Oakland Raiders: Could they share a stadium with 49ers?
With confetti streaming down under a blue sky, the 49ers officially opened the $1.2 billion stadium in Santa Clara with a ribbon-cutting ceremony complete with all the opulence of their new home.
Eric Risberg/AP
SANTA CLARA, California
San Francisco 49ers CEO Jed York got a little teary on his drive to Levi's Stadium on Thursday. His voice cracked while talking about taking his young son to NFL games at the stadium for years to come.
Others had a different reaction upon walking into the arena: Wow!
With confetti streaming down under a blue sky, the 49ers officially opened the $1.2 billion stadium in Santa Clara with a ribbon-cutting ceremony complete with all the opulence of their new home.
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh, linebacker Patrick Willis, and left tackle Joe Staley joined York and others on stage to cut the ribbons.
They used oversized red scissors with gold-colored blades in keeping with team colors. Hard hat-wearing construction workers lined the steps in fluorescent yellow jackets as team employees cheered and a fog horn blared.
"This is a long time in the making," York said.
The stadium's opening put one of the NFL's flagship franchises on firm footing and planted the country's most popular sports league in technology-rich Silicon Valley for the first time.
Goodell called it a milestone for the league. He also added a twist to the ceremony by addressing the looming stadium issue just up the road in Oakland, where the Raiders have long been searching for a replacement to the outdated Coliseum.
Goodell said it's up to the Raiders to decide whether they want to try to build a stadium in Oakland or share the facility at Levi's Stadium with the 49ers — an idea York has never dismissed.
Raiders owner Mark Davis has said he doesn't want to be a renter in the 49ers' facility, which is now fitted with red seats and posters of past and present San Francisco greats.
The 49ers' new home, which is the first LEED Gold Certified stadium in the NFL for its environmentally friendly design, will hold about 68,500 fans and has the ability to expand to 75,000 for Super Bowl 50 in February 2016. The facility features 165 luxury suites, 9,000 club seats and even a green roof-top deck that includes solar panels and harvested herbs for on-site food preparation.
Free Wi-Fi will be available at the stadium, and a smartphone application will allow fans to have food delivered to any seat, and check waiting lines at concession stands and bathrooms.
"The stadium reflects the greatness of the region, the technology, and the innovation," Goodell said.
The seats in the lower bowl will hold some 45,000, or two-thirds of stadium capacity, and will be the largest first level in the NFL. All club levels look out to the field in one direction and the surrounding valley and mountains in another. It's 35 rows up to the first club seating area, while Row 1 of the stadium is about 10 feet off the field.
The only lingering stadium concerns from most 49ers fans involve the traffic in an already congested area and rising ticket prices.
And, of course, some are still bitter about the team leaving San Francisco, where the team tried and failed for decades to get a new stadium.
Levi's Stadium, steps away from the 49ers' practice facility, is about 45 miles (70 kilometers) south of downtown San Francisco — the longest distance any team in the league has to the city that bears its name. The 49ers had played in San Francisco since their establishment in 1946, including the past 43 years at Candlestick Park, as the team won all five of its Super Bowl titles.
The whipping wind and cold air from the city's famous fog made conditions constantly change at Candlestick, which is set to be demolished. That's far from the near year-round sunshine — and temperatures that can be 20-25 degrees F (10 C) warmer — in Santa Clara, where most players and coaches already live.
The first regular-season game will be against Chicago on Sept. 14.