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Martin Stadium (Northwestern University)

Coordinates: 42°03′30″N 87°40′15″W / 42.0582460°N 87.6708763°W / 42.0582460; -87.6708763
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lanny and Sharon Martin Stadium
Martin Stadium (the further of the two visible sports fields along the lake shore) and other lakefront athletic facilities, photographed in 2021 (facing northwards)
Map
Former namesLeonard B. Thomas Sports Complex
Lakeside Field
Location2235 Campus Drive[1]
Coordinates42°03′30″N 87°40′15″W / 42.0582460°N 87.6708763°W / 42.0582460; -87.6708763
Public transit Purple at Noyes
Local Transit CTA Route 201 at Sheridan & Lincoln and Sheridan & Haven
OwnerNorthwestern University
OperatorNorthwestern University
Capacity2,000 (until 2024)
12,023 (2024-present)
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Opened1997
Renovated2016
Expanded2024
Tenants
Northwestern Wildcats lacrosse, men's soccer, women's soccer (NCAA) 1997–present

Northwestern Wildcats football (NCAA) 2024–present

Chicago Union (UFA) 2024 –present

Lanny and Sharon Martin Stadium (currently known as Northwestern Medicine Field at Martin Stadium for sponsorship reasons) is an outdoor sports and recreation facility on the campus of Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. It is the home stadium of the Northwestern Wildcats soccer and lacrosse teams,[1] as well as the current temporary home stadium of the school's football team during the construction of its new permanent stadium. The venue was temporarily enlarged in mid-2024 order to accommodate the interim tenancy of the football program. It is located along the shore of Lake Michigan on the northeast end of the campus, adjacent to several other university athletic facilities and the Kellogg Global Hub academic building.

The venue is a component of the university's Lakefront Athletics and Recreation Complex, which also features Lakeside Field (a field hockey venue), Norris Aquatics Center, Henry Crown Sports Pavilion, Combe Tennis Center, Ryan Fieldhouse (indoor football practice facility), Walter Athletics Center, and the currently-disused Hutcheson Field outdoor football practice field.[2]

History

[edit]
2010 photograph of the venue (captured facing north)
2009 aerial photograph of Martin Stadium and other lakefront facilities

The venue traces back to the soccer and lacrosse field first built in 1997 as part of what was originally known as the "Leonard B. Thomas Sports Complex". The multi-field sports complex was constructed at a cost $3.5 million on the north end of the university's main campus in Evanston, Illinois in order to provide home fields for Northwestern University's soccer, lacrosse, and field hockey programs on the main campus. Soccer and lacrosse shared the venue, built as a grass turf in the complex.[3] Field hockey was given a separate dedicated venue designed to the particular specifications of field hockey,[4][5] The site of the fields provides spectators with views of the adjacent Lake Michigan and distant views of the Chicago skyline.[3] Prior to its 2016 renovation, the soccer and lacrosse field was also referred to as "Lakeside Field",[6] the same name also used for the adjacent field hockey venue.[4] It had a capacity of 2,000 spectators.[7]

In 2012, the Chicago Red Stars (an NWSL professional women's soccer team, since renamed to Chicago Stars FC) played two home games on the field.[8] The venue was the site of the Big Ten men's soccer tournament in 1998, 2005, and 2012.

2016 renovation

[edit]
Martin Stadium photographed in 2018 (captured facing north, with the former Hutcheson Field football practice field in the foreground; and with the Walter Athletics Center and Ryan Fieldhouse in the background)

Both the soccer and lacrosse field, as well as the adjacent field hockey facility, were renovated in 2016 as part of a renovation of the lakefront athletics complex that also included the addition of an outdoor practice field for the school's football program.[9] The football practice field, named Chap and Ethel Hutcheson Field (also known as Hutcheson Field), was built just to the south of the renovated soccer facility[10][11] along the lakefront,[9] and was built to also be utilized by club sports teams in addition to the football program.[2] The renovations of the lakefront fields was part of the university's "We Will" campaign of investment in its athletic facilities.[12] The newly-renovated soccer and lacrosse venue was renamed "Lanny and Sharon Martin Stadium" after J. Landis "Lanny" Martin (a trustee and alumnus of the university) and his wife Sharon Martin,[2][12] who together had served as co-chairs of the campaign's fundraising efforts and had contributed $15 million to it.[12]

HOK/360 Architecture were the lead architects of the facilities renovation project.[11] The renovations added lighting upgrades, and new video equipment.[citation needed] The renovated soccer and lacrosse venue continued to have a permanent capacity of 2,000 seated spectators,[13][14] and had featured a single small video board (located in its northeast corner).[15] It reopened on March 8, 2016, with a women's lacrosse match against Marquette.[11]

After this renovation, the stadium was the location of the Big Ten women's lacrosse tournament both in 2016[16] and 2024.[17]

Temporary use as football stadium (2024 and 2025)

[edit]
October 2024 game between the Wisconsin Badgers and the Wildcats at the at Martin Field, viewed from a student seating section in the north grandstand

On April 10, 2024, the university announced that a temporary facility would be constructed as part of the complex to serve as the football team's home stadium for the 2024 and 2025 seasons while a replacement for Ryan Field is built.[18] During its use as an interim football stadium, the facility is known for sponsorship reasons as "Northwestern Medicine Field at Martin Stadium", with Northwestern Medicine signing a two-year exclusive naming rights partnership in August 2024 for the branding of the stadium.[19] In addition to the school's football team, its soccer teams and lacrosse program continue to play at the venue.[15]

Logistics

[edit]

Background and planning

[edit]

With Ryan Field demolished for the construction of a replacement stadium at the same location, the football team needed to find a temporary venue to play for two seasons. The university quickly began demolition on their previous stadium soon after receiving approval to, so as to preempt allowing time for any further legal challenges that could delay the project's initiation. The start of demolition came prior to arrangements being made for where the team would play during construction.[20]

Before settling on plans to use Martin Stadium, several venues in the Chicago region were looked at as options. These were assessed as presenting too far of commutes from the Evanston campus for athletes and student fans.[15][21] One was SeatGeek Stadium, a stadium which had been originally built for Major League Soccer. SeatGeek featured adequate facilities to serve as a temporary home venue,[15] and a larger capacity than the temporary setup at Martin Stadium offers.[13] However, its distance from the university's Evanston campus (a 45 minute to hour drive, using highways) made it an unideal option.[15][13] Soldier Field (the stadium of the NFL's Chicago Bears and the MLS's Chicago Fire FC) was considered, but presented scheduling concerns as the Bears' 2024 schedule had not yet been finalized and the Chicago Fire's games would also present further scheduling challenges.[20] It was also judged as presenting too far a commute from the Evanston campus.[21] Guaranteed Rate Field (home stadium of the MLB's Chicago White Sox) was considered to be overly-remote from Evanston.[20] While closer, Wrigley Field (home of the MLB's Chicago Cubs) was also judged as being too far removed from campus to serve as a season-long home venue.[21]

The football program's plans for a temporarily-expanded Martin Stadium were found to be feasible for meeting the needs of gameday logistics and requirements for television broadcasts. These plans was cleared for action once the team received needed approvals from the NCAA, the Big Ten Conference, and the city of Evanston to play their games at the stadium. There was a limited timeframe in which the plans could be executed, with preparation beginning in early June 2025 and the first scheduled football home game at the venue taking place on August 31.[15] As a result, the expanded seating of the venue was erected over the course of only approximately 60 days.[13]

Head football coach David Braun and his family gave what was described to be "a major six-figure contribution" to the university to help fund the project of expanding Martin Stadium.[13]

Seating and other aspects of the stadium

[edit]

The temporary enlargement of the venue to accommodate football games was overseen by InProduction, company which specializes in erecting temporary seating structures for sports events such as Formula 1 races and golf tournaments, and which had previously built temporary bleachers at Kidd Brewer Stadium (for Appalachian State Mountaineers football) and Clarence T. C. Ching Athletics Complex (for Hawaii Rainbow Warriors football).[13]

Due to each sideline being space-confined, the sideline grandstands grandstands are more shallow in depth than the temporary endzone grandstands are. Parts of the temporary endzone grandstands sit atop of a former football practice field and a parking lot.[13] The initial target capacity for the temporary venue was to hold somewhere around 15,000 spectators.[15] However, when it opened for the 2024 season its official capacity was even lower, at only 12,023.[13][22] Northwestern Athletics noted that there would be the ability to potentially enlarge the capacity for the 2026 season[13] including by adding as many as 3,000 more seats to the venue by placing more seating in the stadium's corners and under its score boards.[23]

View of the western grandstand (with Lakeside Field and the Kellogg Global Hub visible behind it)

The expansion of the venue included dismantling and rebuilding the existing grandstand structure on the west sideline of the field, in order to add additional seating as well as a mezzanine level and press box on that side of the venue.[15] The size of what could be added on the west sideline was space-limited, due to the proximity of the neighboring Lakeside Field field hockey venue.[13] Northwestern Athletics regarded any plan that would require to uproot its championship field hockey program from their own facility to be non-starter,[23] thus the enlarged western grandstand could not be extended much further back than the existing grandstand extended.[13] Most of the seating along the west sideline includes 2,500 bleacher-style bench seats. Above this is a 200-capacity premium mezzanine seating section that has been nicknamed a "loft level", featuring barstools and chair-backed seats for its ticketed spectators. The Northwestern home team bench is located along the west sideline.[21]

View of the east grandstand

A second sideline grandstand was added on the east sideline of the playing surface, the side of the venue which abuts the lake, and is the side in which the visiting team bench is located along. This grandstand contains 1,200 bleacher-style bench seats.[15][21] The size of what could be constructed along the east sideline was confined by the limited amount of room between the playing surface and the lake. The east stands are very near to the lake, with their last row of seats being located roughly 50 feet (15 m) from the water.[13]

The temporary south endzone grandstand grandstand contains both general admission and premium seating, and extends far further-back than the sidelines do.[13] The south endzone has two suite levels,[13] with a total of sixteen suites.[13] It also features club seats, and a field-level premium loge seating section.[13][21][24] With its many premium seats, the South grandstand generates the most revenue.[23] Its first row is a field-level premium loge seating section that has twenty sets of four-seat tables (with cushioned seats) that are elevated only 2 feet (0.61 m) above the playing surface.[24] Behind this are rows of general admission seats, beyond which there are several rows of cushioned premium club seating. Behind the club seating are club dining areas[23] (which contain the all-inclusive dining offered to club section seatholders)[24] and the premium suites.[23] Each premium suite is open-air, and offers seating for either 11 or 14 spectators.[21][24]

The 5,000 seat[23] temporary north endzone grandstand features sections for marching band stands and the student sections of both Northwestern and visiting teams.[13] All seating in this section is bleacher-style bench seating.[21]

Despite the expanded venue having a much lower overall capacity than the former Ryan Field had, its premium seating areas have far more seats than the premium areas of the former Ryan Field had offered[13][25] in its sole premium section (a 350-seat skybox). Since premium seating areas generate larger revenue, this has allowed Northwestern to generate greater per-game revenue during its 2024 season home games at Martin Stadium than it had in its 2023 season home games at the former Ryan Field.[26]

The existing turf at the venue was maintained, with minor augmentations made to allow it to accommodate the teams of all three sports that will be using it.[15] Video boards were installed in the south end zone and along the eastern sideline.[27]

View (from stairs to north grandstand) of concessions and porta-poties behind the north grandstand (and adjacent to the Walter Athletics Center and Ryan Fieldhouse)

Alcoholic beverages are sold at stadium concessions.[28] This is a difference from Ryan Field, which for decades had never offered in-stadium sale of alcohol.[21] There is a "beer garden" area behind the south grandstand structure, adjacent to that grandstand's concessions salespoint. This offers an in-stadium gathering space open to all stadium spectators,[21] featuring patio furniture and sun umbrellas.[23]

The Walter Athletics Center (a $270 million indoor football practice facility located adjacent to Martin Stadium) is used to house game-day back-of-house operations, as well was the locker rooms for both Northwestern and visiting teams.[13] Additionally, a sales center for the new Ryan Field was added to the lobby of the Walter Athletics Center, featuring a model of the under-construction stadium. A similar sales center also exists at Welsh–Ryan Arena.[15] It was declared that there were no plans to formally use the terrace of the Walter Athletics Center nor the balcony of the Kellogg Global Hub (both of which overlook the venue) for additional ticketed spectator capacity, though the team was open to the possibility of hosting visiting athletic program recruits on the athletic center's balcony.[15]

Parking, transportation, and tailgating

[edit]

Northwestern University's main campus offers more available parking for football attendees than its Ryan Field campus did, though much of it is separated into smaller parking lots and parking structures spread apart across a greater area.[15]

Despite there being more parking at Martin Stadium, there is a lower capacity for parking lot tailgating due to a portion of the parking on the main campus being contained within parking structures. To make up for this,[15] portions of the open space on the adjacent Northwestern University Lakefill[15] have been used for the "Lakeside Gameday Experience".[21] This has been described as "tailgate village"/"tailgate zone"[15][23] and beer garden which can be accessed through the purchase of an special entry ticket. The area features food and drinks available for purchase, as well as lawn games and television screens.[23] It also feature private party spaces which attendees can book use of in advance to host private pre-game parties.[15][23] Those who reserve space on the Lakefill for tailgate parties have the options of either bringing their own food or taking advantage of catering options the venue offers. Northwestern compared the offering of these options to those using The Lakefill as being somewhat similar to the options offered for attendees at picnic lawns the Ravinia Festival concert venue.[15] Among the reservable-spaces are two 50-capacity chalets and several 10-capacity tents.[21]

Northwestern Athletics have advised the Noyes station of the CTA Purple Line as a means of traveling to the venue via rapid transit. Spectators are advised to (after exiting the station) travel east down Noyes Street until Sheridan Road, at which event-day wayfinding signage will guide them through the campus and to the stadium. Northwestern Athletics recommended CTA bus route 201 as one means for those parking in the campus' south lots to get from the parking lot to the stadium, with the nearest stops to the stadium being at Sheridan & Lincoln and Sheridan & Haven.[28]

Northwestern Athletics has advised those wanting to arrive via Metra's Union Pacific North Line that (as with Ryan Field) they advise Evanston Central Street station to be the most convenient Metra station, and that gameday wayfinding signage should be present to aid in finding their way to Martin Stadium.[28] However, this Metra station is significantly further from Martin Stadium than from Ryan Field. Metra riders traveling to the station could alternatively transfer from the Metra Davis Street station to the CTA Purple Line, which has an adjacent Davis station, and from there take the Purple Line to Noyes. A Metra-Purple Line transfer also exist between the adjacent Metra station and CTA station at Main Street in Evanston.

Football games

[edit]

Five home games of Northwestern's 2024 football season were played at the venue,[20] with the final two being played at Wrigley Field (home stadium of the MLB's Chicago Cubs) in November after the conclusion of the MLB calendar.[13][21] The two games held at the larger Wrigley Field were also expected to be the two home matchups that would likely be the highest draw for spectators: the team's games against Ohio State and Illinois (the latter being the in-state Big Ten rival of Northwestern). Wrigley Field had previously been used as a special venue for single select Northwestern football games in some of the team's recent seasons, including its 2023 season and its 2021 season.[21] The team's 2025 season is also scheduled to feature five home games at venue, with its the final two home games being played at Wrigley field in November.[29] Big Noon Kickoff will film its pre-show coverage broadcast live on Northwestern's campus ahead of the September 13, 2026, game hosting the Oregon Ducks at Martin Stadium.[30][31]

During games, boats can be seen behind the east grandstand

Interest has been generated around the unique oddity of a school in one of the four power conferences playing its games at such a small-capacity venue. Also of intrigue has ben the potential for lake winds to impact plays.[21] Interest has also been generated in the unique scenic setting of the venue, including the views of Lake Michigan and boats behind its eastern grandstand. During games, boats can be seen passing by, while others can be seen anchored just beyond the stadium in what a Chicago Tribune columnist described as apparent "floating tailgate[s]"[22] and others have described with the portmanteau "sailgating".[27]

While the athletic program opted not to use the balcony of the Kellogg Global Hub for ticketed spectators,[15] during games students of the business school have been observed using the balcony to garner views of games.[27]

Additional sports events held in the temporarily-expanded venue

[edit]

In addition to the school's football team, its soccer teams and lacrosse program are continuing to play at the venue.[15] In 2025, it was announced that the stadium would be the location of the 2026 NCAA Division I Women's Lacrosse semi-finals and national championship.[32] Beginning with their 2024 season, the Chicago Union team of the Ultimate Frisbee Association made the venue its home stadium.[33]

In July 2025, the Premier Lacrosse League will play four neutral site games of its 2025 season at the venue. The four games will take place over two consecutive days, with Evanston city officials anticipating that 3,500 spectators will likely attend on each day.[34] This is the first time the league will play games in the Chicago area since 2019.[35] Chicago Stars FC are set to return to the venue, playing a single home game of its 2025 season there.[36] The club also filed in May 2024 to request a zoning analysis from the city of Evanston as to the possibility of the team making the venue its home stadium for sixteen games during its 2026 season.[8]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Northwestern Medicine Field at Martin Stadium". NUSports.com. Northwestern Wildcats Athletics. Retrieved June 7, 2025.
  2. ^ a b c Tremmel, Pat Vaughan (April 30, 2015). "Groundbreaking for Lanny and Sharon Martin Stadium". news.northwestern.edu. Northwestern Now (Northwestern University). Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  3. ^ a b "Leonard B. Thomas Sports Complex". nusports.com. Northwestern University Wildcats. May 24, 2001. Retrieved June 5, 2025.
  4. ^ a b "Lakeside Field - Facilities". nusports.com. Northwestern Athletics. Retrieved June 5, 2025.
  5. ^ "Northwestern Field Hockey Camps | at Northwestern Univ. | Evanston, IL". www.northwesternfieldhockeycamp.com. Northwestern Wildcats Field Hockey Camps. Retrieved June 5, 2025.
  6. ^ "Men's Soccer UWM vs. Northwestern". NUSports.com. Northwestern Athletics. September 16, 2012. Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  7. ^ "Wildcats Kick Off Season Against Local Rival DePaul". NUSports.com. Northwestern Athletics. August 19, 2010. Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  8. ^ a b Frieman, Henry (May 14, 2025). "Chicago Stars FC Looking Into Playing At Martin Stadium In 2026". The Daily Northwestern. Retrieved June 4, 2025.
  9. ^ a b Cubbage, Alan (March 11, 2015). "Northwestern to File for Permit to Build Lakefront Athletics and Recreation Complex". Northwestern.edu. Northwestern Now (Northwestern University). Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  10. ^ "Northwestern University Campus Maps: Chap and Ethel Hutcheson Field". maps.northwestern.edu. Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  11. ^ a b c "Sportsfield Specialties Outfits Northwestern University Venues". Sportsfield Specialties. August 31, 2016. Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  12. ^ a b c Din, Benjamin; McKeon, Shane (May 1, 2015). "Northwestern Breaks Ground On Stadium For Soccer, Lacrosse". The Daily Northwestern.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Meyer, Craig (September 7, 2024). "Why Is Northwestern Football Playing In A Temporary Stadium? Ryan Field Being Demolished For New Stadium". USA Today. Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  14. ^ "Facilities". nurecreation.com. Northwestern University Recreation. Retrieved June 10, 2025.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Segall, Ethan (May 28, 2024). "The Latest On Northwestern's Temporary Football Stadium Plan". Inside NU. Retrieved June 5, 2025.
  16. ^ "2016 Big Ten Tournament Bracket" (PDF). NUSports.com. Northwestern Wildcats Athletics. 2016. Retrieved June 11, 2025.
  17. ^ "2024 Big Ten Women's Lacrosse Tournament". Big Ten Conference. 2024. Retrieved June 11, 2025.
  18. ^ "Northwestern Football 'Staying Home' With Temporary Enhancements To The Lanny and Sharon Martin Facility On Lakefront". Northwestern Now. April 10, 2024. Retrieved April 11, 2024.
  19. ^ "Temporary Lakeside Athletics Venue To Be Named Northwestern Medicine Field at Martin Stadium". news.northwestern.edu. Northwestern Now (Northwestern University). August 12, 2024. Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  20. ^ a b c d Brown, Matt (August 13, 2024). "Northwestern's Temporary Lakefront Football Stadium, Explained:". Extra Points. Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o McKessy, Jack (August 29, 2024). "How Northwestern Turned Lacrosse Field Into Unique 12,000-seat, Lakeside Football Stadium". USA Today. Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  22. ^ a b Taylor, Shakeia (September 1, 2024). "A 'Picturesque' Debut for Northwestern At Its Temporary Stadium — And For The New Big Ten". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Fleming, Margaret (September 4, 2024). "Northwestern's Tiny Football Stadium Is Making Big Money". Front Office Sports. Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  24. ^ a b c d Ong, Eli (May 30, 2024). "Northwestern Sends Concept Renderings of Temporary Football Field To Season Ticket Holders". WGN-TV. Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  25. ^ Novy-Williams, Eben (November 18, 2024). "Why Northwestern Wants Big-Time Football's Smallest Venue". Sportico. Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  26. ^ Novy-Williams, Eben (November 18, 2024). "Why Northwestern Wants Big-Time Football's Smallest Venue". Sportico. Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  27. ^ a b c Katz, Andrew (September 2, 2024). "Fans Rave About Northwestern Football's New stadium Setup". Evanston RoundTable. Retrieved June 10, 2025.
  28. ^ a b c "Northwestern Medicine Field at Martin Stadium Guide - Northwestern Athletics". nusports.com. Northwestern Athletics. 2024. Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  29. ^ "Northwestern Football Announces Early Season Kick Times and TV Networks". NUSports.com. Northwestern Athletics. May 29, 2025. Retrieved June 6, 2025.
  30. ^ Axelrod, Ben (May 29, 2025). "Fox Announces First 3 'Big Noon Kickoff' Games of 2025, Including Ohio State vs. Texas". Awful Announcing. Retrieved June 7, 2025.
  31. ^ "Fox Sports Ignites 2025 College Football Season With Blockbuster Matchups and Historic Rivalries". Fox Sports. March 29, 2025. Retrieved June 7, 2025.
  32. ^ "Northwestern Named Host of 2026 NCAA Division I Women's Lacrosse Championship". NCAA.com. Retrieved January 19, 2025.
  33. ^ "Stadium FAQ - Martin Stadium". WatchUFA. March 4, 2024. Retrieved June 4, 2025.
  34. ^ Milanowski, Margo (May 20, 2025). "Premier Lacrosse League To Play In Evanston This Summer". Evanston RoundTable. Retrieved June 11, 2025.
  35. ^ "Chicago 2025". Premier Lacrosse League. 2025. Retrieved June 11, 2025.
  36. ^ "Chicago Stars FC to Play Lakefront Faceoff Match on Evanston's North Shore". Chicago Stars. May 19, 2025. Retrieved June 4, 2025.