Lynn Family Stadium


Lynn Family Stadium is a soccer-specific stadium in the Butchertown neighborhood of Louisville, Kentucky, United States. It has hosted Louisville City FC of the USL Championship since it opened in 2020 and will become home to Racing Louisville FC of the National Women's Soccer League in 2021. The venue has 11,700 permanent seats, with expansion for up to 15,304 spectators, and began construction in 2018.

History

Planning and financing

was founded in 2014 as the successor to Orlando City SC, which had moved to Major League Soccer and left an open slot in USL Pro. The team began play in 2015 at Louisville Slugger Field, a minor league baseball park, but expressed interest in building a soccer-specific stadium after reaching attendance goals. As part of the shared five-year arrangement at Slugger Field, Louisville City FC paid for minor renovations, including a retractable pitchers mound, and a rental fee of $5,000 per match. The new team drew an average attendance of over 6,000 per match in their inaugural season, second among teams in the USL, but were unable to generate revenue as a secondary tenant at Slugger Field, which incurred unexpected expenses.
In August 2015, high-level talks with Mayor Greg Fischer concerning stadium planning began as the club also explored bidding for an MLS franchise. Louisville City FC owner Wayne Estopinal and Metro Councilman Dan Johnson proposed a site at Champions Park, a former country club northeast of downtown, for a stadium that would initially seat 10,000 spectators and expand to 20,000 for an MLS team. The city government announced a stadium feasibility and financing study in January 2016, examining four sites in Louisville. The study was completed in August and recommended a 10,000-seat stadium that would cost $30–50 million depending on the mix of public and private funds, but did not name potential sites. The club appointed John Neance as chairman and operating manager in September 2016, with a focus on planning for the stadium. In a December interview with The Courier-Journal, he revealed that the club had been actively acquiring property at a proposed site and were negotiating a public–private partnership to fund the project.
The club hired HOK as the architect for the stadium project, which would also include a mixed-use development with offices and retail, in January 2017. On April 12, 2017, Louisville City FC announced its intention to build a 10,000-seat stadium on a industrial site in the Butchertown neighborhood east of Downtown Louisville. The stadium and surrounding development would cost a total of $200 million to construct, including financing assistance from the state government. In September, Mayor Fischer announced a $30 million financing plan from the city that would buy the necessary parcels at the stadium site and contribute to infrastructure improvements. The financing plan was approved by the Metro Council the following month, along with an application to the state government for tax increment financing for the surrounding development.
Property acquisition of the four parcels that comprise the stadium site was completed in November 2018 at a cost of $24.1 million. The tax increment financing proposal was approved by the state government in May 2018, allowing for $21.7 million in financing over a 20-year period within a special district created by the Kentucky Economic Development Finance Authority. The club was criticized by a councilmember during early planning for removing a homeless camp at the stadium site in February 2018; the club ownership donated funds to a homeless advocacy group to house the displaced residents in hotels for two months.

Construction

The club and city government hosted a groundbreaking ceremony for the project on June 28, 2018, which included the ownership group, Kentucky governor Matt Bevin, and Louisville mayor Greg Fischer. The stadium was originally estimated to cost $45 million but costs rose to $60–65 million at the time of the groundbreaking. A joint venture of Messer Construction and Harmon Construction was selected as the general contractor for the stadium project in November 2018. By May 2019, work on the roof structure was two-thirds complete and the lower levels of the stadium were in place. The structural steel elements of the stadium were completed in July ahead of work on the grass surface, which was installed in September. Construction was completed in early March, with a formal handover ceremony as Louisville City FC took possession of the stadium.
Lynn Family Stadium was scheduled to open on April 11, 2020, with a regular season match between Louisville City FC and Birmingham Legion FC. A fixture for Louisville City FC in the 2020 U.S. Open Cup was also scheduled on April 7. The home opener and cup fixture were cancelled by the suspension of USL and U.S. Open Cup play announced in March 2020 because of the coronavirus pandemic. The opening date was pushed to July 12, 2020, with a home match against the Pittsburgh Riverhounds SC and capacity limited to 30 percent. In October 2019, the National Women's Soccer League awarded an expansion franchise to Louisville that would begin play at Lynn Family Stadium in 2021.

Naming rights

On August 5, 2019, Louisville City FC announced that the stadium would be named Lynn Family Stadium for Dr. Mark and Cindy Lynn, who had purchased the ten-year naming rights for an undisclosed amount. Dr. Lynn, an optometrist, owns the Louisville-area franchise of the national optical retailer Visionworks. The Lynns had also donated to the University of Louisville for construction of a collegiate soccer stadium named Dr. Mark & Cindy Lynn Stadium, which opened in 2014 and was designed by founding Louisville City FC owner Wayne Estopinal.

Design

In its initial configuration, Lynn Family Stadium has 11,700 seats, a Premier Club area with 250 seats, and 18 luxury suite boxes. The stadium's total capacity is 15,304 spectators with a safe standing area for supporters' groups and would be expandable to 20,000 with additional construction. The stands enclose three sides of the field, with the open end facing west towards the downtown bridges over the Ohio River; the open end also has a video board made by Daktronics, one of eight digital displays at the stadium. The playing surface is Bermuda grass sod that was grown in Indiana and is maintained with an underheating element. HOK designed the stadium and drew inspiration from other venues, including Earthquakes Stadium in San Jose, California, Rio Tinto Stadium in Sandy, Utah, and Little Caesars Arena in Detroit. The stadium is managed by AEG Facilities.