flavze wrote:Pants wrote:
Fair enough. Adelaide Oval's never going to be even half a bowl though and there aren't any other realistic options to deliver a stadium of this magnitude at this stage.
Are you happy with the 77% cover stat posted above? I'm no architect or engineer, but my guess is that you couldn't do too much better than that without a domed roof because of sight lines etc
i wonder if that 77% includes the areas between the "pillows" that doesn't seem to actually have a cover but is just framework?
but no, i'm not happy with it. really the only seats that shouldn't have cover is those around the Northern end of the ground.
I like the way the eastern and northern stand roofs match, but when it gets down to it it's a sports stadium not and art piece. It's No.1 purpose is to provide an arena for fans to enjoy watching sports.
the most important things for a stadium to provide the fans a quality experiance is a good quality playing surface, an apropriate capacity and comfortable experiance, all other aspects of the stadium design come after those imo.
To me the roof has been designed for summer shade, not winter cover. Will be great for cricket, the rugby 7's tournament and and AFL games when it's fine. But i just don't see the point of spending that much money and doing a half arsed job.
I'd hazard a guess that there's some form of clear cover over the breaks between the 'pillows'. I'd find it hard to see how they could claim to have 77% cover when there are open gaps in the roof. The HD flyover seems to show some sort of cover, but it's hard to tell.
I really can't under stand the public's fundamental complaints. Other than people wanting a roof over the whole thing (which is unnecessary/unfeasible) or a stadium with 360 degree stands (which is never going to happen at AO and actually sets it apart from most high end stadiums around the world and adds to its considerable charm, even in its proposed redeveloped state) I can't see the problem. They're clearly not doing a half arsed job. Not for $535m. Having a look at the fly through it doesn't look like much expense has been spared. The glass exterior so you can look out over the city or the parklands is amazing and I'm sure they'll have all the bars/restaurants etc people will need.
My only real issue is capacity. They can't increase their footprint on the parklands much more so they're hamstrung in that respect, but it is a bit of an issue that we're spending all this money on a stadium that has less capacity than AAMI. Still, there's seemingly no more room at AO and no alternatives to bring football and cricket together and therefore spend this much money on a stadium other than AO, so what do you do?
I'd much rather have 50,000 in the CBD than 52,000 at West Lakes and even if 70,000 or so were possible at AO, even the biggest optimist wouldn't say with any certainty that it'd be filled more than once or twice a year (if that) over the next 20-30 years based on crowd figures for the Crows and Port since their inception and they way they're trending and even taking into account the ideal of bigger crowds in the city.