Eric the Red
Team HuskerBoard
Published Tuesday
September 13, 2005
Planned NU stadium screen is a whopper
BY RICH KAIPUST AND BILL HORD
WORLD-HERALD BUREAU
LINCOLN - The planned video screen for Memorial Stadium potentially could be among the largest in college and professional sports, if the installation and proposed dimensions are approved later this week.
According to the University of Nebraska Board of Regents agenda, the video screen that would sit atop the north addition would be 33 feet tall by 117 feet wide. For perspective, the width of a football field is 160 feet.
Tony Mulder, a spokesman for Daktronics Inc. in Brookings, S.D., said a 117-foot-wide screen would be the biggest in a college football venue.
The largest video screen currently is the 107-foot-wide SACO SmartVision screen at Arkansas' Razorback Stadium. According to the SmartVision Web site, it's the largest LED video display at any sports venue.
Daktronics recently installed a 132-foot-wide scoreboard structure as part of Iowa's renovation of Kinnick Stadium. The video portion, however, only spans 68 feet.
The NU Board of Regents will be asked to approve the purchase and installation of the main video screen, along with new screens for the southwest and southeast towers. Cost is listed at $5 million - "to be paid by sponsorships and donations," according to the agenda - and not part of the $50 million project already underway.
The proposal for the project would include construction starting next March and completion by July.
Nebraska Athletic Director Steve Pederson on Monday said he would await approval before commenting on specifics for the video screen. Mulder said visual communications companies haven't yet seen specifications for the proposal, either.
But fans at the Huskers' first two home games have gotten a look at the designed framework, which will hold the board above the North Stadium skyboxes under construction.
Mulder said the size of video screens most often installed in National Football League stadiums is 96 feet wide, about one-third narrower than the proposed Husker screen. Traveling NU fans might remember the 96-foot-wide Sony JumboTron board at Heinz Field, where the Huskers played Pittsburgh last year.
Contact the Omaha World-Herald newsroom
Copyright ©2005 Omaha World-Herald®. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, displayed or distributed for any purpose without permission from the Omaha World-Herald.
September 13, 2005
Planned NU stadium screen is a whopper
BY RICH KAIPUST AND BILL HORD
WORLD-HERALD BUREAU
LINCOLN - The planned video screen for Memorial Stadium potentially could be among the largest in college and professional sports, if the installation and proposed dimensions are approved later this week.
According to the University of Nebraska Board of Regents agenda, the video screen that would sit atop the north addition would be 33 feet tall by 117 feet wide. For perspective, the width of a football field is 160 feet.
Tony Mulder, a spokesman for Daktronics Inc. in Brookings, S.D., said a 117-foot-wide screen would be the biggest in a college football venue.
The largest video screen currently is the 107-foot-wide SACO SmartVision screen at Arkansas' Razorback Stadium. According to the SmartVision Web site, it's the largest LED video display at any sports venue.
Daktronics recently installed a 132-foot-wide scoreboard structure as part of Iowa's renovation of Kinnick Stadium. The video portion, however, only spans 68 feet.
The NU Board of Regents will be asked to approve the purchase and installation of the main video screen, along with new screens for the southwest and southeast towers. Cost is listed at $5 million - "to be paid by sponsorships and donations," according to the agenda - and not part of the $50 million project already underway.
The proposal for the project would include construction starting next March and completion by July.
Nebraska Athletic Director Steve Pederson on Monday said he would await approval before commenting on specifics for the video screen. Mulder said visual communications companies haven't yet seen specifications for the proposal, either.
But fans at the Huskers' first two home games have gotten a look at the designed framework, which will hold the board above the North Stadium skyboxes under construction.
Mulder said the size of video screens most often installed in National Football League stadiums is 96 feet wide, about one-third narrower than the proposed Husker screen. Traveling NU fans might remember the 96-foot-wide Sony JumboTron board at Heinz Field, where the Huskers played Pittsburgh last year.
Contact the Omaha World-Herald newsroom
Copyright ©2005 Omaha World-Herald®. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, displayed or distributed for any purpose without permission from the Omaha World-Herald.