SeatGeek Stadium
SeatGeek Stadium (then Toyota Park) in 2017 | |
SeatGeek Stadium Location in the Chicago metro area SeatGeek Stadium Location in Illinois SeatGeek Stadium Location in the United States | |
| Former names | Toyota Park (2006–2018) |
|---|---|
| Address | 7000 South Harlem Avenue |
| Location | Bridgeview, Illinois |
| Coordinates | 41°45′53″N 87°48′22″W / 41.76472°N 87.80611°W |
| Owner | Village of Bridgeview |
| Operator | Spectra |
| Capacity | Soccer: 20,000 Concerts: 28,000 |
| Surface | Kentucky Bluegrass |
| Field size | 120 x 75 yards |
| Construction | |
| Broke ground | November 30, 2004 |
| Opened | June 11, 2006 |
| Construction cost | $98 million ($157 million in 2025 dollars) |
| Architect | Rossetti Architects |
| Project manager | ICON Venue Group |
| Structural engineer | John A. Martin & Associates |
| Services engineer | A. Epstein & Sons International |
| General contractor | Turner Construction Harbour Contractors |
| Tenants | |
| Chicago Stars FC (WPS, NWSL) (2009–2010, 2016–2025) Chicago State Cougars football (NCAA DI) (2026-present) Chicago State Cougars soccer (NCAA DI) (2021) Chicago Fire FC II (MLSNP) (2022–present) Chicago Hounds (MLR) (2023–present) Chicago Fire FC (MLS) (2006–2019) Chicago Machine (MLL) (2007–2009) Roosevelt Lakers soccer (NAIA) (2010–2019) Chicago Bliss (LFL) (2011–2012, 2015–2017) Northwestern Wildcats soccer (NCAA DI) (2015) Chicago House AC (NISA) (2021) | |
SeatGeek Stadium is a soccer-specific stadium in Bridgeview, Illinois, about 12 miles southwest of downtown Chicago. It is the home stadium of Chicago Fire FC II of MLS Next Pro, the Chicago Hounds of Major League Rugby, and the Chicago State Cougars football team. The stadium has also hosted the Chicago Fire of Major League Soccer, Chicago Stars FC of the National Women's Soccer League, Chicago Machine of Major League Lacrosse, Chicago Bliss of the Legends Football League, Chicago State Cougars men's and women's soccer teams of NCAA Division I, and Chicago House AC of the National Independent Soccer Association. Originally Toyota Park when it opened on June 11, 2006, the facility has a capacity of 20,000 and was developed at a cost of around $100 million. The naming rights agreement with SeatGeek went into effect following the Fire's 2018 season.