Lambeau Field
Adapted from Wikipedia · Discoverer experience
Lambeau Field is an outdoor stadium located in Green Bay, Wisconsin. It is the home of the Green Bay Packers, a team in the National Football League. The stadium opened in 1957 and was first called City Stadium. It was later renamed in honor of Earl "Curly" Lambeau, one of the team's founders.
Today, Lambeau Field can hold over 81,000 fans, making it the second-largest stadium in the NFL. It is the oldest stadium that is still used for NFL games. The field where the games are played faces north and south and sits 640 feet above sea level.
The stadium's address is 1265 Lombardi Avenue, named after the famous coach Vince Lombardi. It is close to an area called Titletown District, which has hotels, restaurants, and other fun places to visit. In 2025, important football events took place there during the NFL draft.
History
Packers seek a modern facility
Since 1925, the Green Bay Packers played at a small stadium behind Green Bay East High School. By the 1950s, this stadium was too small and old for the team’s needs. It was made mostly of wood, and visiting teams had to dress at a hotel before games. The stadium could not be expanded because of its location.
Officials in Milwaukee wanted the Packers to move there, so they built a larger stadium. This pushed the Packers to build a new, bigger stadium in Green Bay. In 1956, Green Bay voters approved funding for the new stadium, which opened in 1957 with 32,500 seats. It was the first stadium built just for an NFL team. The site was chosen because it had a natural slope perfect for seating and lots of parking space.
Expansion, 1961–1995
Demand for tickets was very high, especially after coach Vince Lombardi joined the team. The stadium was expanded several times over the years, increasing its capacity. In the 1960s and 1970s, they added more seats, and in the 1980s and 1990s, they added private boxes and club seats. By 1995, the stadium could hold over 60,000 fans.
Renovation, 2001–2003
By the end of 1999, the Packers needed to update their stadium to stay competitive. They planned a big renovation project costing $295 million. Fans approved the plan, and work began in 2001. The renovation added new seats and facilities while keeping the famous grass field. It was finished in time for the 2003 season, increasing the capacity to 72,515. The Packers have sold out every game since 1960, and many fans are on a waiting list for tickets.
South end zone expansion, 2012–2013
In 2010, the Packers announced plans to add new scoreboards and seats in the south end zone. After getting feedback from fans, they added 7,500 new seats. These seats have heated areas to melt snow, helping with winter games. The expansion was paid for by the team, not taxpayers. After completion in 2013, Lambeau Field became the third-largest stadium in the NFL, holding 80,750 fans. New video boards and a rooftop viewing area were added in 2012.
Atrium renovation, 2013–2015
In 2013, the Packers started a $140.5 million project to renovate the entrance area. This included moving the team store, adding escalators, and creating new spaces for fans. The project was finished in 2015 and included new player facilities and a large replica trophy. The stadium’s lighting was also upgraded to LED in 2018.
Lambeau Field Atrium
The Lambeau Field Atrium has the team store, the team’s Hall of Fame, stadium tours, and a restaurant. It is also used for special events like meetings and weddings.
Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame
The Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame is located in the Atrium. Since 1970, it has honored 170 Packers players and staff. The Hall of Fame welcomes over 170,000 visitors each year.
Titletown District
In 2015, the Packers announced plans for the Titletown District, an area near the stadium with a hotel, a sports clinic, and a restaurant. It opened in 2017 and has since hosted events like the NFL draft.
Packers home record at Lambeau
As of the end of the 2024 season, the Packers have a strong home record at Lambeau Field. They have won 264 regular-season games, lost 133, and tied 6. In the playoffs, their record is 18–7. The Denver Broncos are the only team that has never won a regular-season game at Lambeau Field.
Name and nickname
New City Stadium
The original name of Lambeau Field was "City Stadium" through the 1964 season. It was often called "New City Stadium" to tell it apart from an older stadium at East High School.
Lambeau Field
Two months after the passing of Packers founder Curly Lambeau, the stadium was renamed "Lambeau Field" by Green Bay’s city council on August 3, (/wiki/1965_Green_Bay_Packers_season). Lambeau started the team in 1919, played for the Packers early on, and coached them for 31 seasons up through (/wiki/1949_Green_Bay_Packers_season). He, along with George Halas of the Chicago Bears and Bill Belichick of the New England Patriots, coached his team to the most NFL championships, winning six. Lambeau was among the first group of players inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio, in 1963.
Corporate naming rights
On November 7, 2000, after Brown County voters approved a sales tax to help pay for Lambeau Field’s renovation, another vote was held. This vote asked if naming rights to the renovated stadium should be sold to help pay off the tax sooner. The vote passed 53%-47%, the same percentage as the sales tax approval.
After the vote, the Packers talked with the city of Green Bay, which owns the stadium, about selling the naming rights. They agreed to sell them if they could get $100 million, but no buyer was found.
Although the team agreed to follow the voters’ decision, they said they would rather keep the traditional name of Lambeau Field to honor the team’s founder.
The Packers have sold naming rights to the eight entrance gates. From north going clockwise, they are: Bellin Health (north gate), Miller Brewing (atrium gate), American Family Insurance (northeast gate at parking lot level), the Oneida Tribe of Indians of Wisconsin (east gate on elevated plaza facing Oneida Street), Fleet Farm stores (southwest gate), Associated Bank (west gate and private box entrance), and Kwik Trip (northwest gate). Verizon was the previous sponsor of the northwest gate from 2003 to 2017. Miller Brewing also sponsors the atrium and has a section in one end zone called the "Miller Lite End Zone". Shopko was the former sponsor of the south gate until it closed in June 2019. The naming rights to the south gate were then sold to Invisalign in 2022.
At the 2015 Packers shareholders meeting President Mark Murphy said, “We will not sell the naming rights to the stadium. … We will never do that. It will always be Lambeau Field”.
"The Frozen Tundra"
The stadium’s nickname came from the Ice Bowl game between the Packers and the Dallas Cowboys on December 31, 1967. The game was played in very cold temperatures of −15 °F (−26 °C) with strong winds. Journalist Tex Maule used the word tundra in his article about the game in Sports Illustrated.
The nickname “the frozen tundra” is believed to come from The Greatest Challenge, the Packers’ official version of their game film. In the Cowboys’ version of the film, A Chilling Championship, writer Bill Woodson used the term “the frozen tundra” to describe Lambeau Field. Before the 1967 season, an underground electric heating system was added, but it couldn’t stop the cold during the Ice Bowl game. The field had been covered overnight with the heater on, but when the cover was removed in the extreme cold, the moisture on the grass froze instantly.
The underground heating and drainage system was updated in (/wiki/1997_Green_Bay_Packers_season), with pipes filled with a special solution replacing the electric coils. After the 2006 season, the surface, heating, and drainage system was replaced again. From 2007 to 2018, the field used the Desso GrassMaster system, which mixes synthetic fibers with traditional Kentucky bluegrass sod. In 2018, this was replaced with a polyethylene-based surface called SIS Grass. Even the new video boards, installed in (/wiki/2004_NFL_season), were influenced by the field’s nickname and were called “Tundra Vision”. These video displays are more than 25 feet high by 46 feet wide. An artificial lighting system, similar to technology used in Dutch rose greenhouses, was tested in (/wiki/2010_Green_Bay_Packers_season) and bought for the 2011 season. It stays on 24 hours a day from October to early December to help the grass grow. This system is also used in some soccer stadiums where shade from stands and roofs can be a problem for the grass.
Titletown, USA
“Titletown, USA” is more famous as a nickname for the city than for its football field, but it became popular in 1961, even before Vince Lombardi won any of his championships. At the 1961 NFL Championship Game against the New York Giants, which the Packers won 37–0, fans hung signs around the stadium that said Welcome to Titletown, USA. The then-Giants quarterback Y. A. Tittle joked that the title was for him, but his name was spelled wrong. By the mid-1960s, “Titletown, USA” was a registered trademark of the Green Bay Packers, Inc. Lambeau Field has been home to seven NFL world championship seasons, five under Lombardi, one under Mike Holmgren and one under Mike McCarthy, more than the six world championship seasons at its predecessor, City Stadium, under Curly Lambeau.
Postseason
Lambeau Field has often helped the Packers during important playoff games. The cold and sometimes muddy weather makes it hard for visiting teams to play well. One famous example is the Ice Bowl. In more recent years, teams like the San Francisco 49ers and the Carolina Panthers found it tough to handle the cold and wet conditions.
The Packers had a very good record at Lambeau Field for many years, only losing their first postseason game there in January 2003. Even though they haven’t always won in recent years, their overall record in playoff games at Lambeau Field is very strong. The stadium has also hosted several big championship games over the years.
Traditions
The Lambeau Leap
Main article: Lambeau Leap
Many Green Bay Packers players jump into the stands after scoring, a fun celebration called the Lambeau Leap. It began in 1993 when a player named LeRoy Butler did it after scoring a point. Later, another player, Robert Brooks, helped make it popular.
Even when rules were made to stop big celebrations, the Lambeau Leap was allowed to keep happening. Sometimes, players from other teams try to do the Lambeau Leap, but Packers fans usually don’t let them. In 2014, a statue was built outside the stadium to honor this tradition. The NFL Network named the Lambeau Leap one of the best touchdown celebrations ever.
Special events
Packers shareholders meeting
When the Green Bay Packers sold stock in 1997–98, the number of owners grew to over 112,000. This required a big space for the yearly meeting, so it returned to Lambeau Field in 2006 after many people could not attend in 2005. Usually, between 8,000 and 10,000 people join these meetings.
The COVID-19 pandemic meant the 2020 meeting could not happen in person at Lambeau Field, so it was shown online instead. In 2021, only about 3,900 owners attended in person.
High school and college football
Lambeau Field was planned for high school games too, like the old stadium it replaced. But after a rain-soaked high school game damaged the field before an important Packers match, the schools were asked not to use it often. Some games still happened there until a new high school stadium was built in the late 1970s.
In 1973, an important high school championship was held at Lambeau. The last high school game was in the 1980s. In 1982 and 1983, St. Norbert College played games there to support a cancer foundation. In 2016, Lambeau hosted a big college football game between Wisconsin and LSU, with Wisconsin winning in an upset.
Hockey
After a successful outdoor hockey game in 2001, teams from Wisconsin and Ohio State played at Lambeau Field on February 11, 2006. Wisconsin won 4–2 in front of a full stadium, even though the ice cracked a little during the game.
Snowmobile racing
In 2004, snowmobile racing happened in the parking lot because there wasn’t enough snow elsewhere. In 2005, the racing moved to the grass with the right amount of snow.
Concerts
Lambeau Field doesn’t host many concerts because it is mainly used for football. The lease allows one non-football event each month from February to June, but the Packers can choose not to allow it.
Other
Comedian Bob Hope was the first big entertainment act at Lambeau, performing for 18,000 people on May 31, 1976.
Soccer
Fireworks
For many years, Lambeau Field hosted a popular Fourth of July fireworks show, supported by a local shopping company.
| Date | Game | Score | Attendance |
|---|---|---|---|
| November 20, 1982 | St. Norbert vs. Fordham University | 14–10 | 5,119 |
| November 19, 1983 | St. Norbert vs. Fordham University | 18–9 | 842 |
| September 3, 2016 | Wisconsin vs. 5 LSU | 16–14 | 77,823 |
| September 5, 2026 | Wisconsin vs. Notre Dame | TBD | TBD |
| Date | Artist | Opening Act(s) | Tour / Concert Names | Attendance | Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| June 21, 1985 | Survivor | — | — | 13,000 | —N/a |
| June 11, 2011 | Kenny Chesney Zac Brown Band | Billy Currington Uncle Kracker | Goin' Coastal Tour | 45,446 / 45,446 | $4,948,817 |
| June 20, 2015 | Kenny Chesney Jason Aldean | Brantley Gilbert Cole Swindell Old Dominion | The Big Revival Tour Burn It Down Tour | 53,363 / 53,363 | $5,867,106 |
| June 17, 2017 | Billy Joel | Andrew McMahon in the Wilderness | Billy Joel in Concert | 45,602 / 45,602 | $4,805,909 |
| June 8, 2019 | Paul McCartney | — | Freshen Up | 49,416 / 49,416 | $6,529,928 |
| Date | Team #1 | Result | Team #2 | Tournament | Spectators |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| July 23, 2022 | 0–1 | Friendly | 78,128 |
Seating capacity
Lambeau Field is the second largest stadium in the NFL by how many people can sit there.
Sustainability
The Green Bay Packers have worked to make Lambeau Field better for the environment. They have added more recycling bins, use dishes that break down naturally, and updated lighting to LED lights. The stadium now has over 500 new lighting fixtures, 11 efficient boilers for heating, and two electric chillers to keep certain areas cool.
Images
Related articles
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