While we were planning the trip to Wisconsin described in THIS SPACE yesterday, the thought struck me that I was probably never going to be in Milwaukee ever again, and if I'm going to be there in September, then by God, I'm going to fulfill a lifelong wish and I'm going to go to Green Bay and see Lambeau Field. Actually, the "lifelong wish" was to see a game played at Lambeau Field. I knew that that wouldn't be possible, so a little bit of research on the interwebs revealed that the Packers offer tours of their stadium, as well as their Packers Hall of Fame, on a daily basis, so back in July we booked such a tour for Tuesday, September 10. Obviously, on a gorgeous September day with temps in the eighties, the famed Tundra of Lambeau Field wasn't so frozen, but that took nothing away from the experience.
This post will be mainly just pictures from our tour, but a few fun facts before that. As the 21st century dawned, the Packers found themselves in the bottom five of the NFL in terms of revenues, and they knew that something had to be done. In 2004, Ron Wolf was hired as head of football operations, and his realization was that drastic changes had to be made to their Stadium Operations, or they might soon become the Oklahoma City or Las Vegas Packers. So drastic renovations were undertaken, that included expanded seating with luxury suites, and a stadium atrium with dining facilities and a Packers Hall of Fame that could be open seven days a week, fifty-two weeks a year.
In the picture you see above, the lower bowl of the stadium are all bleacher type seats, and they have a capacity of 60,000. With the renovations that Wolf effected, the stadium now seats 81,000. The newer seats are all chairback seats and luxury suite seating. The bleachers remain with each "seat" being eighteen inches wide. To replace those with chairback seats (23 or 24 inches), the capacity would have been decreased by about 8,000 seats, all of them held by season ticket holders, so the bleachers were not going to go away.
So what the Packers now have in Lambeau Field is a facility that is open year round for tours, weddings, high school proms, business meetings etc, and the Packers revenues now rank in the Top Ten in the NFL. Speaking of the tours, several millions of people have taken them over the years, from all fifty states and from over 140 foreign countries. In our group on Tuesday, there was a gentleman from England and young couple from Switzerland who said the sole purpose of their trip to the USA was to come to Green Bay! And ours was not the only tour group of the day. Two others were taking place simultaneously to ours, and we saw at least three others beginning by the time we left the stadium.
Also, you notice that there are no lines or markings on the field. When the grass gets cut, and they cut it every two days, all painted lines and markings disappear. The field is then repainted on the day before a Game Day.
So some vacation pics for your viewing pleasure.
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