The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Next football season will see new turf, officials say

Stadium GM says work to occur when Atlanta United’s schedule permits.

- By Tim Tucker tim.tucker@ajc.com

The artificial turf on which Super Bowl LIII was played will be replaced before next football season, Mercedes-Benz Stadium officials said Thursday.

The plan is to use a “very similar but newer version” of turf from the same company, FieldTurf, that installed the current playing surface before the building opened in 2017, stadium general manager Scott Jenkins said.

The work, which will take about a week, will be scheduled before the start of the Falcons’ season and during the Atlanta United season, Jenkins said.

“We’re looking for an opening in the schedule,” he said.

Jenkins said the turf likely will be replaced every two years, in part for aesthetic reasons because of wear from the field being con- stantly repainted and re-branded for various events.

The turf replacemen­t, which will cost about $700,000, is the most expensive item on a lengthy list of capital improvemen­ts proposed for the stadium this year by the Falcons organizati­on, which operates the facility.

The list, totaling $1.97 million, was presented Thursday at a meeting of the Georgia World Congress Center Authority, a state board that has an oversight role over the stadium.

Among other items on the list: self-serve coolers for the upper deck ($22,700), five additional automated turnstiles ($69,829), video equipment ($150,000), restoring/updating finishes due to wear and tear ($250,000) and a new cooling tower water treatment system ($364,360).

Capital improvemen­ts are funded in part by a portion of the Atlanta hotel-motel tax dedicated to the stadium.

If there aren’t sufficient funds from the tax to cover needed improvemen­ts, the Falcons organizati­on is responsibl­e for the rest.

The GWCCA has 25 business days to provide feedback about this year’s proposed expenditur­es.

Stadium officials also presented the board with a projection of capital-improvemen­t costs over the next five years, showing a dramatic rise in 2022 (to $10.4 million) and 2023 ($18.9 million). Technology and video upgrades that will be needed around that time, as well as suite and club “refinishin­gs,” will account for the increased costs in those years, the board was told.

 ??  ?? GM Scott Jenkins says turf is newer version.
GM Scott Jenkins says turf is newer version.

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