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Venues

Venue Detail

Buffalo Bills

RSV Pro Facilities Report
February, 2016
Buffalo Bills

1 Bills Dr Orchard Park, NY 14127 Phone: 716-648-1800 Fax: 716-648-6446 URL: www.buffalobills.com Owner: Terry and Kim Pegula League: National Football League, AFC East

Venue
Ralph Wilson Stadium, 1 Bills Dr, Orchard Park, NY 14127 Owner: Erie County, NY Managed by: Owner Built: 1973 Capacity: 75,000 Permanent concession stands: 38 Concessionaire: Sportservice Suite caterer: Sportservice Soft drink: Pepsi Cola Beer: Multiple

Ticket prices
Season tickets range from $350 to $600 Single tickets range from $45.00 to $480.00

Attendance
2013 average attendance: 66,267 2014 average attendance: 67,522

Suites
Quantity: 130 Term: 3 to 5 years Price: $28,000 to $195,000 Seats: 12 to 31 Includes: Does not include tickets. A private entrance is available for suite holders.

Club seats
Quantity: 6,878 Term: 2 to 2 years Price: $1,050 to $2,300 Includes: A private lounge is being built for club seat holders. The newer club seats are heated, a major benefit for watching games in the cold outdoors of Buffalo.

Financing
The $22 million stadium was financed with revenue bonds.
In 2014, following the death of Ralph Wilson, Jr., the team was sold to Terry and Kim Pegula and the new owners said a new stadium is vital. City, county and state officials had already begun considering if and where to build a new venue.
The stadium was formerly called Rich Stadium, but those naming rights expired in 1998. At the prodding of state officials, the team finally named the venue Ralph Wilson Stadium after the team's owner. Until the new name was picked, sports fans were fondly calling it "The Stadium Formerly Known as Rich."
In 1997 the team agreed to a new 15-year lease in exchange for 76 new luxury suites and 6,800 sideline club seats. The sideline club seats sell for $890 to $2,300. A special $2,500 ticket includes transportation from Rochester for out-of-town fans. The most expensive club seats come with an all-you-can-eat buffet and open bar. Membership in the Maple Leaf Club costs $265 per person per game and includes the buffet and bar.
Four new enclosed club suites have a sports bar atmosphere and serve 500. Membership price is $1,000 a year. The suites feature a greenhouse-type front with glass windows that can be opened or closed. There are regional clubs pitched to satellite markets the team has targeted: Rochester and Southern Ontario. Stadium seating was reduced to 75,000 as a result of the work.
First-of-a-kind heated club seats promise to keep fans warmer in winter weather. And if it's too miserable, they can head back to the huge clubs, featuring special rest rooms, bars and food, and watch the game on TV.
Indoor club seats require a license of $1,100 and outdoor clubs require a $450 seat license. Tickets must be purchased each year to maintain the license. Club seat prices above do not include the license fee.
When the remodeled stadium opened in 1999, a season ticket holder, and former building inspector, claimed the club seats were too close together to meet codes. That was true, but the Bills convinced the state to evaluate the stadium as a theater rather than an assembly venue and under those rules the work was approved. The team did offer to remove cup holders for any fan requesting it and was looking into ways to increase the space.
Four new rest room towers were added, two on each side, that will cut down the time and effort that upper level fans need to use the older rest rooms below them. A new walkway runs along the top of the upper level stands, connecting the rest rooms on each side and giving fans a gathering space. The Bills say the towers increase rest room capacity 35 percent.
In 1996, in an effort to generate additional stadium revenue, the Bills were one of the first to come up with the idea of selling sponsorship of the parking lots at the stadium. (Facilities, Football, NFL, Professional Sports, Venue)