TRZ Ad

Chiefs Owner Clark Hunt: ‘We’re Making Progress’ on Domed Stadium Renderings

Disclaimer: This article was originally published on FOX Sports Digital. All articles, images, and related media on this website are sourced directly from their respective publishers and credited accordingly. TheRedZone.org does not claim ownership of any third-party content and provides it solely for informational and news aggregation purposes. All rights to original materials remain with their respective copyright holders.

The Kansas City Chiefs expect to unveil renderings for their new, $3 billion domed stadium later this summer, and team owner Clark Hunt said Friday that the plan is to begin bidding for the Super Bowl, Final Four and College Football Playoff games. The Chiefs announced in late December that they were moving from their longtime home at Arrowhead Stadium across the Kansas-Missouri state line. The move came after Kansas lawmakers voted to allow the state to issue a little more than $2.4 million in bonds to cover about 60% of the cost of the stadium, a new training facility and retail and entertainment space. The stadium itself will be built in Kansas City, Kansas, near Kansas Speedway and a retail district known as The Legends. The area is also home to Sporting Park, the home of MLS club Sporting Kansas City, and a minor-league baseball stadium. “We’re making progress,” Hunt said. “We have a design competition that’s ongoing between MANICA and Populous, and I would hope in the next several months that we’d be able to make a decision on the lead architect.” Both of the firms are based in Kansas City, MANICA on the Kansas side and Populous on the Missouri side. MANICA has been working on the new Nissan Stadium in Nashville that will be home to the Tennessee Titans, and worked on Allegiant Stadium, the home of the Las Vegas Raiders. Populous has been wrapping up the new Highmark Stadium for the Buffalo Bills. Hunt did underscore that “our thought process at this time is that it would be an enclosed dome.” One of the long-held dreams of Hunt’s father, the late Chiefs founder Lamar Hunt, was to host a Super Bowl — the name he coined for the NFL title game. That would have been unlikely in an outdoor stadium in Kansas City, given the frigid Midwest winters. “We plan on bidding for Final Fours, College Football Playoff Games, bowl games and, of course, the Super Bowl,” Clark Hunt said. “It will coincide with the construction of several other NFL buildings, so we will have competition, but I will make sure that Kansas City and the Chiefs put their best foot forward in that process.” Hunt spoke Friday while introducing former linebacker Derrick Johnson as the newest member of the team’s Hall of Fame. The Chiefs hosted the NFL draft to widespread acclaim in 2023 at Union Station in Kansas City, Missouri, close to where the Kansas City Royals announced this week that they would be building a $1.9 billion stadium to replace Kauffman Stadium. The Chiefs also are hosting six FIFA Men’s World Cup games this summer at Arrowhead Stadium. It had to undergo minor renovations so that the 53-year-old stadium could fit the size of the field used for one of the biggest sporting events in the world. The World Cup in Kansas City is another crowning achievement for the Hunt family. Lamar Hunt was one of the original founding investors of Major League Soccer, and he originally owned two teams, the Columbus Crew and the Kansas City Wizards — now known as Sporting Kansas City. Hunt later purchased a third team, the Dallas Burn, which has been rebranded as FC Dallas is still owned by the Hunt family. “We’re really excited. It’s hard to believe the World Cup is a little over 45 days away,” Clark Hunt said. “It feels like we’ve been working on it for a decade, and in some regards that’s probably true. It’s going to be a tremendous opportunity for Kansas City to be seen and appreciated on a global stage. There will literally be billions of TV viewers watching games from Kansas City.” Reporting by The Associated Press.

Teams