Fans For All Seasons
By Sara J. Bennett
Wednesday, November 24, 2004
Thud. Ball! Thud. Strike 2!
Seven-year-old Spenser Brown stood in a pitching
cage, hurling baseball after baseball over a simulated
home base while his sister, MacKenzie, called the
pitches from behind a catchers mask embedded
in the far wall. Their mom, Holly, stood nearby, holding
Spensers Cincinnati Reds jacket and admiring
the other interactives at the Reds Hall of Fame and
Museums Play Ball gallery.
Were big fans, and weve been meaning
to come down here for awhile, she said. We
hit the kids area, and now were in hog
heaven.
Spenser and his family werent waiting for a
game to start, nor were they taking a break from the
heat during a slow inning. They were visiting Great
American Ball Park on a rainy day in November. The
year-old home of the Reds is now a 365-day-a-year
destination thanks to the Hall of Fame and Museum,
which opened in late September.
Great American is the latest major sports venue to
go year-round as teams look for ways to increase revenue,
strengthen their brands, and build fan loyalty. Last
fall, the Green Bay Packers got into the act when
the team unveiled the capstone of its $295 million
stadium renovation. The Lambeau Field Atrium blends
themed retail and restaurants with interactive museum
experiences and a new hall of fame in an attraction
that SportsBusiness Journal dubbed a fan magnet.

At the Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame, fans can go
behind the scenes to get to know the Packers in the
Pro Football Hall of Fame through lockers dedicated
to the 19 inductees.
As exhibit designers for both the Reds and Packers
projects, Cincinnati-based Jack Rouse Associates has
seen a trend in franchises that are making the most
of their real estate by keeping their facilities open,
making money, and providing fan-centric fun throughout
the year.
Teams are looking at ways to celebrate and
engage fans during the off-season, said Amy
Merrell, JRAs Chief Operating Officer. With
so many other entertainment options competing for
peoples attention, theyre realizing they
need to keep the interest of current fans while creating
new ones, too. Going year-round makes stadiums and
the sports they represent accessible to a wider audience.
From Game Day to Every Day
Look at all these recordstheres
13 of them, Ill have you know, 35-year-old
Anne Harrod said to co-worker Dan Hampshire as they
surveyed an exhibit dedicated to Pete Rose at the
Reds Hall of Fame and Museum. He should be in
(Cooperstown). He should.
Walking up the staircase to the main exhibit area,
Harrod and her companions passed a floor-to-ceiling
wall of baseballs representing Roses 4,256 career
hits. To their left, floor-to-ceiling windows gave
a view of Great American Ball Parks concourse,
where outdoor interactives like Vertical Leap
and Todays Line-Up waited for next
seasons crowds.
The year-round trend is part of a bigger movement
that sees sports as a total entertainment package.
Game-day interactives such as the ones at Great American
Ball Park have been gaining popularity for several
years. For example, Philadelphias Citizens Bank
Park opened in April with exhibits honoring the citys
pro baseball heritage and a stand where fans can create
a customized version of the Phillies mascot.
(Today) youll see everything from educational
efforts such as the Braves joint venture with
the Atlanta History Museum to present players and
strategic skills in a way that helps fans better understand
the game, to the sheer frivolity of having your picture
taken as you leap for a ball against a faux scoreboard,
to having an autograph session with a player,
said Janet Marie Smith, Vice President of Planning
and Development for the Boston Red Sox. Often touted
as a visionary in the sports venue entertainment field,
Smith spearheaded Oriole Park at Camden Yards, which
is widely seen as the first sports facility to make
the leap from ball park to gathering place. She also
led the development of Atlantas Turner Field,
which local and national press called baseballs
first theme park.
The children's area of the Packers Hall of Fame lets
little
fans try on the uniforms of their favorite players.
While game-day entertainment is aimed at getting
fans to come early and stay late, year-round venues
invite them to come any time.
We look at it that we went from game day to
every day, says John Jones, Executive Vice President
and Chief Operating Officer of the Green Bay Packers.
Our theory was that we could create a new paradigm
of stadium destination tourism.
According to Jones, the idea for the Atrium at Lambeau
Field came from fans who kept calling, wanting to
use the historic stadium for weddings and other special
events. Before the renovation, the stadium couldnt
handle their requests.
I remember in the old stadium in 1999, I looked
out my office window and a van pulled up with Canadian
license plates, he recalls. The doors
open, and guys are piling out of the van doing this
victory dance that theyre at Lambeau. They took
pictures of one another, did a few war whoops, then
got back into the van and drove away. Maybe they went
back to Canada. We saw these things and we thought,
what if we could create a place where all these people
could come and have meetings and celebrations, and
what if we had entertainment like a hall of fame and
a stadium tour, and what if we had great food and
a place where kids could have a great time?
The result is the 366-square-foot, five-story Atrium.
It includes restaurants, Packers retail shops, meeting
and event facilities, an interactive fan zone and
the Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame. Visitors can view
a film hosted by Brett Favre examining how the Packers
have used the frozen tundra to their advantage
over the years; play in a life-sized diorama capturing
the thrilling moments at the end of the 1967 Ice
Bowl; learn about Vince Lombardi in a re-creation
of his office; and see a multimedia show celebrating
great moments in Packer history while viewing the
franchises three Super Bowl trophies.

When creating the exhibits and other experiences
for the Packers Hall of Fame, designers worked to
create experiences that would draw a wide audience,
from die-hard fans to the casual tourist. The designers
also worked with Wisconsins public school system
to create exhibits that use football to teach concepts
like math, science, nutrition and teamwork.
Fans are at the center of the Reds project, too.
Early on, team representatives held two town hall
meetings, one with season ticket holders and one that
was open to the public. As the project progressed,
fan input also was gathered via e-mail. The Hall of
Fame and Museum is filled with homages to the fans,
from a re-created Palace of the Fans theater façade,
to the exhibit honoring Cincinnatis famous opening
day parade, to a re-created rec room packed with memorabilia.
The Great Eight: This tribute to the Big Red Machine
features eight life-sized figures (Rose, Griffey,
Morgan, Foster, Bench, Perez, Concepcion and Geronimo)
celebrating a championship moment based on the final
play of the 1972 NL pennant game.
These kinds of attractions are great ways for teams
to tell their stories and let fans know theyre
appreciated. Theyre also an investment in the
fans of the future.
Not everybody is born into a family where it
becomes their first love, so its nice to be
able to offer something that appeals to people who
may only go to one or two games, says Janet
Marie Smith. Conventional wisdom would say that
if youre interested youre going to come
back.
Year-round facilities are also revenue generators,
bringing added value to a building that otherwise
would sit idle during the off-season. The Cincinnati
Reds estimated its new Hall of Fame and Museum would
draw about 200,000 visitors in its first year for
an annual revenue of $1 million to $1.5 million. In
Green Bay last year the Atriums retail space
generated over $15 million in revenue, making it the
NFLs #1 team-operated single store. The Packers
went from #16 to #13 on Forbess list of top-earning
NFL teams, and Jones reports that more than 1,300
events have been held at the facility with bookings
stretching into 2010.
Ultimately, he says, it all goes toward putting a
better product on the playing field.
Every day of the week, teams are in competition
to build more local revenue. Its extremely important
in our league that you be competitive off the field.
If youre not competitive economically off the
field, it will be very difficult for you to be competitive
on the field.
Looking Ahead

As Anne Herrod and her friends made their way toward
the end of the Reds Hall of Fame and Museum, they
found themselves in a reverently lit space where bronze
plaques representing the inductees hung suspended
on cable between the floor and ceiling. From Johnny
Bench to Joe Nuxhall, the recorded voices of enshrined
players and other luminaries echoed throughout the
room.
Its almost overwhelming, theres
so much to see, said Harrod. I think this
was a long time coming.
Marty Brennaman and Joe Nuxhall--partners for 31
seasons on the Reds Radio Network--coach fans in the
finer points of calling a baseball games. Then fans
get to try their hands at calling a major play.
Fans of other teams might see similar facilities coming
to their hometowns. Jones says several teams have
expressed interest in what the Packers did with the
Atrium, most notably the Dallas Cowboys, who are planning
a new stadium for Arlington, Texas.
With fans embracing teams from all over the country
and world, these facilities have the potential to
become bona fide tourist attractions. The keys to
their success will lie in staying true to the teams
unique story, fanbase and history.
There is a feeling (in pro sports) that fans
are increasingly more transient, says Janet
Marie Smith. It used to be you knew your home
town team and their venue and not any others. I think
thats a piece of sports that is not going to
go away, and I think the challenge for stadiums is
to make sure that what they do feels real and authentic
to their particular city and their particular franchise.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sara J. Bennett is a Senior Writer for Jack Rouse
Associates.
Jack Rouse Associates is a design and master planning
firm that for more than 25 years has been creating
engaging experiences for stadia, museums, theme parks,
corporations, and zoos. Recent sports clients include
the Cincinnati Reds, the Green Bay Packers, the Indiana
Pacers, the Atlanta Braves, the Columbus Blue Jackets
and DAYTONA USA.
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