
There will be a new Tunnel Club replacing the current Field Club.The other changes will be available only to fans paying premium prices. Unfortunately, this will only be available to Sounders fans for games when seating is expanded into the third deck. That’s all the way up as high as you can go in Lumen’s south end. It will now expand behind the Toyota Fan Deck. Most Sounders games it has food and beverage from SoDo, the International District and Central District.

Another District MarketĬurrently, there’s a District Market tucked behind section 214. With it being finished this fall, hopefully Reign crowds fill up enough for the club and stadium to open the space. The rail will be a great spot to watch a game. Imagine T-Mobile Field’s Bullpen, but at Lumen. The space features two nearly 40-foot-wide bars along with 83 feet of drink rails facing the field, an oversized outdoor gas fireplace, and Pacific Northwest-themed finishes. Open to all fans on Seahawks and Sounders gamedays, this project transforms the currently unused space underneath the stadium’s iconic Hawks Nest into a covered open-air fan gathering area with premium lower-level views of the playing field. It sounds amazing.Ī new 6,300-square foot premium food and beverage area named Cityside Bars is being added in the north end of the stadium. Instead, there will be an actual bar with a fireplace, mostly covered but still open air. Tucked underneath the Hawks Nest is a mass of metal pipes with ad hoc heating and beer service. The one downside will be that the new videoboards will likely partially obscure the iconic city views from much of the stadium. They’re a massive 40 by 70 feet, about twice as big as the ones they’re replacing. The new version will be capable of showing stats and replays.

New video boardsįor most Sounders and OL Reign fans, the most notable improvements are the two new massive video boards being added to the north end of the stadium.
#Lumen field series
Lumen Field, First & Goal, the Seattle Seahawks and the Seattle Sounders announced that there are a series of improvements coming, some of which have already started. But now, some of the impact of hosting the equivalent of “three-seven Super Bowls” in the span of a month is starting to work its way into the stadium. With Seattle hosting the World Cup in 2026 there was no promised improvements to the stadium, besides grass.
