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Chicago Fire owner Joe Mansueto talks about his plans for a privately financed $650 million soccer stadium at the 62-acre site, and why he thinks teams should foot the bill for these projects.
Chicago’s Major League Soccer club has reached a deal to self-finance a new downtown stadium. Chicago Fire to self-finance downtown stadium on land owned by developer Related. Skip to Main Content.
The planned $650-million soccer stadium for the Chicago Fire will be entirely self-funded by the team's owner Joe Mansueto. Rendering sketch courtesy the Chicago Fire. June 4, 2025.
Chicago Fire FC have unveiled plans for a new privately funded, soccer-specific stadium they expect to open in Spring 2028, continuing chairman and owner Joe Mansueto's transformation of the club.
A proposed soccer stadium in Baltimore for D.C. United's minor league team could cost $188-238 million. Two potential sites are under consideration.
In 2006, the Fire moved into a newly built, $98 million stadium in Bridgeview, then known as Toyota Park, with a lease that ran through 2036.The 20,000-seat venue, which was rebranded as SeatGeek ...
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (WOOD) — The downtown Grand Rapids YMCA is staying open as construction continues on the new soccer stadium. In a letter to members, the David D. Hunting YMCA said there will ...
Readers applaud building a soccer-only stadium on the land known as The 78 and Joe Mansueto for using private financing. But they point out that public funds would be needed for infrastructure ...
BRIDGEPORT — Andre Swanston just wanted to eat his hot chicken sandwich — hold the pickles — not discuss the chances of his minor league soccer stadium receiving tens-of-millions of dollars ...
Billionaire Joe Mansueto is using his fortune to build a new stadium for his Chicago soccer team. The founder of Morningstar Inc. and owner of Chicago Fire FC said Tuesday he will personally fund ...
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