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Pontiac Silverdome auctioned off for.....$583,000

Train

Lifer
http://money.cnn.com/2009/11/17/news/economy/silverdome_buyer/

Unidentified Toronto-based real estate company buys Pontiac stadium for $583,000 - a fraction of the $55.7 million it cost to build.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- An unidentified Canadian real estate company was the winning bidder for the Silverdome, snatching it up for a mere fraction of its original value.

A Toronto-based family-owned company bid $583,000 for the under-used stadium on Monday, which is currently owned by the City of Pontiac, Mich., according to auctioneer Williams & Williams.

The company plans to refurbish the Silverdome into a stadium for men's Major League Soccer and women's professional soccer teams, said the auctioneer. While the stadium was the former home of the National Foodball League's Detroit Lions, it also played host to the World Cup in 1994, when Brazil beat Italy in a knuckle-biter that ended in a penalty shootout.

The auctioneer Williams & Williams, based in Tulsa, Okla., said it will not identify the buyer "until the final details are worked out and the sale closes."

"The Silverdome will now be in the hands of professionals who can devote their time to transform this high-profile property into a vital asset instead of enabling it to continue to languish as an empty facility," said Fred Leeb, the emergency financial planner for Pontiac, in a press release.

0:00 /02:32Hollywood helps Michigan jobless
The sale of the Silverdome takes a large financial burden off the hard-hit city of Pontiac, which has fallen on hard times, with budget shortfalls and high unemployment. Earlier this year, GM announced it would close a truck plant, taking about 1,400 jobs from the city.

As a result, Leeb said, Pontiac could ill afford to continue paying $1.5 million in annual upkeep for the stadium. With a private owner, the property "will go back on the tax rolls," he explained.

The 80,000-seat Silverdome was the biggest stadium in the National Football League when it was built in 1975 for $55.7 million. The stadium, which sits on a 127-acre plot, is also the former home of the National Basketball Association's Detroit Pistons.

The stadium reached its football zenith in 1982 as the site of Super Bowl XVI, when San Francisco's 49ers beat the Cincinnati Bengals.

The Silverdome has also served as a music venue for some of the hottest acts in show business, including Michael Jackson, Madonna and Elvis. Another high profile visitor, Pope John Paul II, once delivered Mass from the field.

But the Silverdome's biggest event was Wrestle Mania III in 1987, when 93,000 fans packed into the stadium to watch Hulk Hogan body-slam Andre the Giant. That was the biggest turnout ever for an indoor sports event.

Despite its rich history, the stadium has seen little use since 2002, when the Lions concluded their last season there.

"We want to convert a major premier asset of the city - convert it from something that's been languishing into a new, vibrant marquee asset of the city," said Leeb, in an October interview.

Poor Detroit 🙁
 
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Jeez, finally. But I guess that means my friends won't be able to go to the Silverdome drive-in anymore. 😛
 
Jeez, finally. But I guess that means my friends won't be able to go to the Silverdome drive-in anymore. 😛

I have to say, I am so hopeful they do something with it... knock it down, rennovate... something. It is so sad to see it vacant. It is somewhat of an eye sore in AH/Pontiac.
 
i find it kind of weird that they list the cost of construction. with depreciation factored in, i bet the assessment is about 1/4 of the initial costs, tops.
 
Hmmm...decisions, decisions. Starter home in San Francisco...or MY VERY OWN STADIUM!!

Yeah, I know it's not nearly that simple but $600k for a giant indoor stadium is a bit ridiculous.
 
oh and not to mention the functional obsolesence... probably pretty tough to sell a building so unique. my guess is they knock it down
 
If Canadians want to invest in Detroit real estate, I say make them a 'can't refuse' offer for the whole thing.
 
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The Silverdome lost much of it's value after Tim Taylor wrecked the controls in the main nerve center on Thanksgiving 15 years ago.
 
lol, the largest attendance was for a "sporting event" that's not even a sport. Stupid writer.
 
Those Canadians got a good deal... maybe? 55.7million in 1950's dollars inflation adjusted is a lot of $$$ today.

Maybe... if they hold onto it for a few decades. It is only worth what someone is willing to pay for it. Seeing there is a glut of cheap homes in detroit ... no telling how long it will take the market to turn around.

But there is still a market and I bet they could still make money booking a number of events that no one wants in a new stadium.
 
As a result, Leeb said, Pontiac could ill afford to continue paying $1.5 million in annual upkeep for the stadium

Anyone who has driven by it in the last year knows that Pontiac is not putting any money into it's upkeep. The parking lot has sprouted fair-sized trees through the cracked cement.
 
Heard on the radio a few days ago they hoped to get 100 million for it. I guess they fell a "tad" short on that one, eh?
 
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