Thursday, January 4, 2018

Doak Renovation discussion (Updated, with most recent at top)




https://floridastate.forums.rivals.com/threads/the-case-for-reducing-seat-count-in-doak-cambell.209215/

I am asking the question of should we reduce the number of seats in Doak Campbell Stadium? A stadium that seats 79,560 fans. We know recent renovations reduced capacity from 82,300. Is that enough of a drop?


Where's there's a will (and a checkbook), there's a way.

The Dunlap Champions Club was the largest project ever completed in Leon County within 9 months. Childers Construction did an amazing job of finding subs and managing the work flow without shutting down the classroom offices or the University Center Club or the Visitor Center. We had about 10,000 people walking through or around our job site every day. If an instructor couldn't hear himself think, or a bride was getting married, we took a break from whatever was disruptive until their event was over.

It would be great if we could play the games elsewhere for one season but that ship probably won't sail. You could gain a month or so -- which would be huge -- if you worked your schedule just right. Start in mid November of an even year season when we play at Florida around thanksgiving -- and schedule our early September games on a neutral site or on the road. You work with your head coach to choose which poison you take but this is better than moving all the games.

While a lot of this project will be simpler than the Champions Club, it will still be 2 to 4 times bigger than the Champions Club. So we would have to supplement the skilled work force (electricians, plumbers, etc.) to accomplish this entire project within 9 months or phase the scope. We expected to receive bids from subcontractors from Jax, Orl, Atl, Tampa on the Champions Club but there was so much work in those areas we didn't get many competitive bids and had to ask the local work force to staff up and to work two 10-hour shifts and they got it done one day ahead of deadline!

We've talked to Legends and Skanska and others who have built stadiums of this size, where they bring in the skilled labor to supplement the local talent pool, so its possible.

There are other issues involved with building on such a tight campus, where you don't have any laydown area to speak of, but Childers and others have figured those logistics out.

While this will be a massive undertaking, it is simplified to a great extent in that you don't have to mess with the premium spaces (skyboxes, pressbox or club seats) and you don't have as much to do with the exterior as the University Center complex will remain. But keeping those exterior buildings also creates logistics issues for the contractor who will have to build it in a bottle with students and administrators continually using those classroom office spaces.

My experience with Childers and the Champions Club was your contractor and the university can figure out what scope is possible within whatever timeline you have. They are professionals. For example: we started the elevator towers in July, ahead of the 2015 football season, and before we began work on the Champions Club (to be completed by 2016 season)which gave us an extra six months on a significant portion of project.

I could see that happening on this upcoming project.

I haven't had those discussions with contractors, or FSU facilities yet, but it may be we could get approval to build the seating structure only the first year -- with temporary concessions and restrooms -- and full completion by the following season.

It will be imperative to be fully designed and vetted long before anyone sticks a shovel in the ground and be disciplined during the time period. There can be no scope creep once the project begins. They'll need to stick to plan A which is easier said than done for those who know of such things.



Chair backs won't work in the existing structure because there is only 26 inches between your bleacher seat and the one in front of you. A chair back requires at least 30 inches. So that requires totally replacing all the seating plates and reduces the number of rows by about 15 percent so rather than 80 rows, like we have now, we'd fall to about 68 rows. Once you do that, you trigger all the other codes -- including ADA -- which has additional severe impacts on capacity so you can't do it half way and maintain capacity.

The same is true for adding 2-4 inches to your seat width. There's 38 seats per row in most sections. If you add 4 inches per seat, you reduce the number of seats to 30 and four people on each end of your row have to move over a section and it disrupts seating blocks and moves people off aisles. Its an inconvenience for some in the first section affected but becomes magnified as you move further and further toward the endzone.
We've mocked it up and its a mess if you don't do a full reseat and that would create a lot of hard ache for people who have been seated in the same place and love their neighbors around them.

If you are going to disrupt your entire fan base, I think you have to give them something more than an extra 2 or 4 inches (insert joke here).



Yes. We have looked into a roof structure -- or even a large center hung scoreboard that would cast some hade on the east sideline -- and continue to ask architects for creative ideas.

I've heard the Hard Rock roof has some downsides as far as circulation of air but I haven't talked to their architects or contractors to validate.



Agree with your post.
We had HKS come in about 5 years ago and do a master plan for the highest and best use for Doak. They envisioned the south endzone with the champions club as phase one with the east and west sidelines as phase 2 (and probably) phase 3.

The Champions Club is built and will reach critical mass this fall in terms of sales. It was profitable in year 1 with sales at 50 percent so Seminole Boosters is encouraged to move forward with raising money and completing design for phase 2 and 3 if athletics and the university and board of trustees is on board. It could happen within the next 7-10 years.

We had the architects give us a conceptual design of what the east and west could look like before we built phase 1. We needed to contemplate what the east and west structures would be someday before we built the Champions Club now and found we had blocked sightlines later. So while the east and west are not detailed drawings, they give us an idea of what the capacity could be with that design which is just north of 70,000.

Once we start the east and west, we have to upgrade to the new building code and meet all ADA requirements which is a good thing but eats away at capacity. If we kept the same bowl perimeter (which we probably will be confined to), and widened the majority of seats to 20 inches and went to a 30 inch tread rather than current 26 inch tread, it would reduce capacity to 50-55k. Just widening the aisles to put in a hand rail and required handicapped seating cuts capacity 5,000 seats. But you gain back 10k-15k seats by cantilevering the upper 6-10 rows of seats over the lower rows of seats like we've done in the Champions Club.

So, we can get it back to 70k or slightly more.


And I agree there are sections that could be standing decks or tighter seating for students (who don't want to sit) and visiting fans and a cheap seat section for fans who need to sample college game day.

The east and west sideline renovation would tear down only the metal seating structure, ramps, concourses, bathrooms and concession stands and not touch the brick buildings which house 500,000 sq ft of classrooms and offices and are topped with the skyboxes and press box. So, while it is a daunting project, it does not require a total demo, only the metal structure inside the University Center Complex buildings.

You are also correct about the spans. We are told the support spans can be spaced 2 or 3 times farther apart which requires fewer columns and gives us a lot of flexibility for concessions, bathrooms, etc.

Current cost to build is about $250 to $300 million and would need to be raised. We envision about 10 mid level skyboxes that we would lease to 10 individuals who made very large leadership gifts ($10 million or more) to the project. The remaining money would require a major capital campaign.

While all this is exciting to FSU season ticket holders, be forewarned: a project of this magnitude scrambles all the eggs in terms of seating. Stadium folks we've talked to, who have gone through a major project like this, tell us the only way to get it done is to do a total reseating of your existing season ticket holders.

Even if you just widen the seats in Doak from 16 inches to 20 inches, you reduce the number of people who can sit in a row from 38 to about 30. You do that in each of your center 6 sections and people who now sit on the 20 would be moved to the goal line.

As you get into actually trying to reseat -- which we have contemplated -- it gets very disruptive for groups of people who are used to sitting together or around the same people, or on an aisle, etc.

We've had lively discussion on how best to accomplish it.


 

One more thought...
Don't look at this as a capacity reduction play. We would not seek to reduce capacity but rather to add amenities and a more enjoyable fan experience to increase our retention and yield per seat.

A wise ticket man once told me retention and yield should be at the core of any decision you make with your program.

I think based on the demographics of our market and the physics of our stadium we can create a variety of appropriately priced experiences for 70k people that will maximize the optimum retention and yield.




Supply/demand. Maybe 72,000, I think 75 that you said is still a little high. I (personal opinion) is we should create a great value for our donors and season ticket holders. They should be our 1st and foremost concern not how many people we can put in a stadium with cheap tickets. Those extra tickets devalue the season ticket. I think 70,000ish is the sweet spot.





When FSU renovates Doak, as it will have to do eventually, regulatory laws will pretty much cause a reduction in seating regardless.

I think a forced reduction in seating is an admission we aren't the program we want to claim we are. Maybe I am old fashioned, but it's how I think.

I am OK with a modern, beautiful 75K seat brick stadium. But forcing a 60K stadium says we aren't really elite.


There is a long range plan to change the seating of part of the stadium (chair backs, etc) and perhaps adding more amenities to certain sections (less than Champions Club, but more than what is now there), but there are various versions of it. One thing I don't know (and this is what led University of Pittsburgh to tear down its' on campus stadium) was whether or not the chair backs can be added without changing the depth of the current steps. (At Pitt, they needed to gut the stadium to its foundation and remove the all the existing narrow steps in order to put in just basic chair backs; that is how they ended up scrapping the idea and using the Steelers stadium). The reason to do all this to Doak is not to reduce capacity but to improve the live experience for everyone - but capacity may go down to about 72,000 (if I recall)

The Champions Club original design was modified to be integrated into this plan, and its financial success is critical to moving forward with the rest of the stadium. As Jam and Jerry have noted, the Club is on target (or somewhat ahead). But what happens next is a very big step. President Thrasher wants any stadium renovation to benefit the entire university (Champions Club hosts many functions not related to football or athletics; the proposed new golf course will be integrated to a variety of university functions not related to athletics).

I agree that an improved live experience, including a reduction in seats, could be a big winner. But I caution you that our reduced attendance has more to do with the poor schedules we have had to endure instead of just the on field results. 2014 is an example of what a good schedule means. With VT and Clemson at Doak next year with a new coaching staff and style, it will be interesting to see how ticket sales go. But good post OP.







Just a few things about stadium enhancements. Mainly the “bowl” area. To put seat backs in any of the sideline areas, the problem is not the width, it’s the depth. There is not enough room between rows to put in seats with backs. To do that the whole “bowl” area it has to be replaced not just refurbished. It’s going to happen at some point relatively soon (my guess within 10 years)because the upkeep of the existing stadium will cost more than the note payment to replace. Most don’t realize that the original structure, 1950 version, is still in place. When it happens I imagine it will probably be a continuation of the champions club set up all the way around. It will bring down the capacity quite a bit but how much depends on what is done in the student sections and upper deck area.


I’ve heard the long-term plan (5-10 years) is to rebuild the east/west stands and make more amenities and wider seats / chair backs. Would reduce capacity to around 65,000 give or take a few thousand.







38 nolemanb, Yesterday at 7:51 PM
Last edited: Yesterday at 8:12 PM



You can't add chair back seating to the stadium as it is now, there's just not enough room. We basically have to tear out the whole metal structure and start over. We have conceptuals (I showed it to NoVaNole) and rough costs to do this and it's not cheap. I wish we were around 68-70,000

Yes.
We have a current plan that envisions a hotel on the south side connected to the Champions Club which would by symbiotic to the 3000 year round events hosted in the hotel space.

Your whole post reflects Andy Miller's cutting edge approach to beautifying Doak over the years with the University Center complex with more than 500k sq ft of classroom office space supporting the pressbox and skyboxes. Even the Champions Club is built into a building that houses the School of Hospitality management.

Notre Dame copied Andy's blueprint for building academic space around their stadium (very very similar to what FSU did 20 years ago) and were praised by the Wall Street Journal for being innovative.

Ha!

Your ideas are, and will continue to be, incorporated into Doak.

Since neither the state nor the university can use taxpayer dollars to build athletic only facilities, you have to figure out how to be creative which is a mindset Andy Miller and the Seminole Boosters board have demonstrated for years. No one has done more with less.





51 Jerry Kutz, 16 minutes ago




OLDER POSTS

http://allthingsfsu.blogspot.com/2014/03/doak-renovations-info-from-jerry-kutz.html

http://allthingsfsu.blogspot.com/2016/07/fsu-athletic-facility-upgrades-in-works.html

The stadium renovations are just the first phase. In an interview with The Associated Press, Wilcox said that plans to renovate the rest of the stadium are in the preliminary stages, but that those could run $200 to $400 million.

http://allthingsfsu.blogspot.com/2015/04/more-stadium-renovation-info-from-jerry.html


"The night the stadium was opened in 1950, Bobby Bowden was the starting quarterback for Howard College (now Sanford).

Doak turns 65 this year and like a lot of us in our 60s is in need of more than cosmetic surgery.

She needs orthopedic work and some gastrointestinal as well. Doak is at that age where maintenance includes foundation work, rust abatement and other expensive repairs. What makes it so costly is that you have to remove all that electrical wiring and plumbing stuff up under the stadium in order to sandblast the rust before you can paint. The top side is relatively easy as all you have to remove are bleachers. The underside is very labor intensive.

We started looking at options three years ago with various stadium design/build teams including HKS who built ATT stadium, TCU and many others. We commissioned them to look at a comprehensive stadium plan, whether renovate or rebuild, and they came to us with several options that included partial and full replacement plans that each featured the endzone club seat project as the first phase, then a continuation of that design down the east and west sidelines.

The design/build team (EMI, Childers, Rosser International) that is building the Champions Club has designed it to be compatible with east and west sideline experience that will not block sight lines. While we don't know the time frame for when phase 2 and 3 will be viable, we wanted the plan to be in place for when that time comes. 

The good news is that much of the really expensive stuff in the stadium complex is built as part of the University Center Complex and would not have to be rebuilt, things like the pressbox and skyboxes are on top of the UCC buildings. The coaches offices and athletic center are free standing on the North Side and the University Center Club and Champions Club are also either free standing or will be built on solid structure.

All we need to do to renovate or replace is the metal structure in between those four buildings and concessions and bathrooms. That's still a big project -- most likely $60-70 million to renovate and about $200 million to replace -- but it would be far more if we had to include the skyboxes and all the other stuff.

Someone asked about adding inches to each seat as an interim improvement. Yes, that is being considered. While an improvement, it is a capacity eater, requires a re-seating, and does not resolve the knees in your back which we can't fix until we build a stadium with 30 inches or more between rows (re-design and re-build).

http://allthingsfsu.blogspot.com/2017/12/jerry-kutz-on-champions-club-college.html






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