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Q2 Stadium

Coordinates:30°23′16″N97°43′10″W / 30.3877°N 97.7195°W /30.3877; -97.7195
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Soccer stadium in Austin, Texas, United States

Q2 Stadium
McKalla Place
Austin FC vs.Columbus Crew in June 2021
Q2 Stadium is located in Texas
Q2 Stadium
Q2 Stadium
Location inTexas
Show map of Texas
Q2 Stadium is located in the United States
Q2 Stadium
Q2 Stadium
Location in theUnited States
Show map of the United States
Full nameQ2 Stadium at McKalla Place
Former namesAustin FC Stadium (tentative name)
Address10414 McKalla Place
Austin, TX 78758
Coordinates30°23′16″N97°43′10″W / 30.3877°N 97.7195°W /30.3877; -97.7195
Public transitCapMetro Rapid Braker/Stadium station
McKalla station
OwnerAnthony Precourt
OperatorTwo Oak Ventures LLC
TypeSoccer-specific stadium
Seating typeSeated, safe standing[1]
Capacity20,500[2]
Field size115 yd × 75 yd (105 m × 69 m)[3]
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Broke groundSeptember 9, 2019
OpenedJune 16, 2021
Construction cost~$260 million
ArchitectGensler
BuilderAustin Commercial
Structural engineerWalter P Moore
Services engineerHenderson Engineers
Main contractorsIdibri
Tenants
Austin FC (MLS) 2021–present

Q2 Stadium is asoccer-specific stadium located in the North Burnet section of NorthAustin, Texas, United States. It is the home ofAustin FC, aMajor League Soccer (MLS) team that began play in 2021. The stadium hosted its first event on June 16, 2021, an international friendly between theUnited States women's national team andNigeria.

Site history

[edit]

The earliest noted development of the tract of land was in 1956, when the land was christened as a 23.5 acre chemical manufacturing plant. The manufacturing plant produced various chemicals for Reichhold Chemicals, generally peroxides, for the majority of its 29 years as a chemical plant. The facility was closed following a series of on-site safety incidents in December, 1985, which made it economically infeasible to operate.[4]

The land was annexed into the Austin city limits on July 19, 1973.[5]

Reichhold's parent company,DIC Corporation, sold the land to the City of Austin in 1995 for $1.4 million, with the city planning on using it as the Austin Water North Service Center. However, during construction of the facility in 2003, an explosion occurred, with workers finding illegally stored chemical waste on the site. Remediation was undertaken, stripping the site down to bedrock. The city sued DIC, and received $3.6 million.[6]

When Precourt Sports Ventures, operator ofColumbus Crew SC, announced they were intending to move the team to Austin, city staff identified eight potential sites for a permanent stadium.[7] 10414 McKalla Place was identified as one of those eight sites, and following some public debate, became the prime candidate following the Austin City Council meeting on March 22, 2018.[8] After several sessions, the Austin City Council granted the City Manager the authority to negotiate and execute a lease with the 7–4 vote during a special session on August 15, 2018.[9] The city announced that the lease had been completed and signed on December 19, 2018.[10]

The 20-year lease of the site includes yearly rent of $550,000 beginning in year six, with an additional $3.6 million being given toCapMetro for transit. The stadium would be fully financed and built with private money, though stadium ownership would be held by the city itself. The club has the ability to extend the lease up to three times, with each extension being ten years.[11]

Construction

[edit]
Construction progress, July 2020

The approximately 20,500-seat stadium was expected to cost $260 million, with team operator Precourt Sports Ventures privately financing the construction.[12] Other elements for the 24-acre site and surroundings include green space, potential housing, and mixed-use retail.

In March 2019, Precourt Sports named Austin Commercial as the construction manager andGensler as the lead architect for the stadium, and announced that groundbreaking will take place in September 2019.[2]

Re-zoning the site to stadium requirements passed Austin City Council unanimously on June 6, 2019.[13]

On August 19, 2019, a site plan for the Austin FC stadium in North Austin was approved by the city ofAustin, Texas.[14]

In January 2021, Austin FC entered a naming rights partnership with Q2 Holdings, a local online banking provider, resulting in the stadium formally being namedQ2 Stadium on January 25, 2021.[15][16]

Public transportation

[edit]
See also:McKalla station

Q2 Stadium sits next toMcKalla station onCapMetro's Red Line commuter rail service, opened in 2024 specifically to serve the stadium.[17] Before then, the closest existing station on the Red Line wasKramer station, about a 0.5-mile (0.80 km) walk from the stadium. The new station provides a much shorter and more direct walking route from rail services to the stadium without having to cross any roads. Kramer station is expected to be relocated about 0.6-mile (0.97 km) north to the Broadmoor campus and be renamedBroadmoor station.[18]

Bus connections to the stadium includeCapMetro Rapid route 803 andCapMetro Bus routes 3, 383, 392, and 466.[19]

Events

[edit]

The stadium opened on June 16, 2021, hosting an international women's friendly between theUnited States andNigeria.Christen Press scored the first ever goal in the stadium.

Austin FC played their first ever match at the stadium on June 19, 2021, against theSan Jose Earthquakes.[20] The match ended with a 0–0 draw in front of a sellout crowd of 20,738.[21] On July 1, 2021,Jon Gallagher scored the first ever competitive goal in Q2 Stadium history, during the 27th minute of Austin FC's 3rd ever regular MLS season home match versusPortland Timbers, eventually finishing as a 4–1 win to Austin FC.[22]

On July 29, 2021,USA beatQatar in theGold Cup Semifinals on aGyasi Zardes goal in the 86th minute, and Q2 hosted its firstWorld Cup qualifying match that October, a 2–0 win againstJamaica. Q2 hosted its firstNations League match on June 10, 2022, a 5–0 win againstGrenada.FC Dallas strikerJesús Ferreira scored 4 goals for the Americans in the match, the first ever hat-trick in Q2 Stadium.

On July 4, 2022, Q2 Stadium held its first non-sporting event, when it hostedWillie Nelson's 4th of July Picnic and Firework show, an annual event that was started in 1972.[23]

On July 30, 2022, Q2 hosted its first non-soccer event,Premier Rugby Sevens, featuring a single dayRugby sevens tournament with theExperts,Loonies,Headliners, andLoggerheads.[24] PR7s returned to Q2 on June 17, 2023, for the Eastern Conference Kickoff.[25]

In December 2023, Q2 was selected to host 2 matches for the2024 Copa América, a quadrennialCONMEBOL soccer tournament.Copa América is the oldest national team soccer tournament in the world. Q2 was one of fourteen stadium selected in the United States and one of three soccer specific stadiums chosen to host matches.[26] Later that month, the 2024 Copa América draw revealed that the first game would featureVenezuela andJamaica, and the second game would featureParaguay and the winner ofqualifying play-off match betweenCosta Rica andHonduras.[27]

International Soccer

[edit]
DateTeam #1ResultTeam #2TournamentSpectators
June 16, 2021 United States2–0 NigeriaWomen's International Friendly20,500
July 29, 2021 Qatar0–1 United States2021 CONCACAF Gold Cup Semifinal20,500
October 7, 2021 United States2–0 Jamaica2022 FIFA World Cup qualifying20,500
December 8, 2021 Mexico2–2 ChileFriendly17,202
June 10, 2022 United States5–0 Grenada2022–23 CONCACAF Nations League A20,500
April 8, 2023 United States2–0 Republic of IrelandWomen's International Friendly20,593
November 16, 2023 United States3–0 Trinidad and Tobago2023–24 CONCACAF Nations League A19,850
June 30, 2024 Jamaica0–3 Venezuela2024 Copa América20,240
July 2, 2024 Costa Rica2–1 Paraguay12,765
October 12, 2024 United States2–0 PanamaFriendly20,239
October 24, 2024 United States3–1 IcelandWomen's International Friendly18,580

Average attendances

[edit]
TenantsLeague seasonHome gamesAverage attendance[28][29]
Austin FC20241720,738
Austin FC20231720,738

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Spedden, Zach (April 26, 2019)."Austin FC Stadium Design Taking Shape".Soccerstadiumdigest.com. RetrievedJune 7, 2019.
  2. ^ab"Precourt Sports Ventures names construction manager and design team for Austin FC stadium"(PDF) (Press release). Austin FC. March 25, 2019. RetrievedMarch 25, 2019.
  3. ^"Rising stadium signals that Austin FC, MLS are on their way".
  4. ^"History of McKalla Place".Estadiomckalla.com. RetrievedJune 7, 2019.
  5. ^"Geocortex Viewer for HTML5".Austintexas.gov. RetrievedJune 7, 2019.
  6. ^Lyttle, Kevin."McKalla Place: The good, bad and ugly for possible MLS stadium site".Austin American-Statesman. RetrievedJune 7, 2019.
  7. ^Neely, Christopher (December 12, 2017)."MAP: Austin recommends these 8 public properties for a new Major League Soccer field".Community Impact Newspaper. RetrievedJune 7, 2019.
  8. ^"Council approves study of McKalla Place as soccer stadium site".Austin Monitor. March 26, 2018. RetrievedJune 7, 2019.
  9. ^Lyttle, Kevin."Austin City Council votes 'yes' to MLS at McKalla Place".Austin American-Statesman. RetrievedJune 7, 2019.
  10. ^Jimmy Maas (December 19, 2018)."Major League Soccer And Precourt Sports Sign Lease For Stadium Site In North Austin".Kut.org. RetrievedJune 7, 2019.
  11. ^"LEASE AND DEVELOPMENT AGREEMENT by and between CITY OF AUSTIN, as Landlord and AUSTIN STADCO LLC, as Tenant"(PDF).Austintexas.gov. RetrievedJune 7, 2019.
  12. ^"Details of potential McKalla Place soccer deal emerge".Mystatesman.com. RetrievedJuly 28, 2018.
  13. ^Jankowski, Phil (June 6, 2019)."On to No. 97, rezoning McKalla Place to build the MLS stadium for @austinfc. Some speakers on this one. Could get interesting! #ATXcouncil #mls2atx #AustinFCpic.twitter.com/HZsbvo7xb3".Twitter. RetrievedJune 7, 2019.
  14. ^"Site plan approved for Austin FC stadium". bizjournals.com. August 19, 2019.
  15. ^Rosner, Mark (January 25, 2021)."Austin's MLS stadium now officially has a name".Austin American-Statesman. Austin, Texas: Statesman.com. RetrievedJanuary 25, 2021.
  16. ^"Austin FC announce stadium naming rights partnership with Q2 Holdings Inc". MLS. January 25, 2021. RetrievedJanuary 25, 2021.
  17. ^KUT, Nathan Bernier (February 26, 2024)."New Cap Metro train station opens at Q2 Stadium as 'quiet zones' take effect".Austin Monitor. RetrievedMarch 17, 2024.
  18. ^"CapMetro Rail Red Line Map"(PDF).CapMetro. RetrievedJune 20, 2020.
  19. ^"Capital Metro Memorandum"(PDF).Austin, Texas. RetrievedJune 20, 2020.[dead link]
  20. ^Klick, Andrea; Jankowski, Philip (June 16, 2021)."How to get in and out of Austin FC's new soccer stadium: First big test looms".Austin American-Statesman. RetrievedJune 16, 2021.
  21. ^Sigal, Jonathan (June 19, 2021)."Recap: Austin FC 0, San Jose Earthquakes 0".
  22. ^Sigal, Jonathan."Austin FC Savor "Momentous Occasion" Of First Win, First Goals At Q2 Stadium".MLS.com. RetrievedJuly 2, 2021.
  23. ^"Willie Nelson Announces 4th of July Picnic and Fireworks At Q2 Stadium".www.AustinFC.com. Q2 Stadium. April 8, 2022. RetrievedDecember 8, 2023.
  24. ^"The Championship for Premier Rugby Sevens Comes To Austin's Q2 Stadium".KXAN Austin. July 26, 2022. RetrievedNovember 30, 2023.
  25. ^"Premier Rugby Sevens' return to Austin shows budding interest, potential audience".Austin American-Statesman. RetrievedNovember 30, 2023.
  26. ^"Q2 Stadium Named As A Host Venue For The 2024 CONMEBOL Copa America".www.AustinFC.com. Q2 Stadium. December 4, 2023. RetrievedDecember 8, 2023.
  27. ^"2024 CONMEBOL Copa America Draw Confirms Matchups To Take Place at Q2 Stadium".www.AustinFC.com. Q2 Stadium. December 7, 2023. RetrievedDecember 8, 2023.
  28. ^https://www.worldfootball.net/attendance/usa-major-league-soccer-2024/1/
  29. ^https://www.worldfootball.net/attendance/usa-major-league-soccer-2023/1/

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toQ2 Stadium.
Club
Stadiums
Affiliated clubs
Culture
  • Los Verdes, Austin Anthem
Rivalries
Key personnel
Owners
Anthony Precourt
President
Andy Loughnane
Sporting Director
Rodolfo Borrell
Head coach
Nico Estévez
Academy manager
Tyson Wahl
Competitions
MLS (5)
U.S. Open Cup (2)
CONCACAF Champions League (1)
Leagues Cup (2)
Primary
Eastern Conference
Western Conference
Future
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