Movable seating
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Movable seating is a feature of some facilities like stadiums, often known as convertible stadiums, or moduable stadiums. It allows for the movement of parts of the grandstand to allow for a change of the playing surface shape. This allows games that use various shaped playing surfaces such as an oval field, for cricket and/or Australian rules football; or a rectangular field, for football (soccer), rugby league, rugby union, American football, and/or Canadian football; or a diamond field, for baseball; to be played in the same stadium. This is particularly useful in Australia and the United States, where various professional sports with varying field configurations are popular spectator pastimes. The process of conversion from one form to another is time consuming, depending on the stadium it can take from 8[1] to 80[2] hours. Many stadiums were built in the United States in the 1960s and 1970s to host both baseball and American football.
Asia

- Saitama Super Arena in Saitama City, Saitama, Japan, has separate layouts for arena-style seating for basketball and hockey and stadium-style seating for soccer, American football, and concerts. This is made possible by a large movable block.
Europe
- Allianz Park, the stadium that is the most notable structure within the Barnet Copthall leisure complex in London, England, United Kingdom, has movable seating that was installed for the benefit of its primary tenant, the Saracens rugby union club, in a renovation that was completed in early 2013. The movable stands allow the stadium to continue to serve in its original role as an athletics (track and field) venue.
- London Stadium, formerly known as Olympic Stadium in London, England, United Kingdom, was originally built for the 2012 Summer Olympics with fixed seating, but movable sections were added to provide optimal configurations for its original purpose of athletics, association football and concerts. West Ham United F.C. moved into the reconfigured venue starting in the 2016–17 season.
- Paris La Défense Arena, located near the La Défense business district in the Paris suburb of Nanterre, opened in October 2017 after many delays. The stadium features a movable seating block that allows it to accommodate field or court sports.
- Stade de France in the Paris suburb of Saint-Denis, France was built for the 1998 FIFA World Cup. It has a movable stand which covers an athletics track.[2]
North America
- Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States, opened in 1975, and has four movable sections allowing it to be reconfigured for baseball, American football, soccer, or concerts. However, the stadium managers permanently locked the stands in the football configuration effective in 2007, citing maintenance costs for the equipment used to move the sections.
- BC Place in Vancouver, British Columbia, has movable sections that can configured for Canadian football and soccer or baseball.
- Caesars Superdome originally been designed to accommodate baseball. The sideline seats used for football could be pulled backwards, to widen the field. The Minor League New Orleans Pelicans played one year there (1977), and several Major League teams played exhibition games. However, it was not ideal for baseball: some upper-deck seats did not get a full view of the field. Major League Baseball never considered New Orleans seriously as an expansion site. After Hurricane Katrina, when the Superdome was renovated, the movable seats were replaced with permanent seating. It is thus no longer capable of accommodating baseball.
- Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida, United States, home of the Miami Dolphins (National Football League) and Miami Hurricanes (NCAA football), originally had a movable stand used to accommodate the Florida Marlins. The Marlins opened LoanDepot Park in 2012, following which the movable stand was permanently locked into a football-only configuration. This stand was later demolished in a 2015 reconstruction of the stadium's lower bowl.
- Olympic Stadium in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, has two movable sections allowing it to be reconfigured for baseball, Canadian football, soccer and concerts.
- Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia, United States, home to the NFL's Atlanta Falcons and Major League Soccer's Atlanta United since August 2017, has retractable lower-bowl seats along the sidelines. This allows an appropriate playing area for soccer, whose regulation field is nearly 20 meters wider than that of American football.
- RingCentral Coliseum in Oakland, California, United States, has been the home venue for the NFL’s Oakland Raiders and baseball’s Oakland Athletics for most of its existence, and thus has movable seating. However, the Raiders relocated to Las Vegas after the 2019 season, leaving baseball as the only sport regularly played at the Coliseum.
- Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium in Washington, D.C., United States, used movable seating to accommodate two different pairs of teams:
- Starting in 1962, the year after the stadium opened, the NFL's Washington Commanders and the second incarnation of the Washington Senators shared the stadium until the Senators moved to the Dallas–Fort Worth Metroplex in 1971. During this time, several different soccer teams also used RFK in its (American) football configuration.
- The MLB Washington Nationals and D.C. United (Major League Soccer) shared the stadium from 2005 until 2008, when the Nationals moved to a new ballpark.[3]
- Rogers Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, has separate layouts for the Toronto Blue Jays (American League) and the Toronto Argonauts (Canadian Football League). For several years in the 21st century, the Buffalo Bills (NFL) played one regular-season home game there each year, using the CFL seating configuration and an NFL-regulation field. The Argonauts moved to an expanded and renovated BMO Field in 2016, after which the movable seating was permanently locked into its baseball configuration.
- U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States, which opened in 2016 as the new home of the Minnesota Vikings (National Football League), is purposed for football but is able to convert to baseball for the University of Minnesota men's baseball team.
Oceania
- Stadium Australia (Accor Stadium) was the Olympic Stadium at the Sydney 2000 Summer Olympics in Australia. Post-Olympics during 2001–2003, it was re-configured and movable seating was implemented allowing the stadium to transition between a rectangular or an oval playing surface.
- Marvel Stadium (Docklands Stadium) in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, was completed in 1999. Features such as movable seating and a retractable roof allow for the venue to host many sports and entertainment events.[4] It is also the first stadium in Australia to have this feature.
- Optus Stadium in Perth, Australia, a venue built with an oval pitch for cricket and Australian rules football, has several "drop-in" movable seating areas positioned to "fill in" much of the sides of the pitch when the venue is used for rectangular-field sports.