The Columbus Dispatch

Browns begin talks about new stadium

- By Tom Withers

CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Browns are discussing long-term plans for a major downtown developmen­t project that could include major stadium renovation­s — or a new facility.

Owner Dee Haslam revealed to ESPN that the team has done some preliminar­y work by speaking to city officials and there has been positive feedback. She said any project could take 10 years to complete, and cautioned nothing has been decided.

“So I think it’s really important to find out what’s possible,” she told ESPN. “There could be a lot of great ideas that we might not be able to do because it’s not feasible for one reason or another. I don’t want to get the horse in front of the cart until we’re knowledgea­ble enough to know, because we’re not informed enough to know right now. But we do know that we have a desire to make a bigger impact on the future of Cleveland.”

As part of the process, the team is conducting an economic impact study with Cleveland State University. Haslam cited the developmen­t of the Gateway project, which includes Progressiv­e Field and Quicken Loans Arena, as an example of how some of the city’s underused areas could be better developed.

FirstEnerg­y Stadium, which was built before the Browns returned as an expansion team in 1999, shares space along Lake Erie with the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and Great Lakes Science Center. But much of the area near those facilities is either underdevel­oped or not used.

Haslam said the Browns will complete their lease, which runs through 2029. The team recently finished a $125 million renovation, paying $95 million of the cost.

Haslam insisted any discussion about a new stadium would be premature, and that any decision on the longterm future should be made by taxpayers.

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