for major events.”

It’s understood the curtain remains a major priority for the Trust, after the Alliance of Moore Park Sports — its tenants — met this week and agreed to step up lobbying of government now the election is over.

The final design for the interior of the stadium will be drawn up in coming months.

https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/s...m/news-story/cbdb43bbb794cad3033c2b001b3a854a

So infuriating. This is a critical part of the rebuild, the stadium is 90% of the time going to be less than 20-25k full, yet they avoid doing this.

The Roosters even signed a new 25 year agreement without this being guaranteed. They should've held out.
 

seanoff

Juniors
Messages
1,207
Well, maybe the clubs could pony up the extra $50M for the curtain. You’re being gifted use of a stadium that is designed well beyond its actual real need. $16,500/seat is in world terms bloody swanky.

Not sure it needs to be so plush.
 

TheEroticGamer

Juniors
Messages
1,181
Wasn't the original plans for ANZ to have a led curtain also before discount alf stewart and his mob got the government to prioritise Allianz stadium instead?
 
Messages
21,880
Well, maybe the clubs could pony up the extra $50M for the curtain. You’re being gifted use of a stadium that is designed well beyond its actual real need. $16,500/seat is in world terms bloody swanky.

Not sure it needs to be so plush.

You could find the savings elsewhere in the stadium, no need to ditch something important to the 3 tenants. It's definitely swanky, plenty of other fat that could be cut.
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
69,546
Shows the farce of the decision. All the tenants want a shed load of money spending to deal with the fact the stadium is uneccesarily over capacity for their needs. Here’s an idea, build a 30k stadium and don’t buy a led curtain and save $400million!
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
69,546
Well, maybe the clubs could pony up the extra $50M for the curtain. You’re being gifted use of a stadium that is designed well beyond its actual real need. $16,500/seat is in world terms bloody swanky.

Not sure it needs to be so plush.

The unnecessary 15,000 seats are actually costing $26,500 a seat, I think labor was onto something!
 
Messages
21,880
Shows the farce of the decision. All the tenants want a shed load of money spending to deal with the fact the stadium is uneccesarily over capacity for their needs. Here’s an idea, build a 30k stadium and don’t buy a led curtain and save $400million!

The roosters pushed hard for the stadium to be 30,000, but the next best option is for the club mode.
 

azza29

Juniors
Messages
1,057
Alternative solution, if the clubs can get 20 crowds over 20k in the first two years the stadium is open, the government agrees to add the curtain. At some point you've got to tie the spend back to actual usage.

Not hard between three sports, surely...
 
Messages
21,880
Alternative solution, if the clubs can get 20 crowds over 20k in the first two years the stadium is open, the government agrees to add the curtain. At some point you've got to tie the spend back to actual usage.

Not hard between three sports, surely...

There’s heaps of other largess that could be cut back. They’re putting some type of ring road below the playing surface for instance, the members area & the trust reserve will have all the best facilities.
 

azza29

Juniors
Messages
1,057
There’s heaps of other largess that could be cut back. They’re putting some type of ring road below the playing surface for instance, the members area & the trust reserve will have all the best facilities.
Sure, but even assuming it's 100% necessary, $50m still seems like a massive amount of money for a curtain (even one with LED tech embedded).

Perhaps either way they would be better off waiting a couple of years for the technology to come down in price.
 

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