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Orlando City Stadium

Orlando City Stadium
Open House Event (32264010504).jpg
Location 655 West Church Street, Orlando, Florida 32805
Coordinates 28°32′28″N 81°23′21″W / 28.5410645°N 81.389035°W / 28.5410645; -81.389035Coordinates: 28°32′28″N 81°23′21″W / 28.5410645°N 81.389035°W / 28.5410645; -81.389035
Public transit Local Transit SunRail Church Street Station
Local Transit Lynx 21, 62, 319
Owner Orlando City SC
Operator Orlando City SC
Executive suites 31
Capacity 25,500
Acreage 10
Surface Grass
Scoreboard Panasonic
Construction
Broke ground October 16, 2014
Opened February 24, 2017 (2017-02-24)
Construction cost $155 million
Architect Populous
Project manager ICON Venue Group
General contractor Barton Malow
Tenants
Orlando City SC (MLS) (2017–)
Orlando Pride (NWSL) (2017–)
Orlando City B (USL) (2017–)

Orlando City Stadium is a soccer-specific stadium in downtown Orlando, Florida. It is the home venue for the Orlando City SC, which entered Major League Soccer (MLS) as an expansion franchise in 2015, and their National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) sister club the Orlando Pride. The stadium was completed in time for Orlando City's first home game of the 2017 season on March 5th.

The stadium is located along West Church Street in the Parramore neighborhood west of Downtown Orlando.

In April 2013, the City of Orlando purchased downtown land for $8.2 million to be used towards the construction of a $110 million MLS soccer stadium. However, in May, the Florida House of Representatives failed to vote on a bill that had passed the Senate that would have provided up to $30 million in state funds towards the stadium project. Orlando City SC President Phil Rawlins responded by expressing his intent to find alternative funding and keep seeking MLS expansion.

The Orlando downtown soccer stadium moved closer to securing funding on August 8, 2013, when Orange County Mayor Teresa Jacobs and Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer reached an agreement on a deal to provide financial support for a variety of Orlando projects including the new MLS soccer stadium. The last piece in stadium funding was an October 2013 vote on using an existing tourism tax to fund the final quarter of the $80 million stadium project. On October 22, 2013, the Orange County Board of Commissioners voted 5–2 to approve the use of $20 million in tourist development tax funds to build an $84 million multi-purpose soccer stadium in downtown Orlando.

The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) announced on December 11, 2013, that the 2016 and 2017 NCAA Women's College Cup Championship would be held at the new stadium.

On August 4, 2014, the team announced that the stadium location would be moved one block west, to avoid having a delay to the opening day, due to Faith Deliverance Temple fighting the city's eminent-domain claim. The new location resulted in the closure of Parramore Avenue between Church Street and Central Boulevard in February 2015, as the stadium was built right on top of where the road currently runs.


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