"The Cage" | |
A view of the interior of TDECU Stadium
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Location | 3874 Holman St Houston, TX 77004 |
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Coordinates | 29°43′19″N 95°20′57″W / 29.72194°N 95.34917°WCoordinates: 29°43′19″N 95°20′57″W / 29.72194°N 95.34917°W |
Public transit | Robertson Stadium/UH/TSU station |
Owner | University of Houston System |
Operator | University of Houston |
Executive suites | 26 Suites, 42 Loge Boxes, 766 Club Seats, 2 Suite Decks, 4 Party Decks |
Capacity | 40,000 + SRO |
Record attendance | 42,822 (November 17, 2016) |
Surface | UBU Speed Series S5-M synthetic turf |
Scoreboard | Panasonic LED HD 68' by 38' |
Construction | |
Broke ground | February 8, 2013 |
Opened | August 29, 2014 |
Construction cost | $128 million |
Architect |
DLR Group PageSoutherlandPage Smith & Company Architects |
Project manager | Broaddus & Associates |
Structural engineer | Walter P Moore/Henderson + Rogers |
General contractor | Manhattan Construction |
Tenants | |
Houston Cougars football (NCAA) (2014–present) | |
Website | |
Official [1] Seat Viewfinder [2] |
John O'Quinn Field at TDECU Stadium is an American football stadium on the campus of the University of Houston. The stadium serves as the home of the Houston Cougars football team, which represents the University of Houston in collegiate football. TDECU Stadium was built on the former site of Robertson Stadium, which was the intermittent home of the school's football program since 1946. Its official name is derived from Texas Dow Employees Credit Union (TDECU), the largest credit union in Houston, which purchased its naming rights in the largest-ever naming rights deal for a college football stadium.
Plans for a new or renovated football venue were developed by the university's athletics department and their contractors as early as 2010. Demolition of Robertson Stadium began on December 3, 2012, and the official groundbreaking for the new stadium was celebrated on February 8, 2013. TDECU Stadium cost USD$128 million to build. The University of Houston opened the new stadium on Friday, August 29, 2014 in a contest with UTSA Roadrunners.
On February 10, 2010, Houston athletics director Mack Rhoades announced that the University of Houston had hired consultant JMI Sports and engineering/architectural design firm AECOM to conduct a feasibility study regarding possible renovations or reconstruction of Houston's Robertson Stadium and Hofheinz Pavilion. Based on the study, Houston officials announced on June 10, 2010, their intention to raze Robertson Stadium in preparation for a new stadium to be built on the same location and to perform major renovations on Hofheinz Pavilion. The plan included a new football stadium with an initial capacity of 40,000 seats with expandability to 60,000. At an estimated $120 million cost, Houston athletics also announced the start of a fundraising drive.
On August 18, 2011, the University of Houston announced that they had received the largest single donation for the stadium when co-CEOs and co-founders of Austin-based Data Foundry, Ron and Carolyn Yokubaitis donated $10 million USD to the project. Ron Yokubaitis is an alumnus of the University of Houston and former Cougar football player. Houston officials also reported that $60 million had been raised for the stadium, whereas approximately $80–$85 million was needed to break ground on construction.
On November 14, 2011, the Student Fees Advisory Committee (SFAC), a joint student-faculty committee which advises university administration about compulsory student fees, recommended an increase of student fees to specifically construct, maintain, and operate athletic facilities. The committee also recommended that input from the student body was necessary, and that this would be appropriate through a student referendum made possible by future legislation in the Student Government Association (SGA).