Superdome

stadium, New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
Also known as: Louisiana Superdome

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design innovations

  • Michigan Stadium, Ann Arbor
    In stadium: Design innovations

    …eclipsed by the New Orleans Superdome, which opened in 1975 with an official seating capacity of 69,065 (though able to accommodate larger numbers); the 30-story structure is topped by a steel-ribbed roof that has a 680-foot (200-metre) clearspan. In the late 1980s stadiums with retractable domes began to appear, most…

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Hurricane Katrina

  • Hurricane Katrina
    In Hurricane Katrina: Damage

    …Orleans Convention Center or the Louisiana Superdome. As the already strained levee system continued to give way, the remaining residents of New Orleans were faced with a city that by August 30 was 80 percent underwater. Many local agencies found themselves unable to respond to the increasingly desperate situation, as…

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lamella dome

  • construction of apartment buildings
    In construction: Postwar developments in long-span construction

    …and the 207-metre- (678-foot-) diameter Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana, designed by Sverdrup and Parcel and completed in 1973. The steel truss continued to be used and was extended to three dimensions to form space trusses. The longest span of this type was the Narita Hangar at Tokyo International Airport,…

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  • In lamella roof

    …m), and the New Orleans Superdome (1973), 678 ft (207 m) in diameter.

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New Orleans

  • New Orleans: St. Louis Cathedral
    In New Orleans: Cultural life

    …is the site of the Louisiana Superdome, one of the world’s largest sports arenas. In early January the Superdome hosts the Sugar Bowl game, one of the collegiate championship contests in football; in conjunction with the game are competitions in other sports. Horse racing is held at the local Fair…

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New Orleans Saints

  • Drew Brees
    In New Orleans Saints

    …attended home games at the Louisiana Superdome with bags over their heads in reaction to the franchise’s prolonged ineffectiveness. Two notable figures to play for the Saints during that time were Archie Manning (father of future NFL quarterbacks Peyton Manning and Eli Manning), who was one of the most popular…

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